Asia's
second largest smartphone maker, HTC, throws its Wildfire S (promo
video posted below) into the entry-level ring, hoping to attract
users with its stylish design and premium user experience.
Design
This
sturdily constructed and robust HTC Wildfire S is extremely
comfortable to hold and almost unnoticeable in your pocket, as it
measures in at a 101.3 x 59.4 x 12.4 mm, and weighs a mere 105 g. Its
ivory coloured plastic look is nicely contrasted by a silver soft
touch plastic finish around the smartphone's edges and camera, much
like HTC's Flyer tablet. This allows it to come across as a more
stylish and upmarket device than the rather plain black design of the
Samsung Galaxy Gio.
The
smartphone boasts a 3.2 "(320 x 480 pixels, 180 ppi pixel
density) TFT capacitive touchscreen, which is much better that the
previous Wildfire's 3.2" (240 x 320 pixels) display. It also
features Gorilla Glass, which provides extra protection as well as
durability - a really impressive feature on a budget-friendly device.
Like
the Samsung Galaxy Gio's display sports some really good viewing
angles and nicely saturated colours. This isn't very surprising as it
sports the same display size, type and resolution as the budget entry
from Samsung. Like its Korean counterpart, the Wildfire S is also
privy to displaying reflections when used outdoors in direct
sunlight.
Sensible
skin
You
employ that vibrant and responsive dispay to navigate the device's
operating system (OS), which in this case is Google's latest Android
2.3 (Gingerbread) with HTC's Sense 2.1 skin running atop of it (same
as on theDesire S).
We
are avid fans of the company's Sense interface that flies between
integrated social feeds, the best apps arrangement in the business
and intuitive accessibility to numerous functions, all while still
retaining Android's familiarity. Another aspect that's worth
highlighting is HTC's widgets, which are gorgeous in their design and
incredibly practical in terms of their user friendliness.
Our
only real gripe with the device concerning its usability is that this
interface requires some oomph in terms of processing power, because
of the graphical nature of the widgets. HTC has opted to power this
device with a 600 MHz Snapdragon MSM7227 CPU (old Wildfireused a 528
MHz CPU), with the graphics being handled by an Adreno 200 GPU and
512 MB RAM (418 MB user-available).
Unlike
with the HTC ChaCha that packs a 800 MHz processor, the interface was
noticeably laggy on occasion, which was kind of annoying and does
detract from the coolness factor that this fantastic skin brings to
this budget smartphone.
Samsung's
Galaxy Gio offers a much better processing performance with its
Qualcomm's QCT MSM7227-1 Turbo 800 MHz processor. Its Smartbench 2011
Productivity Index score of 577 and Games Index score of 977, managed
to beat both the HTC ChaCha (361 and 516 respectively) and HTC's
Wildfire S (331 and 736 respectively) during tests.
Other
features
Other
than its underwhelming processor, users can employ the Wildfire S's 5
MP auto-focus camera with LED flash to capture some good-looking, but
not extraordinary photos. This snapper doesn't enable you to record
HD-Ready (720p) videos, which seems to have become in-vogue with a
lot of manufacturers of late, but can record VGA video at 24 fps.
Whilst the level of detail and frame rate is much better than the
video quality that the Samsung Galaxy Gio's snapper delivers, it's
definitely not the smoothest, since it's still partial to some
jerkiness.
Also
onboard is 3G HSDPA, GPS with a-GPS support, Wi-Fi 802.11 n,
Bluetooth 3.0 with A2DP and EDR, and a microSD card slot that
supports cards up to 32 GB in size, with a 2 GB card included in the
box .
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