Design
and Build
The
design and feel of the phone is heavily inspired from the Explorer.
The Desire C has the same pebble-shaped rubberized body except for
the Addition of the chrome strip along the bezel That sits. The phone
feels light at just 100g and is very comfortable to hold. The rubber
back Also adds to the grip, so it will not slip out of your Easily
hand. We have the three capacitive buttons in the front and a
proximity sensor and ambient light sensor but no front camera.
A
handsome looking phone
The
microUSB port, volume rocker and power / sleep buttons along the
sides are Placed Along with the 3.5mm headphone jack on the top. The
placement of the ports and buttons are quite ergonomic and everything
is Within Reach. In the back we have a 5MP fixed-focus camera and the
speaker grill beside it. The Desire C is available in different color
trims, out of Which We like the black and red theme the most. The
rear panel snaps back to reveal the removable battery, SIM card tray
and a microSD card slot. Overall, HTC's done an excellent job With
The Design and build of the phone.
Interface
We
were quite surprised to see HTC bundle Along with Android 4.0 Sense
UI on a phone powered by 600MHz CPU just to. By today's standards,
this is way too underpowered and Usually phones Expects That one cost
around 6-7K to use this kind of CPU. And it's not like it's a new one
either, HTC has used an older MSM7227A SoC With An even older Adreno
200 GPU. Thanks to the 512MB of RAM, the UI is manageable and while
it's not the best ICS experience, you will not find yourself tearing
your hair out either. With Sense 4.0, you get all of the bundled apps
we've see in phones like the One S, One V etc.
Sense
4.0 Gives You a very familiar experience
The
3.5-inch screen features a resolution of 320 x 480, Which is a bit
low so icons and menus are not the sharpest but not too bad either.
There is a major color banding issue, Which is very noticeable across
MOST color backgrounds, Especially white and black. We'd have
expected HTC to fit a better quality screen for the price tag they've
attached to this phone, but sadly They have not. Multi-tasking is
present as well, with the dedicated task switcher key.
Average
You
get the new media player thanks to Sense 4.0, Which is a complete
overhaul of Their previous versions of Sense. We now have TuneIn
Radio, SoundHound and 7digital, Which are integrated into the default
music player. A simple tap fetches you the music info, the option to
purchase music, lyrics and find similar artists as well as locate
tour dates. A couple of them, Including the similar artists and music
info PROVED to be quite useful to get more out of your existing music
library. There are not any preset equalizer any more - You Only Have
the options to enable or disable Beat Audio. The audio quality is
good but for more Flexibility in tweaking the sound, we'd recommend
something like Poweramp.
Good
half playback options
The
stock video player will only playback MP4 and AVI and that too only
up to 480p. 720p playback will but with a lot of stutter. The Beats
Audio option is available in the stock video player as well. HTC does
not bundle the Beats in-ear headphones anymore, so to get the MOST
out of it, we'd recommend a good pair of IEMs.
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