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Hands-on with the HTC Desire from U.S. Cellular

By | August 26, 2010, 11:26pm PDT

Summary: U.S. Cellular was successful in securing the excellent HTC Desire Android device for the US market. The form factor is great and the device should do very well at U.S. Cellular.

I live in a rather heavily occupied region of Western Washington where all four of the major US wireless carriers typically have decent coverage. Thus, it is rare that I get the chance to think much about and experience those services provided by some of the larger regional carriers where you can see some fantastic plan offerings and decent hardware. We usually see more compelling plans and additional bonus offers, but the phone hardware generally lags behind what we see on the four major carriers. Lately though, the hardware available from these regional carriers is getting better and better and today we actually see the release of an HTC Android device that has not appeared on any of the four major carriers in the US. The HTC Desire is available in Europe and other areas of the world in GSM form so I actually was a bit surprised to see a CDMA variant of the device launch on a regional carrier here in the US. What’s funny is that the HTC Desire’s ROM is one of those I have loaded on my Google Nexus One so it was great to finally get some hands-on time with an actual HTC Desire device. Check out my image gallery with a few photos of the HTC Desire and Google Nexus One, my video below walking through a few aspects of the device, and my thoughts after using the HTC Desire for several days.


Image Gallery: Check out some photos of the HTC Desire on U.S. Cellular. Image Gallery: HTC Desire in hand Image Gallery: Branding on the HTC Desire

Who is U.S. Cellular?

U.S. Cellular was founded in 1983 and currently has a reported 6.2 million customers throughout states in the Pacific Northwest, Midwest, East, and Northeast. Their wireless technology is based on CDMA and EVDO so they support roaming on other carriers and my research shows they have agreements with Verizon. You need to actually live in a service activation area to sign up for U.S. Cellular and then I believe you can roam after that, but there may be additional costs. There are several rural areas of Washington State that are covered by U.S. Cellular, but for most of my evaluation period I was roaming.

If you are looking for something different than one of the four typical large US carriers, then I recommend you check out the U.S. Cellular Why Choose U.S. Cellular? page that lists several of the benefits of this carrier. These include free incoming calls, texts, and pictures, free battery swap for dead batteries, and free overage protection so you don’t have to worry about getting hit with outlandish bills in the future.

In the box and first impressions

The HTC Desire comes in a fairly typical solidly built white cardboard box that we have seen from HTC before, similar to the Google Nexus One, with the Desire shown in full color on the front and stats on the back. Inside the box you will find the Desire, battery, 8GB microSD card, wired stereo headset, USB cable, and USB A/C adapter along with a Quick Start Guide and some other pamphlets.

The HTC Desire feels fantastic in your hand and reminds me a lot of the Google Nexus One. It is not too wide, is rock solid, has great hardware buttons, and a beautiful display. If you are a U.S. Cellular customer then I think there is no question this is a device you need to go check out now.

Specifications

Specifications for the HTC Desire include the following:

  • Android 2.1 with HTC Sense user interface
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 1GHz processor
  • CDMA 2000 1xRTT/EVDO 800/1900 MHz
  • 512MB ROM and 512MB RAM
  • 3.7 inch WVGA (800×480) capacitive LCD touch display
  • Integrated microSD card (8GB included)
  • 5 megapixel camera with flash
  • Proximity sensor, light sensor and digital compass
  • Integrated A-GPS
  • Wi-Fi (802.11 b/g/n)
  • Bluetooth 2.1
  • 1400 mAh battery
  • 3.5 mm headset jack
  • Dimensions: 4.7 x 2.4 x 0.47 inches and 4.76 ounces

As you can see, these specifications are almost the same as the Google Nexus One with the dimensions almost the same as well. The LCD display is quite viewable outside and I personally like the physical hardware buttons much more than the capacitive touch ones on the Nexus One.

Walk around the hardware

The front of the HTC Desire is dominated by the 3.7 inch touchscreen LCD display and it looks great on the device. The device is narrow compared to some of the newer and larger Android devices and is quite pocketable. There are three hardware buttons on the bottom below the display, including one for Home, Menu, and a combined one for Back and Search. There is an optical trackball in the center between the buttons, but I am not really sold on its functionality and think I prefer the Nexus One physical trackball.

There is nothing on the right side while there is a large volume button on the left side. A microUSB port and microphone are found on the bottom while the power button and 3.5mm headset jack are located on the top. A 5 megapixel camera and light are placed on the upper center of the back.

The HTC Desire is mostly covered in soft touch material and I cannot get over how great the device feels in your hand.

Walk through the software and services

The HTC Desire is preloaded with the HTC experience that goes much deeper than just the user interface elements. You will find utilities, widgets, and applications from HTC on the Desire. The Desire comes with Android 2.1 out of the box and it is possible an update to 2.2 may come in the future, but no official word has been provided yet.

In addition to all the great Android features such as Google Maps Navigation, social networking apps, Quickoffice viewer, and more you will find a few U.S. Cellular apps and services loaded up on the Desire. Unlike some other carriers, they do not load up a ton of junk and include My Contacts Backup, City ID, Tone Room Deluxe, and Your Navigation Deluxe. Tone Room Deluxe is their ringtone web service. Your Navigator Deluxe is a GPS navigation solution provided by TeleNav. This is the same as Sprint Navigation and AT&T Navigator and like Sprint’s deal it is completely FREE on the HTC Desire on U.S. Cellular. In my experiences, the TeleNav solution is more powerful and capable than the Google Maps Navigation service and since it is available for free you cannot go wrong using whatever works best for you.

Pricing and availability

The HTC Desire is available now from U.S. Cellular for $199.95 after $70 mail-in rebate and 2-year committment. Their Android data plans are $30 for data and $55 for data and tethering (5GB limit), with a voice plan. Voice plans start as low as $39.99 for 450 minutes up to $69.99 for unlimited national plan minutes. There are several plan options and their rates are very competitive.

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Topics

Matthew Miller started using a Pilot 1000 in 1997 and has been writing news, reviews, and opinion pieces ever since.

Disclosure

Matthew Miller

Matthew is a professional naval architect by day and a mobile gadget freak at all other times. He purchases his own devices and then sells them on eBay or Craigslist to buy more. Many other devices are sent for review on a 30-day loaner basis and then returned to the carrier or manufacturer. If any are provided as “long term loaner units” this will be clearly disclosed in his reviews.

Biography

Matthew Miller

Matthew Miller started using a mobile devices in 1997 and has been writing news, reviews, and opinion pieces ever since. He is a co-host with GigaOM's Kevin Tofel on the MobileTechRoundup podcast and an author of three Wiley Companion series books. Matthew started using mobile devices with a US Robotics Pilot 1000 and has owned over 125 different devices running Palm, Linux, Symbian, Newton, BlackBerry, iOS, Android, webOS, Windows Mobile, and Windows Phone operating systems. His current collection includes an HTC Radar 4G, Dell Venue Pro, Apple iPad 2, HTC Flyer, Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Nokia N9, Apple iPhone 4S, MacBook Pro, and many more, along with tons of accessories and classic devices like the Apple Newton MessagePad 2100 and Sony CLIE UX50. Matthew can be found on various discussion forums under the user name of "palmsolo".
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Desire
The Management consultant 28th Aug 2010
I have a pay as you go Desire.This is a great phone.its updated constantly and has most apps you find on IPhone...If you can't get one in your sate get one from Europe for around ?350.Similar to the Evo and Nexus.
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Last paragraph says, "...available now from U.S. Cellular for $xx.xx." How much is xx?
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Contributr
Sorry, was not known at the time of publishing
palmsolo (aka Matthew Miller) 27th Aug 2010
@jhay777@... Sorry, I couldn't get this from my contact and had to wait until the Desire site went live. I updated my post now with the price. Thanks for reading.
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I feel like pricing is about the same as what Verizon charges, and then a little bit:

For 89.98 (my usual monthly phone bill from Verizon... bottom line value that I pay) I get 450 minutes (basic nationwide talk plan), 500 text messages + 10 PIX messages + free messages to verizon customers (the only people I text anyhow), unlimited data + most importantly NO TETHERING RESTRICTIONS OR FEES! (I use an OpenVPN solution in combination with azilink and USB debugging)

A plan that would be comparable to my plan would be 450 minutes @39.99 + 55$ for data/tethering = 95.99/month + taxes. My 89.98 is with taxes and directly off of my phone bill from this month, so with tax I'd be paying 102.70 (sales tax is 7% in Philadelphia), the difference would be about 13 bucks. The only big argument I can see for it would be if you texted a lot, even then VZW's unlimited text would be $10.70 more (with tax) leaving you at a difference of 2$.
How about pay as you go deals? i would like to think Evo 4g shall certainly out perform it and even give tough competition Iphone 4g, argg but might need to wait for that to release. I think you can get HTC Desire for about $500 dollars cash? I like the fact it got a cool talk time, 6 hours 40 minutes on 2g and 6 hours 30 minutes on 3g.
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Desire
The Management consultant 28th Aug 2010
I have a pay as you go Desire.This is a great phone.its updated constantly and has most apps you find on IPhone...If you can't get one in your sate get one from Europe for around ?350.Similar to the Evo and Nexus.

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