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December 12, 2010

HTC Desire HD Review

The HTC Desire HD is one of the most anticipated superphone this year and it’s coming to town in time for Christmas (or so they say). Check out our full review of the Desire HD after the jump.

As a successor to the popular HTC Desire, the Desire HD brings with it most of the desirable features of its predecessor then wrapped it with a huge 4.3 inch screen (see our review of the HTC Desire here to get a better perspective).

With such a huge screen real estate, the handset makes for a very good first impression very few smartphones ever get. The 4.3″ LCD display is already bordering on the tablet category, just right under other 4 and 5-inchers like the Archos 43 and the Dell Streak.

The build and form factor is nothing new to us as we’ve already seen it over a year ago with the HTC HD2, although that one was running on WinMo 6.5 (there’s a hack to install Android on that one too) so it’s not a surprise that people are eager to see the marriage of the HD2′s hardware and Android OS.

What we missed with the Desire HD that we really liked with the older Desire is the inclusion of an AMOLED screen. While the LCD on the Desire HD still brings in that bright and clear display, the crispness and depth of contrast we get from AMOLED is very noticeable.

The resolution is at 480×800 pixels — it was just right on the Desire but the Desire HD’s 4.3″ display seems to big for such resolution that widgets and icons are a bit oversized. The 3.7″ Desire can accommodate 4 rows of icons and the 4.0″ Samsung Galaxy S can do 5 rows; despite the 4.3″ screen of the Desire HD, it can only do 4 rows (a limitation brought upon by the resolution). In retrospect, this might be good for those who have bigger than normal fingers.

However, if that switch was the one that made the Desire HD more affordable (with a 35k SRP compared to the Desire’s 34.9k SRP), then I think it is a reasonable trade-off since the launch price are practically the same.

That, or there’s just not enough supply of AMOLED these days.

Construction-wise, the Desire HD is tightly built. If you’re familiar with recent HTC handsets or have owned one, you’d agree how solid the units are. It’s got some heft to it, considering the size and materials used. The width is just right although people will smaller hands might have a harder time with the grip. It’s relatively thin too and somewhat tapers towards the edges with curves just at the right places; it’s actually thicker in the center where the camera is positioned.

The front panel is all covered with the glass display while the bottom end leaves enough space for the usual touch controls (similar to the Nexus One) of Android devices. I would have preferred the physical buttons like the ones on the older Desire but we’re pretty much familiar with how this works so it’s not a huge deal.


Above, from left to right: HTC Desire, iPhone 4, Desire HD, Galaxy S

The back panel has two compartments you can pry open — one for the SIM card slot on the right side and another one at the bottom part for the 1230mAh Li-Ion battery. The 8MP camera is positioned in the top middle part of the back panel with the dual-LED flash is on its right side and the microphone on the left.

The lens is protected by a metallic barrel around it. The barrel somewhat protrudes from the back so it usually ends up as the first point of contact when you put down the handset on tis back. As such, it’s also prone to bruises — I’ve already peeled off a tiny bit of dark paint off of it.

Like many top-of-the-line handsets, I guess you’ll really need to get a protective case for the device once you start using it. A thin, soft gel case would suffice.

While the camera has been cranked up to 8-megapixels, there isn’t much improvements in the photo quality. There’s no dedicated camera button too. Images are between decent to good when in the outdoors or with sufficient lighting but not much on low-light conditions. The 720p video recording looked much better though. Audio quality is good and sound volume is just enough for music or movie playback .

Here are some sample photos I took using the Desire HD:

You’ll notice that shots taken at low-light conditions tend to be bit grainy. The video quality is better though. See sample below (just set it to 720p when viewing).

The Desire HD performs very well; it’s very snappy and responsive and with the HTC Sense UI wrapped around Android Froyo, the interface is all pleasantness. You get the cool HTC widgets, themes and skins as well as the entire 7 home screens. There’s not much difference with the older Desire except for the pre-installed HTC Hub, Media Link and HTC Likes (recommended Android Apps).

The calendar widget now has a flipping animation when updating the time. Drag down the notification toolbar and you’ll see a list of recent apps. The virtual keyboard is now also expanded to include 4 arrow keys so you can navigate thru text much easier. Then there’s the Universal Search that collates all searches in one results screen.

We’ve also seen Flash 10.1 running on this device flawlessly. It’s way better than Flash Lite on the older HTC Desire. You also get the mobile hotspot (WiFi tethering) which comes with Froyo.

Performance is top notch, with the second generation 1GHz SnapDragon chip and 768MB RAM taking as much load as you can fire up apps on the device. We’ve had several apps running in the background including Angry Birds (which looked gorgeous, btw), DropBox uploading a video file, the full Harry Potter 7 website loading and a YouTube streaming all at once. Web browsing is also better with the large screen and full Flash experience.

As an added bonus, HTC has also launched HTCSense.com, a remote device management service for the Desire HD and Desire Z. It allows for data storage on the cloud (contacts, text messages, and other details) as well as security features like phone locator, remote lock and remote wipe of handset data.

Battery life is another thing altogether. With only a 1230mAh rating on the Li-Ion battery, the handset barely lasts the entire day especially when you’re connected to the net. This isn’t an isolated case though. We’ve experience the same with the Desire and the Nexus One before so if you’re coming from another Android device, this is already expected. Either you bring a charger all the time or carry a portable rechargeable pack.

HTC Desire HD specs:
4.3″ Super TFT display @ 480 x 800 pixels
1GHz Qualcomm 8255 Snapdragon CPU
1.5 GB internal
768MB RAM
up to 32GB via microSD
HSDPA 7.2 Mbps, HSUPA 2 Mbps
WiFi 802.11n
Bluetooth
GPS w/ aGPS support
FM Radio tuner
8MP camera with dual LED Flash
720p video recording
Li-Ion 1230mAh battery
Android 2.2. Froyo
Price: Php35,000
Release Date: December 2010

The HTC Desire HD is definitely a great phone. It’s one of the best Android phone we’ve tested this year; actually, among the best smartphones we’ve used ever. It’s not a perfect phone; it’s got a few shortcomings too (yeah, that resolution was a bummer) but over-all, I’m pretty impressed with the handset. With a suggested retail price of Php35,000 it’s actually right within the range of all other flagship smartphones out there.

HTC Touch HD launched and priced
HTC Wildfire First Impressions
HTC Desire S coming in at Php25,990

156 Responses to “HTC Desire HD Review”

  1. daniel says:

    sayang hindi AMOLED… da best na sana hahaha
    –for sure ang mahal nyan. basta HTC.
    >> bday ko nung december 7 at ang ulam ay ampalaya… baka gusto nyo naman ako bigyan ng bagong cellphone kahit ano basta gumagana ! hehehe!

  2. john says:

    saan merong desire hd with 35k SRP??? htc concept store declares a 37k and up with a jan release….

  3. Im l0oking forward to have my n0kia n8 before this year ends or archos 10.1 tablet,d ko ma afford ang price ng HTC DESIRE HD kc,hehehe

  4. McSalamanca says:

    Hi Yuga. I was wondering if, by any chance, would you be doing a comparison of all the major android phones that have come out this year–including the local ones? :)

  5. Marvin paul says:

    abe, anong mas maganda.. Htc desire HD or HTC HD7? I know there difference, which u prefer? Nid an answer thanks!!

  6. Mark
    Twitter: mckewlit
    says:

    @ Marvin Paul – ako na sasagot, go for HTC DESIRE HD! HD 7 is a replica of Iphone (IN MANY WAYS!!!) It all depends on Zune program now same as Iphone with Itunes. It has NO micro sd card slot, so you have to manage whatever memory you have on the phone. There’s no flash player so you can’t expect to see flash animation while browsing. Silverlight isn’t even there so online radio streaming is a no-go. No DiVX support too, pretty much stuck with MP4 then. No copy/paste feature yet… maybe to be updated on the future. No internet tethering (well not useful anyway unless you have an Ipod, Ipad, Galaxy Tab, laptop and similar wi-fi enabled devices) But here’s the biggest deal breaker NO BLUETOOTH FILE TRANSFER! So expect your friends’ eyes rolling when you can’t even bluetooth that darn picture of them that you’ve taken from yer phone. Do I hear Iphone? DO I HEAR IPHONE?!!!!!

    Screw WINDOWS 7 MOBILE! Finally they’ve decided to put a rope on their neck. Tsk.. tsk… But then again it’s up to you to decide “, good luck!

  7. pupuboy says:

    hopefully i could get dis phone dis christmas been stalking dis phone for 3 mos now hayy tgal lumabas sana worth it ang paghintay ko…

  8. 3739
    Twitter: iam3739
    says:

    Battery life. =(

    Sir Yuga, how is the screen for reading ebooks? Would it suffice?

  9. adrian says:

    medyo mahal yung price.

  10. Ebengt0t says:

    I agree with mark…

    H0w can Microsoft have the guts to c0me up with s0mething that lack what people was l0oking for to a smarthphone.

  11. totong says:

    may nakita na ko sa megamall nito at P39,990.00 available na last week pa.

  12. tin says:

    i went to htc @ north edsa just yesterday, still unavailable… guess i’ll have to wait until my birthday on january…hope i would cost less to… should i wait, or should i settle for an iphone4???

  13. john says:

    @totong: mukhang sa lahat ng stores na meron na ganito yung price I can only haggle at 39k which is tolerable but im so concerned with the warranty so I guess i’ll wait for the official release

  14. edson says:

    swap na lang sa moto droid x, hindi ko kasi magamit dito e…

  15. Fleeb says:

    @Daniel, super AMOLED is a proprietary display technology of Samsung. HTC cannot just use it at will.

  16. Eric says:

    @ Marvin Paul – I plan to get the Desire HD for Christmas, but if it’s not out yet I’ll probably get the HD7 as a second option. Right now I think the Desire HD is the better phone since you know exactly what you’ll be getting feature-wise. The HD7 meanwhile lacks a lot of key-features compared to android and ios phones, but you’re gambling that Microsoft’s updates will bring it to par. MS already has 2 massive updates planned for January and February. The gamble here is that since MS doesn’t allow companies to customize WP7 phones, then firmware updates should be more immediate, unlike some Android phones who are still waiting for the Froyo upgrade. It’ll probably takes another 6 months before current phones can be upgraded to Honeycomb, but that’s just my take on things.

  17. junulrik says:

    just got htc desire hd for 810 sgd about 27K pesos.. super good .. syang nga lng di AMOLED ang screen.. but screen still superb.. this is better than any windows 7 phone… highly recommended…

  18. junulrik says:

    i bought my htc desire hd at 27k pesos in singapore 3 days ago. it is so so good…
    i asked one shop here in manila omg the price is 37k pesos..

  19. jamecs says:

    @junulrik – where did you buy in sing? does it come with an international warranty? any freebies?

  20. razorous
    Twitter: razorous
    says:

    I wish it had a front facing camera for video calls..

  21. junulrik says:

    i got my htd desire hd at mobilesquare in far east mall.. local warranty only in singapore..

  22. omixam says:

    @totong: where exactly in mega did u see this? im waiting for this fone for like, forever. :) balak ko nga sana blackberry torch na pula ung bbilhin ko e. kaso i saw ur comment and u said sa mega nga. :)

  23. J.R. Francisco says:

    For the ones who bought their Desire HD in Singapore, would they be exactly the same model/version that will be released here? I’ve heard that for some gadgets differ in versions depending on the region? Thanks in advance!

  24. Shellcourt says:

    I got mine from Singapore last friday. Price is already SGD 830 (roughly Php 28k), but still way cheaper than local prices. Check out this site http://www.mobilesquare.com.sg/ or you may call them +65 67333747

    Sobrang sulit!!! Go get one now. My problem now is, I could not yet find a jelly case for my HD.

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