The HTC Hero comes with a 3.2-inch capacitive touchscreen at 320 x 480 HVGA resolution and a 5-megapixel autofocus camera. It is a thin handset, measuring 112 x 56.2 x 14.35 mm, compare to HTC’s other models; for those of you who think in inches, it is about 4.41 x 2.21 x 0.57 inches; the Palm Pre and iPhone 3GS’ thickness are 0.67 inch and .048 inch, respectively. The HTC Hero has a microSD slot with a SIM slot and 1,350mAh Li-Ion battery, all which can be accessed by removing the back cover. The total weight is about 135 grams (4.76 ounces). The HTC Hero will be available in the 850/900/1800/1900MHz GSM/GPRS/EDGE and 900/2100MHz HSPA/WCDMA. The 900/2100MHz HSPA/WCDMA supports up to 7.2Mbps download and 2Mbps upload speeds. It has multiple external connection types which include WiFi b/g, Bluetooth 2.0+EDR with A2DP support, and USB 2.0.
Lets us take a look at the engine that runs the HTC Hero. It is run on Qualcomm’s MSM7200A processor at 528 MHz, which is an old processor. It is about 72 MHz less when compare to the iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre, which run on the new ARM A8 Cortex processor at about 600 MHz. Not only that the processors from the iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre have double the L1 cache but also added a second cache L2 at 256kB (32kB L1 on Qualcomm’s and 64kB L1 on both iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre). The greater the L1 and L2 caches, the smoother and faster the processor able to execute instructions command by you. From the Qualcomm MSM7200A’s spec sheet, it seems the processor from the iPhone 3GS and Palm Pre would out run the Qualcomm MSM7200A any day as we have seen from the previous model of the G1, which has the 528MHz ARM11 processor. Hopefully, the Qualcomm MSM7200A is a better tuned processor and that HTC’s user interface software is efficient. As we have seen so far from users experience in the past couple of months, even with a faster processor, the Palm Pre and iPhone ran into problems of a complete shut down and screen freezing problems.
So far, we haven’t heard any availability to the U.S. market. But a quick check at the HTC’s website, the HTC Hero is available through major U.S carriers like Sprint, ATT, T-Mobile, and Verizon. We’re pretty sure that it will be available through those major carriers. Sprint and T-mobile is definitely for sure, because they are currently carried HTC products.
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i will never buy HTC1
I ordened this one yesterday and it will be delivered today
do I havo to charge the accu the first time for 24 ours? or is that old fashioned? (a)– sorry for my bad English.
Hm, HTC they usually have crap interfaces
u suck then.
both.
bought mine a month ago. nothing but good things !
Отличный аппарат! Всем советую) и 19900 за него не очень много)
is this the best phone for sprint?
Just received my Hero directly from Sprint and love it! My wife has the newest Apple Iphone and she just canceled her service with AT&T because she cant let go of my Hero so I just ordered another Hero for her from Sprint. The 7 home screen selections are amazing and there are too many other great things to list. *Oh and as an ex AT&T employee…yes AT&T customer service does suck
u suck too. HTC is very dumb and i just do not know why people are buying Iphone and HTC. there is so uch hype about them. just accept the truth dude. i suck or not does not matter you. but I am sure HTC SUCKS.u got it?