Thursday, March 18, 2010

HTC Desire vs Apple iPhone 3GS vs Nokia N900

This infallibly has to be the battle of the titans in the phone globe? FoneHome.co.uk have posted an article where one of their stay has compared all three phones.

Most articles I’ve seen like this are normally biased towards a strict manufacturer or phone but I’d say that this is perfectly a fair comparison.

Read on for a few snippets:

In interface provisions

The iPhone famously has the easiest smartphone interface in the real estate, but we’re often left hankering after more customisation, which is offered by Maemo and Android.

Both give you control over a handful of home screens, what one. you can populate with all sorts of neat little shortcuts and widgets. The sheer flexibility of Android wins out for us though, with so a great deal of additional potential offered in app form.

Desktop replacement apps let you completely make some ~ in. the way your phone works – you can even design your acknowledge interface with Sweeter Home. We’re not quite that ambitious, except it wins the HTC Desire lots of points.

Winner – HTC Desire

For suffusion browsing

There’s fierce sword clashing going on here. The Apple iPhone offers a imaginary control interface, with pinch zooming still feeling better than anywhere otherwise here. Gliding around web sites is a dream, and the practical keyboard gets pretty close to a full Qwerty for typing in those textile fabric addresses. There’s one major boo-boo though – no flash favor.

The Nokia N900 boasts full flash, which is still a scarcity on mobile devices, but because of its resistive touchscreen, browsing is quite a different experience. No multitouch features and a less casual be perceived , thanks to the pressure you have to apply with your handle, start swaying the balance back in the Apple iPhone’s favour.

Enter the HTC Desire, oblation the best of both worlds – sort of. It doesn’t require full flash, but its mobile version of Flash 10.1 is a dutiful compromise. The superb capacitive touchscreen and multitouch functionality make casual browsing a ravishment too.

Winner – HTC Desire

I must say, coming from a consummate lover of Nokia I can see that the writer does be assured of what he’s talking about in the terms of things that Nokia devices endeavor their users. This is why I find the article quite a honest “test” when comparing all three phones.

Now I’d allude to reading the rest of the article to see how the Desire fared in other ways…

[Via http://prresblog.wordpress.com]

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