Mobile World Congress - Android Dominates Day 1
HTC One X: This is a killer phone. The One X features the Tegra 3
quad-core processor. It has four 1.5GHz main cores and a secondary core for low-power tasks. It boasts a 4.7-inch Super LCD display with 1280 x 720 pixels for full HD resolution. The 8-megapixel camera is aided by an ImageChip to help process images faster. This phone can take pictures once every 0.7 seconds. It comes with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich and Sense 4.0 from HTC. It's all encased in a creamy, polycarbonate shell that's tough-as-nails and not too hard on the eyes, either. HTC has integrated its Beats Audio software across all audio applications, so even Slacker and Pandora can take advantage of the One X's advanced sound-processing software. This phone will land in the U.S. in April with support for AT&T's LTE 4G network, but loses the Tegra 3 and substitutes a SnapDragon S4 processor instead.
HTC One S: This is also a killer phone, but not quite so killer as the One X. The display drops down to 4.3 inches and qHD (960 x 540) resolution, it has a dual-core SnapDragon S4 processor, and substitutes plasma-coated aluminum for the One X's polycarbonate shell. It has the same camera and same software as the One X. The good news is that the One S will debut on
T-Mobile's network in the coming months with support for 42Mbps HSPA+.
Huawei Ascend D Quad: This phone has one of the worst names ever given to an Android 4.0 device, but that's not stopping Huawei from crowing about its custom-built, quad-core engine.
Huawei claims that the Ascend D Quad is the fastest smartphone ever built. The company is using its own processor --rather than one from Nvidia or Qualcomm. Other features include a 4.5-inch 1280 x 720 HD display, 8-megapixel camera with 1080p HD video capture, and a 1.3-megapixel user-facing camera for those video chats. Huawei plans to introduce several variants of this phone in a number of markets during the second quarter.
Completely absent? Smartphones running Microsoft's Windows Phone platform.
And when Microsoft finally releases a real version of Windows 8 ... what will it look like? More like Android and iOS? Less like current Windows? The era of super-stable operating systems is upon us.
And in other news:
Adobe Launches Photoshop Touch for iPad And it's only $9.99! Who was it here that that said you couldn't run Photoshop on a tablet or smart phone? Every software maker out there will be porting their programs over for tablets and smart phones (and then some).
The trend of smaller, faster, computers and more stable operating systems is underway. Soon will be the day when kids see the old desktop tower PC in the corner of the basement and laugh. My original post 1 year and 4 months ago I said:
This is a major game-changer folks. The writing is on the wall. Will this "kill" the PC? Not today or tomorrow. In 3 to 5 years? It could. It will certainly significantly reduce the number of PC's in my client area which will reduce the need for me and thus my business will suffer.
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