Showing posts with label Tech Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech Stuff. Show all posts

Monday, February 28, 2011

Mobile Phone Upgrade

Well, my HD2 has been with me for nearly 2 years. While that's sounds like the normal life cycle of a mobile phone these days, it's been like dog years for my HD2.

From cracking the screen, to being flung in a drain to being dropped on gravel roads, my HD2 has been through a lot. However, its performed beyond expectations with me having loaded about 15 different WinMo 6.5 ROM's onto it. Then came Froyo, which was nice change. Finally, Windows Phone 7 to which it ran a lot smoother than Froyo.

Alas, it is now overheating for no reason, unlocking itself and uploading pictures of my armpit to Facebook and not responding at times. While I am sure a software refresh would fix it, its best to look at the available upgrade paths.

First up, we have the currently available HTC HD7 running Windows Phone 7. I loved my WP7 experience on my HD2 eventhough it was limited due to the hardware. Since I already have a Galaxy Tab running Android, it would be nice to have a phone running something else, just to add some flavour to life. A summarised run down of the specs below show that this is quite a beast of a phone :

  1. Released October 2010
  2. 122mm x 68mm x 11.2mm
  3. 162g
  4. LCD capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
  5. 480 x 800, 4.3 inches
  6. 16GB with 512ROM and 576 RAM (No expandable memory)
  7. HSDPA 7.2Mbps, HSUPA 2Mbps, and WiFi (b/g/n)
  8. 5MP, 2592 x 1944 pixels, AF and dual-LED Flash
  9. 720p recording
  10. No secondary camera
  11. 1Ghz Scorpion processor, Andreno 200 GPU
  12. 1230 mAh battery
The rest of the specs are what you usually find on a higher end mobile phone these days. Full review can be found here.

At one point, this was a no brainer. However, Samsung had to come along and spoil the fun. The Samsung Galaxy S II was announced at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) and will be available soon. Specs below:
  1. To be released Q1 2011
  2. 125.3mm x 66.1mm x 8.5mm
  3. 116g
  4. Super AMOLED Plus capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
  5. 480 x 800 pixels, 4.3 inches
  6. 16GB/32GB Storage with 1GB of RAM (MicroSD expandable memory)
  7. HSDPA 21Mbps, HSUPA 5.76Mbps, and WiFi (b/g/n), DLNA and Bluetooth 3.0
  8. 8MP, 3264 x 2488 pixels, AF and LED Flash
  9. 1080p recording
  10. Secondary 2MP camera
  11. Dual-core 1Ghz ARM, Mali - 400MP GPU
  12. 1650 mAh battery
The HD7 loses on every single count. On the software end, the HD7 is running the latest and greatest Windows Phone 7. The Galaxy S II will be running Gingerbread.

The HD7 is currently going for RM 1,388 with a 24 month, 3GB data plan with Maxis.

Sigh...





Monday, January 31, 2011

Rooting your Android device

Couple of people have been asking me how I got Skype and a bunch of other apps on my Galaxy Tab when they cant see it in the Android Market.

Reason being, the market is limited by region. As such, you have to Root your device. Think of it as something similar to jailbreaking an iPhone/iPad. The process is not harmful to your device nor is it permanent. Removing the root can be something as simple as restarting your device.

Here goes:

Getting the files needed
  1. Download Z4Root from here. Thanks to the RyanZA from XDA forums for this.
  2. Copy the file onto your device.
  3. Go to the Android Market and look for File Expert. Find it and install it like any other app you have in the past.
  4. Download MarketAcess from here.
Remember to only install File Expert. Do not install any of other files yet. Follow the steps below once you have done the above.

Rooting

  1. Launch File Expert.
  2. Browse to the location where you saved Z4Root. Tap Z4Root to install it.
  3. Go to your settings page. Go to Applications. Go to Development. Select USB debugging
  4. Go to your applications and launch Z4Root.
  5. Select Temprary Root.
  6. Let it do its thing. After a while, it should say Temporary Root Successful. You have now successfully rooted your device.
  7. Next, launch File Expert again. Browse to the location you copied Market Access to and install it.
  8. Launch Market Access.
  9. Select Backup Value. After the confirmation pop-up, select the Providers tab at the top. Select T-Mobile [US].
  10. YOU'RE DONE !!!
Now you can go to the Market and have a look at a plethora of additional apps including the all time favourite, Skype.

* Please note that this apparently doesn't work with the latest firmware update from Samsung. This just serves as a guide and I am not responsible for any damage caused to your device.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Revival

Almost a year since I posted...seemed like flashing my HD2 to Windows Phone 7 would serve as a good revival of this blog.

I have had my HD2 for about 14 months only. Since then, it has seen varied WinMo 6.5 ROM's like Chucky, Artemis, Stellar and others. A couple of months ago, I loaded Froyo 2.2 on it and have been dual booting. Froyo is pretty cool. The icon set is brilliant for the display. There are some lag issues but seeing as how the phone isn't even supposed to have Froyo on it, the lag issues were tolerable.

Windows Phone 7 was released a few months back and with a slew of new phones. I had my eye on the HTC HD7 but before it got launched, I made an impulse buy of the Samsung Galaxy Tab (hope to review that too) and my purchase was put off.

However, thanks to the members of the Dark Forces Team, a new stable WP7 ROM has been released for the HD2. A guide and my feedback will appear in the Reviews section shortly (if all goes well!)

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

HTC HD2

Is there a point where your mobile phones' screen size just becomes ridiculous ? Not for me...that's why im drooling over the recently announced HTC HD2.

Packing a processor that matched the first DELL I ever bought, a 1GHz Snapdragon and the usual connectivity options - 3G, 7.2MBPs HSDPA, GPRS, EDGE, WiFi, BT 2.1 and GPS, the specification that really stands out is the ginormous 4.3inch 480x800 WVGA screen.

Another new entry is the capacitive touchscreen. The first for a WinMo device. Capacitive meaning the touch interface is like the Samsung Omnia HD or the iPhone as in you use your fingers and not a stylus. A subtle hint that its WinMo 7 or Windows Phone ready...For multimedia, as slim as it is,(11mmx67mmx120.5mm) it still has a 3.5mm headphone jack and a 5MP camera with dual LED flash and autofocus. It also comes with an accelerometer and a proximity sensor.

With all this, what concerns me is the slightly low end 1230mAh battery. For such a huge screen, will the battery be sufficient? or die after 20 mins of using GPS? Also, HTC hasn't been the best with its built in camera's...How will this 5MP pan out? With the limited release set for end of the month, we'll just have to wait for the reviews.

In the meantime, have a look at the pictures and video :)