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Category: HTC HD mobiles

The HTC HD2 extended battery is extremely useful, horribly ugly

One of the HTC HD2’s shining achievements as a smartphone is its super-slim profile. It packs in a veritable cornucopia of high-end mobile hardware into a package that’s thinner than an iPhone. There’s GPS, WiFi, 3G data, 5-megapixel autofocus camera (with flash), and a huge 4.3-inch capacitive touchscreen – all wrapped in a slick body trimmed in soft-touch rubber and metal. But, it’s a battery hog. That’s where the extended batter you see here comes into play. The only downside? It’s huge, and ugly, and huge.

The extended battery offers your HTC HD2 a whopping  2300mAh of battery power. That should be more than enough juice to get you through a day of abusively heavy web surfing, video watching, and emailing – that or a couple/few days of moderate use. It even has a kickstand built into it for watching videos and whatnot.

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Android display battle: In the end, there can be only One

It’s not everyday you get to see six (6!) Android devices pitted against each other in a display-quality grudge match. No, not that sensor sensitivity nonsense again, rather, just a plain ol’ video playback comparison for your subjective observations. Fortunately, the Android-loving kids over at HDBlog shot a video of the MyTouch 3G, HTC Hero, Motorola Milestone / Droid, Acer Liquid, Nexus One, and Samsung Galaxy (laid out clockwise in the image above). In our opinion, the Nexus One with its 3.7-inch AMOLED display packing a 800 x 480 pixel resolution comes out on top with the best overall image (though slightly on the red end of the color spectrum) — good thing the video wasn’t shot outdoors where that AMOLED is all but unreadable. But hey, that’s our opinion, form your own in the video after the break.

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Nexus One’s big update can be had without the wait

Android’s devised one of the slickest, most widely-deployed systems for delivering over-the-air operating system updates to smartphones, but there’s a problem: you’ve got to wait until your carrier (or manufacturer) blesses you with them. They’re typically deployed in rolling batches so that it’s easier for the company to do one final test of the code’s veracity and limit potential damage before sending it to a wider audience — but where there’s a will, there’s a way, right? As is often the case with these things, some folks have found a way to get the Nexus One’s glorious new multitouch code on the phone before Google’s willing to give it to you, and for anyone who’s done this before, it’s a fairly standard-issue procedure: copy the update to the root of your microSD card, reboot into recovery mode, and apply the binary. We’ve tested the procedure and it works like a champ, so if you’re feeling impatient, go ahead and pull the trigger — we’re going to go out on a limb here and say that the risk of bricking is pretty low.

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HTC Droid Eris Cell Phone Review–An Odd Package

The HTC Droid Eris cell phone uses the Google Android (Cupcake) operating system in tandem with a Qualcomm® MSM7600™ processor and two hundred eighty eight megs of RAM.  It has a 3.2 inch touch screen, email client,  a battery that supports two hundred and fourteen minutes of talk time, a speakerphone, a five megapixel auto focus camera, support for a variety of audio and video files,  Bluetooth connectivity, a microSD card slot, trackball and more.

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