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HTC Desire S review

Can HTC's first Android 2.3 smartphone live up to its blockbusting heritage?

Our Score 4

Last reviewed: 2011-03-29March 29th

htc-desire-s

The definitive HTC Desire S review

All things must come to an end (or at least be supplanted by something new). The HTC Desire S has arrived to take over from its predecessor in the Android race.

In many ways, it's quite similar. We'll still be looking at a 3.7-inch 480 x 800 screen, Android overlaid with HTC's Sense UI and a 1GHz processor. However, HTC hasn't totally rested on its laurels.

You can check out TechRadar's video review of the HTC Desire S

The RAM is increased for the upgraded Android 2.3, there's now 1GB of built-in memory and it's made with a premium aluminium unibody shell.

HTC desire s

The only real disappointment from a spec point of view is that 1GHz processor – it's single-core, while its competitors slowly move to dual-core for the higher-end phones, such as the Samsung Galaxy S2.

While it lacks the processing grunt of the LG Optimus 2X, we commented in our review of that phone that the Android experience wasn't actually made any faster or smoother than the original Desire by the addition of Nvidia's dual-core Tegra 2, so it'll be interesting to see if it can be as slick as ever on one core.

HTC desire s

The Desire S also brings improvements in video recording, with 720p HD capture now supported, though the sensor stays at five megapixels.

The wireless technology has also had a welcome boost, with 14.4Mbps HSDPA 3G broadband and Wi-Fi 802.11n support both added.

The battery is also slightly larger (up to 1450mAh, which is still smaller than a lot of the competition), though HTC is claiming as much as a 20 per cent increase in standby and talk time.

HTC desire s

It's available SIM-free for a little over £400, but looks set to be free on contract from around £35.

We're told the retail version will ship with a microSD card, but the size will vary between retailers – 4GB looks set to be the average.

The HTC Desire S is classy. The original Desire was incredibly well built, but HTC is taking things to another level recently. The Desire S features a unibody aluminium shell that brings Apple to mind, but bizarrely not the iPhone.

HTC desire s

The iPhone 4's glass and steel design is flashy and eye-catching, but something like the MacBook Pro's unibody build is more discreet, though no less impressive. It's the latter that the Desire S brings to mind, being made with a similar construction process that's resulted in the same kind of gentle angles along the edge.

There's a little bit of cheating going on, because the area around the camera and the slide-off panel on the bottom are both plastic, but that doesn't even come close to marring the overall quality. It's simply a stunningly made handset as far as basic build quality goes.

HTC desire s

More than anything, it's comfortable to hold, and feels solid. There a small amount of give on the back, and you can hear it tapping the battery if you press your finger against it, but there's no give in the device otherwise – it lives up to its billing as a solid lump of metal.

HTC desire s

Looking at the front, the most obvious change is the loss of physical buttons and optical trackpad. While real buttons can be a nice thing to have, the optical trackpad won't be missed. More precise text editing is now built into the OS, making it redundant, and losing it has meant HTC could shave a little off the device's height.

It's now 60 x 115 x 11.6mm, and weighs in at a middle-of-the-road 130g. While 11.6mm isn't hugely thick, it's certainly lagging behind in the skinny war going on between Apple, Samsung and Sony Ericsson. Maybe HTC's got it right, though – let them worry about fitting the battery in, and just make perfectly good normal phones.

The Desire S doesn't feel thick – it's a nice size in the hand, and the curved sides make it quite comfortable to hold.

HTC desire s

The screen retains its 3.7-inch size and 480 x 800 resolution with Super LCD technology. The display is noticeably closer to the glass than the original Desire. It doesn't quite match the iPhone 4's printed-on-the-glass effect, but compared to the original it's certainly an improvement.

When we took the Desire S and original Desire out into the sun together, we actually found the new handset slightly harder to see with them both set to the highest brightness levels. It wasn't a major difference, but it was particularly noticeable when viewing from off-centre - which might be a big turn off for some.

Speaking of which, viewing angles are excellent, just as they were on the Desire S's predecessor. The screen in general is vibrant and clear, with text easily legible.

The touch-sensitive Android buttons (Home, Menu, Back and Search) are softly backlit, and give of a jolt of haptic feedback when pressed.

HTC desire s

At the top of the phone are the wide earpiece and the new front-facing camera. The camera's only VGA, which will probably suffice for most people.

HTC desire s

On the device's left-hand side are a silver volume rocker and a micro-USB port for charging and connecting to a PC.

HTC desire s: design and handling

On the top sit the 3.5mm headphone port and the Lock key, which is in a nicely easy-to-reach spot (unlike, say, the HTC 7 Trophy).

HTC desire s

On the back is the five-megapixel camera's lens, with the LED flash and loudspeaker grille next to it. This plastic appears to house the Wi-Fi antenna, which will become a BIG talking point later on in the review.

HTC desire s

The bottom is a slide-off panel that offers access to the SIM card slot, microSD card slot and battery. The way it curves around the phone (the Desire S still has HTC's trademark lip at the bottom) means you can end up trying to push off against your own hand, inadvertently holding it in place.

HTC desire s

Once you get it off, you'll see a couple of connections underneath. The last time we saw something like this was the Palm Pre 2, so we got excited that there might be secret wireless power capabilities in the Desire S.

There isn't. The slide-off panel is actually part of the antenna assembly, and removing it breaks the connection, meaning you'll have no phone signal while it's off.

With it off, you can get to the battery and card slots by opening a little flip-open panel. It all feels slightly over-engineered, as though HTC has employed Brains from Thunderbirds to design the battery compartment while he was high on model glue.

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Your comments (14) Click to add a new comment

angerz


August 15th

14. I've just got three new updates for my Desire S just now but I don't no what there for? One said an application enchantment...? But which one. Has anyone got the same?

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shanewarner


May 27th

13. Most of almost Cell Phones which are belongs to HTC excellent features outstanding handset but i like old one

http://www.cellhub.com/t-mobile-cell-phones/htc-mytouch-4g-black.html

HTC mytouch 4g

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krasi


April 25th

12. Hi,

About the WiFi issue - I've noticed that other (if not all) HTC phones have the same issue with the WiFi antenna - it drops the signal when it's covered. This is confirmed for HTC Wildfire and HTC Desire HD (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2SB5rQTMyY)

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lspec


April 14th

11. Having read some negative revieews on the Desire S thaught I would write a small review, my first one so bare with me. I got my Desire S on upgrade from a Desire. I went for an Experia Play first but after 48Hrs of force closes, unpredictable PS game controls and a poor screen in sunlight I went back to HTC.

Well the Desire S in a nutshell a upgraded Desire (shocker) but in my opinion HTC have done an all round good job. They have taken a a great phone and tweaked it without going over the top.

The single aluminum chasis is nice and tactile, they have removed the physical buttons for home, menu search and back these are now touch sensitive. I admit I was concerned I would miss the physical buttons but the touch ones work just fine.

I have read some reviews that said the screen was worse than the Desire in Sunlight but I have found it is much improved, although it still isn't at the same level as an Iphone 4. It comes with 2.3 and this with the new processor makes this phone quick and response and the Sense UI is a slick as ever.

HTC has included Location on the phone there own mapping software which works offline, integrates with google maps and has a nice sat-nav interface. I have used it for a couple of jounrneys and found it accurate, the GPS seems to fix quicker than the old Desire and the battery drain is less.

The Battery issue which to be honest was pretty bad on the origonal Desire is much improved its a shame the charging point is now on the left side of the phone meaning my dock will now not work but I can live with that.

Best of all is the nearly 1GB of internal memory now along with the SD card. No more having to juggle apps to free up space, and the ability to hot swap SD/SIM is useful

All in all HTC have done a good job, taking a good phone and making it a whole lot better

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trumpetjedi8378


April 13th

10. Looks like the Nexus One...

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jbendotnet


April 8th

9. Considering getting one of these.

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pj81worcs


April 3rd

8. The old desire records 720p video provided you have a high enough class SD card and update to froyo

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dickson123


April 2nd

7. Zero incentive to upgrade from the original Desire, don't think I could downgrade to LCD after AMOLED. Rooted and running stock gingerbread, it's fast and battery life exceeds a day's use.

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bradavon


March 30th

6. @ morganeverett: Oops, please see below.

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bradavon


March 30th

5. Desire HD only has a 1200mAh battery, which is the same as the original Wildfire and sligtly less than the Wildfire S. It's also roughly 200mAh less tham the Desire/Desire S.

Fair enough though if real world values map out battery life to be roughly a day for all these phones.

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meesterboom


March 30th

4. Flip me, it looks exactly the same design wise as the nexus one! Also made by HTC

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morganeverett


March 30th

3. Bradavon:

I own a Desire HD-on which I'm typing this message, in fact-and can tell you that the battery life is perfectly sufficient to get through the day, which seems to be the accepted minimum for smartphones. I wouldn't be so hasty to dismiss it.

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bradavon


March 29th

2. Is HTC has followed Windows OEMs in filling their phones with lots of bloatware. It's quite bad on the Desire but here it just looks ridiculous. Two twitter apps, two (Google Maps and Navigation are the same app) mapping apps is absurd.

Stuff like Latitude should be left off, for people to install it if they really want to.

Of the 2011 HTC range, I'd probably get the Incredible S. It's got a better camera and is slightly larger. Android 2.3 is going to come to it some point. The Desire HD's battery is too poor to be considered.

That said, in 2010 I went for the Desire, in 2011 I'd go for the Samsung Galaxy S2. It's just simply superior. HTC Sense is excellent but it's not "that" good it's worth getting an inferior phone for.

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bradavon


March 29th

1. Is the original Desire an AMOLED or LCD model? If it's the former, it could explain the difference in screen brightness outside. The Desire S (like later Desire's) is LCD.

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HTC Desire S

HTC Desire S
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Product Summary

Desire S

For

>

Fast operation

>

Slick UI

>

Excellent cloud integration

>

Stunning design

>

Strong stills camera

Against

>

Wi-Fi antenna issue

>

Frequently slow notifications bar

>

Stuttery HD video recording

>

Not cheap for its specs

>

Still some Android UI issues

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