Archive for November 27th, 2009

HTC Hero / Eris mega faceoff on video

Friday, November 27th, 2009

at this time that we’ve got the DROID ERIS in the mix, we’re up to our ears in HTC Hero-derivative devices. We decided to sit the whole crew (GSM, Sprint and Verizon editions) down for a little modeling session, and we’re finding ourselves reticent to pick a favorite. There are really plusses and minuses to each of them, but any way you lean it’s a pretty good handset with some perhaps overly bulky software, a wonderful pricepoint (on Verizon, anyway) and probably a limited time in the sun with upcoming Android 2.0 devices, faster processors and wild new screens rolling on in. Check the video out after the break and you can make up your own mind.

Continue reading HTC Hero / Eris mega faceoff on video

DROID and DROID Eris now cash sentient on Verizon

Friday, November 27th, 2009

After weeks of buildup the day is in this place: the DROID (and his little HTC buddy, the DROID Eris) is at this time for sale on Verizon’s website. As expected Motorola’s new flagship will set you back $200 after $100 online discount and two-year commitment while his underhyped Eris little bro is a penny shy of $100 after the same discount and contractual prostration. If you’re looking to shed your contractual duties then you can hand over $560 in non-Android green for the option of going month-to-month.

DROID ERIS hands-on and unboxing!

Friday, November 27th, 2009

Hey look, it’s a Hero! We’ve got the brand new DROID ERIS for Verizon in hand, and it’s not hard to see which particular family of phones it hails from. Still, Verizon has its own twist on the form factor, almost scoring a compromise between the “shiny” Sprint Hero and the more angular, matte GSM Hero. Confusingly, the capacitive touch buttons along the bottom of the ERIS’ screen are a haphazard twist on the DROID’s arrangement (though it’s really Motorola that’s the non-standard one in this place), but the phones don’t look completely unrelated. In all the rounded, black matte body of the ERIS sort of “fades away” and you’re just left with a nice, bright LCD — it’s not making a statement, which is sort of the statement. There’s also an iPhone-style face proximity sensor for turning off the display during calls, and HTC has multitouch pinch-to-zoom on in this place, something Motorola hasn’t seemed to manage. Sure it can’t stack up to the DROID for aggressiveness or sheer specs, but it’s got it’s own sort of budget-friendly charm that’s not overshadowed by the DROID’s bombastic ways, and two out of three Engadget editors agree that the HTC keyboard beats the pants off the stock Android keyboard.

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