The world’s fastest Android phone, the HTC EVO from Sprint, may have
been overshadowed by Monday’s iPhone 4 news, but this high-speed 4G
powerhouse is worthy of attention.
HTC EVO from Sprint The HTC EVO from Sprint works on the 4G network
that runs about three-and-a-half times faster than the 3G network.

The screen, apps and widgets will be instantly recognizable to anyone
who has fiddled with the HTC Incredible. The speed will be unfamiliar,
though. The phone runs on a 4G network, which, in my test, runs about
three-and-a-half times faster than a 3G network. The EVO, which works
on both 3G and 4G networks, is $200 with a two-year contract after
rebate, and is available online and from Sprint, Best Buy, RadioShack
and Wal-Mart.

First, let’s get our definitions clear. In this case, 4G stands for
the fourth-generation network(available in 33 cities across the
country), not the fourth generation of a handset. It’s the network
that brings the speed. But a phone itself has to have the hardware
built in to work on a 4G network to use the speed. Even though Apple’s
iPhone 4 is the fourth generation of that phone, it doesn’t work on a
4G network. So make sure you have a salesman carefully define terms
when you are phone shopping.

The EVO comes with a respectable suite of features. It has a 4.3-inch
touch screen with pinch to zoom, and acts as a mobile hot spot, so you
can connect up to eight Wi-Fi devices, for an additional $30 a month.

It also comes with a front-facing 1.3 megapixel camera for video
chatting. The camera on the back is 8 megapixels with a dual LED
flash. It also captures video in 720p high definition, and can play it
back on your TV through an HDMI cable. It also has an FM radio, but
you can only listen to it using wired headphones; the cable doubles as
an antenna.

The phone comes with 1 gigabyte of built-in memory and an 8-gigabyte
microSD card, but can support up to 32 gigabytes.

The EVO also has what we’ve come to think of as standard features,
like a 3.5-millimeter headphone jack, stereo Bluetooth and GPS.

In my test of the phone, I used the speed-checking Web site Ookla to
measure speed, which is  possible because current Android phones play
some Adobe Flash. I had 4G downloads of 3.61 to 3.86 mbps, compared
with 3G downloads of .77 to 1.28 mbps with the same phone. To put that
speed in perspective, a 30-minute video on iTunes is about 300
megabytes. On a 3G network it would have taken me four to five minutes
to download. On 4G it would take about one to 1.3 minutes.

I should point out that when the phone was on Wi-Fi, it was even
faster, averaging 7.2 mbps. And using Wi-Fi doesn’t count against a
data plan.

Stephanie Vinge-Walsh, a Sprint spokeswoman, said Ookla and other such
sites were largely inaccurate. She said the company used a
“scientific” measure, which generally finds speeds one to two gigs
faster than Ookla did, though not always. But she agreed that the
speed I measured was within the expected range.

Putting the phone to the test repeatedly with streaming video from
“ABC Mobile Originals” in the featured TV videos found the EVO falling
short. The shows were slow to load, occasionally froze in the middle
and returned error messages saying I had no network connection, and
“Sorry, this channel is temporarily unavailable. Please try again
later or contact Customer Care.” The company said it was most likely
an application issue.

These glitches aside, the phone was smooth, fun to use and over 4G,
fast. Maybe even good enough to buy in a 3G market.

A 4G network is available in these cities: Atlanta; Milledgeville,
Ga.; Honolulu; Maui, Hawaii; Boise, Idaho; Chicago; Baltimore; Kansas
City, Mo.; Las Vegas; Charlotte, Greensboro, High Point,
Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Cary, Chapel Hill and Durham, N.C.; Portland
and Salem, Ore.; Philadelphia; Harrisburg, Lancaster, Reading, and
York, Pa.; Dallas/Ft. Worth; Houston; San Antonio; Abilene, Amarillo,
Austin, Corpus Christi, Killeen/Temple, Lubbock, Midland/Odessa, Waco,
and Wichita Falls, Tex.; Seattle; and Bellingham, Wash.

Sprint says it plans to add more cities to 4G this year, including
Boston, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City, St. Louis
and Washington.

http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/09/an-android-on-steroids/?src=me

-- 
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