At the request of Ampburner
Review of the HTC Hero
By Shakey
I’ve always wanted a HTC handset as I thought they were a good blend of technology and design. I’m not a fan of the iPhone but I won’t get sidetracked now. When I heard about the HTC Hero back in June I figured I would get it on my network (T-Mobile UK) or change if I needed to (Vodafone had secured the HTC Magic)
The phone is available on contract (in the UK) with Orange and T-Mobile. Both offer pretty good line rental packages but the unlimited data usage (subject to AUP –they are everywhere now!) from T-Mobile would make me suggest T-Mo to any potential handset owners.
-Out of the box
When the phone arrived I took the delivery envelope/bag in hand and wandered over to my desk (from that point on I did absolutely nothing at work – so no change really but this time I was wasting time with a new gadget) The bag felt very light and the box was so small I feared that I was getting worked up for nothing. This was just from previous comparison to Nokia boxes which are huge and come with weights in them.
In the box I received
Handset
Battery
Charger (with USB cable – unfortunately some kind of proprietary connection though )
http://picasaweb.goo...feat=directlink3.5mm Headphones (3.5mm is the standard audio jack)
Oh, and a short intro-to-your phone thingy
-Powering Up
Turning the phone on for the first time it seemed to take an age to start up. Once it was up and running there was a tutorial to show you how to use the onscreen keyboard and the predictive texting thing, which I’ve been told is similar to the iPhone. It will make suggestions to finish words and easily allow you to add words to the dictionary.
Like the iPhone it has a QWERTY touchscreen keypad which pops up when needed.
There is a pretty cool function where is vibrates as you type so that you can feel if it has registered your press. Is that haptic feedback?
Then you have the Google account registration thing so that it will check your Gmail and Gcalendar and Gcontacts etc. I also set up my work email address on the Microsoft exchange thing so my work calendar is integrated too for work calls and meetings.
Android is pretty straightforward and the Sense UI is a mix of a ‘normal OS’ and the iPhone one. There are icons to select for programs but there are other menu buttons and you can access settings and such quite easily. You can just drag and drop the position of widgets and icons as you wish.
You can of course disable the Sense UI and use the standard android OS view
With the trackball and the touchscreen you can use the screen for very large/general movements and then scroll around with the trackball or select a small hyperlink/fine movement using the trackball.
-Average use
You slide your finger/thumb across the screen to navigate the 5 ‘panes’ that can display info in the form of widgets or just have icons for programs. I have my work emails displayed by the email widget and then I have a program that tells me the service available on the tube, delays, suspensions etc
To change them you can select the + sign and add it in and to get rid of them you just hold down on them and then you can move them or delete them from the screen.
I use this to check work emails and Gmail when out and about. When in the office/home I turn on WiFi and enjoy the faster connections although the handset supports HSPA (whichever acronym is the best one) and I’ve found uploading images to picasa (google image thing) etc v.easy and quick.
-Android Store
Once you have the phone running anc charged one of the first things youll do is try your hardest to fill it up with junk. Happily the android store is more than willing to help. I’m not sure of any QA/QC so there is a lot of crap on there and also a lot of very similar programs.
I have on my handset
TasKiller (to shut off programs running in the background)
chompSMS (I didn’t realise but it makes the texts look like iPhone conversations bubble things)
Battery widget (allows you to turn on/off GPS and WiFi quickly and easily)
Wikimobile (just like Wikipedia but just no images at all, a great prog for pub arguments)
Beeb player (visually it’s not great but you can hear the audio just great – good for University Challenge, nobody on that program is a looker so the blurriness is a godsend

)
Robo defense (you HAVE to have at least one tower defence game on the handset, I think it is a clause of the ownership agreement)
Solitaire (to waste even more time)
TubeStatus (quicker and easier than going to TFL.gov.uk on WAP)
-My Experience
I have all five panes full of stuff, some crap, some useful and I’ve not encountered the ‘lag’ that other users report. I use google maps and check where I am and more importantly which way I’m facing (it has a digital compass

)
Now that I actually let it rest and I’m not constantly downloading, the battery will happily last a whole day if not half of the next. It will need regular charging but I hope to give it a good few charge cycles and hope that the battery keeps its charge better.
The screen is very clear and is cleaned very easily. I just put it in my pocket and when I nect take it out the screen is clean and there are no smudges. I might get one of those plastic sticky things to stop scratches though.
-Downsides
The camera although it is 5MP really is a bit crap. There is video and you can upload straight to Youtube I believe, but I haven’t found the quality to be great. My last phone was an N95 and the 5MP camera on that was great. On the HTC Hero there is no macro setting, night setting etc. Although I’m sure it can be added later or there will be an app for it on the store I guess.
When on the phone the screen turns off, to access it you need to push a button, as I normally press the call end button to access the screen when its asleep I have hung up on people like an eejit before.
I’ve just got an app that should ‘wake it up’ in a call if I shake it a bit. I need to try it out though.
At first the battery didn’t last long at all. But I was playing with it 24/7
Overall Rating: 4/5 stars
If anyone has any particular questions I’ll check back and see if I can answer them
sweet review 
I'm wondering which you prefer, the Sense UI, or the standard Android one?
I've heard that the sense ui is nice and slick, but can be laggy at times because it has a tendency to 'push the device CPU to it's limits'. I'm wondering if this is true, and if it's a problem at all. Any thoughts on that?
personally Im going to purchase a Palm Pre when the GSM version gets released in Europe, I'll definitely post a review 
I use the SenseUI and I like it as i like the screen animations and transitions.
I've not experienced any lag but I have been careful to limit the number of running apps
Edited by Shakey, 15 August 2009 - 01:33 PM.