Posts Tagged ‘sensor’
Hands-on with HTC Aria
First impression of the Aria is that it’s small. Small and very solid. It has the traditional build quality of an HTC handset (think Nexus One, Desire, etc.) and feels heavy in your hand. The screen itself was nice and bright in the dimly lit room, and the physical controls on the handset itself were easy to reach and responsive. HTC Aria has a 600Mhz processor, it runs Eclair and Sense very well with no real discernible lag. If AT&T decides to upgrade the OS to Froyo in the future, this thing will scream.
Specifications:
If you liked this post, Buy Me a BeerNetwork: 3G, EDGE, GPRS, GSM, HSDPA (3G)
Service: 850, 900, 1800, 1900
Bluetooth: v2.1 with A2DP
USB: MicroUSB v2.0
Display: Color TFT capacitive touchscreen
Display Dimensions: 3.2 in.
Display Resolution: 320 x 480 pixels
Internal Memory: 384MB
Battery: Standard battery, Li-Ion 1200 mAh
Standby Time: 372 hours
Talk Time: 6 hours
Camera: 5 megapixels
Max Resolution: 2592×1944 pixels
Other Features: Android OS, v2.1 (Eclair), Qualcomm MSM 7227 600MHz, Dedicated search key, A-GPS support, 3.5 mm audio jack, Accelerometer sensor auto rotation, Proximity sensor, Optical trackpad, Touch sensitive controls, HTC Sense UI, Geo-tagging
HTC Touch Pro2 proximity sensor demo
The HTC Touch Pro 2 is among the very few Windows Mobile device that has a proximity sensor (the other being the LG Incite). The purpose for the proximity sensor is to turn off the display when you’re on a call to conserve battery. Then, when you pull the phone away from your face, the screen goes back on so that you can view you calendar, add another caller, etc.













































