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HTC Sensation XE with Beats Audio review

Posted by Ken S. on December 19, 2011 in Android, HTC Sensation, T-Mobile |

We had some hands-on timewith HTC’s new European Android flagship a short while back, but it wasn’t nearly enough to answer all our questions about how the 4.3-inch, 1.5GHz dual-core XE compares to the original 1.2GHz Sensation, or whether the implementation of Beats Audio was anything more than a cunning scheme cooked up between the manufacturer’s marketeers and Dr. Dre’s agent. Now, though, this phone has been our closest companion for long enough to reveal its true colors. They’re red, primarily, but there’s a whole rainbow of detail right after the break.

Hardware

In many respects this is not a complete review, because we’ve avoided covering the same ground we already trod extensively in our review of the Sensation. Instead, we’ve focused only on those areas where there have been significant changes, or where the passage of time has altered a particular spec’s standing with respect to the ever-eager competition.
In particular, we spent a great deal of time looking into Beats Audio — far too much time, perhaps, if you’ve already convinced yourself that this Dre hookup is nothing but a gimmick. But we felt that since HTC has invested untold dollars in Beats in order to differentiate itself from the competition, and since it plans to bring the this technology to many more devices in the US and around the world, then we ought to try to come up with something definitive and — if at all possible — scientific. By all means, if you’re just curious about this phone’s musical prowess then skip down to the Software section, but for now we’ll start off with the key hardware features.
Just like the original Sensation, the XE is well-built and beautiful to behold. Its tapered edges and smooth wraparound aluminum case conspire to make it feel thinner than the 11.4mm statistic might suggest. Of course, the XE differs in its coloring and when we first heard about the red accents we were worried they might look cheesy, like a Qosimo gaming laptopor something, but our fears were misplaced. The coloring of the navigation button back-lights, the speaker grill and the ring around the camera lens all helped to lift this phone above the plain black and silver hordes. The speaker grill and front-facing camera both have glinting chrome borders which make them look extra special. Add in the bold red headphones with the Beats logo on the back of each bud and it’s an all-round good look — unless you prefer your gadgets to be more discreet.
If you grip the phone hard you’ll feel and hear slight creaks from the plastic-aluminum hybrid construction, but it’s far less than what you get on purely plastic phones. We should also mention that no matter how we held the device, we failed to encounter any of the so-called “death grip” issues that people complained about with the first Sensation.
Perhaps the only nits we’d pick — and they’re much smaller than your average nits — are the tendency of the border between glass and aluminum around the panel to collect dirt which cannot easily be cleaned, plus the strange slant of the power button. We should probably disregard this latter flaw, since the device in our hands-on didn’t have it and it could simply be a factory error or a result of transit damage. Nevertheless, if wonky power buttons turn out to be an issue with this phone, then remember: you heard it here first.

Processor

We didn’t have an original Sensation to compare against the XE side by side, but we did have an EVO 3D to throw into the mix, which has a 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm MSM8660 processor that’s very similar to the Sensation’s MSM8260. The comparison isn’t perfect, because the EVO 3D has 1GB of RAM instead of 768MB, but it’s nevertheless sufficient for an indication of what 1.5GHz delivers in terms of real-world advantage — which turns out to be not a great deal. The EVO 3D actually booted much quicker than the XE, taking just eight seconds from ‘Off’ to snapping a picture on the camera. Meanwhile the XE took 11 seconds to do the same thing — possibly because the extra Beats Audio logo animation takes a few extra seconds at boot up.
Our Quadrant Standard benchmark scores clustered around 2080, which was significantly more than the EVO 3D (1800) but only slightly more than the original Sensation (2000). Linpack gave us 43MFLOPS for the XE, versus 41 for the EVO 3D and 46 for the Sensation — so nothing worth shouting about there either. Meanwhile, the Sun Spider javascript benchmark for browser speed timed the XE at approximately 3,300ms, which was much healthier than the strangely slow 6320ms time from the EVO 3D, but not a great deal quicker than what you’d get from the single-core iPhone 4. Forgetting benchmarks for a minute, the fact remains that webpage rendering on the XE was impeccable.
Our impression was that anything the XE could do, the EVO 3D could just about as well, so the extra 300MHz doesn’t count for much at all in practice. We can’t help but notice that the chip in the XE is identical to that in the original Sensation and has merely been overclocked — something savvy Sensation owners are perfectly capable of doing themselves.

Battery Life

HTC bumped the battery up to 1750mAh in the XE instead of the original 1520mAh, ostensibly to let you listen to more tunes but also perhaps also to compensate for the 300MHz bump to the original Sensation’s clock speed. The lower part of the case heats up whenever you put the processor under any serious load and you can just imagine how those two cores must be gulping down energy. After a 14-hour day of heavy use, including tonn of music, a few photos and a bit of video, the battery fell to eight percent by the time we got on a train home. It subsequently fell to three percent after listening to about 30 minutes of music and then finally died after taking four final night-time photographs. In other words, there’s no forgiving fuel tank here; when the battery says it’s nearly dead, it really is. However, just like with the original Sensation, the phone is frugal with power while it’s idle and on a less busy, more normal day we’d still find around 30-40 percent of the battery remaining when plugged the phone in to charge.
In our regular battery test, looping a standard def video with low-to-mid connectivity and push settings, the phone died somewhere between five and six hours, which is slightly below average for a large screen device. For the sake of reference, the 3.7-inch single-core BlackBerry Torch 9850 lasted 20 percent longer in this test — which merely shows that the Sensation XE pays for its specs in battery life.

Camera

The camera hardware in the XE is identical to that in the original Sensation, so check out that review for a full appraisal. All we really have to add is that the slight increase in clockspeed with the XE might translate into a minor improvement in the time it takes to load up the camera app and start capturing video or stills, but it’s nothing particularly noticeable — after all, the original Sensation was no slouch in this regard to begin with.
On the other hand, one thing has changed significantly since the XE’s predecessor, and that’s time. As the months have progressed and new handsets have come to market, we’ve become less forgiving of XE camera’s flaws — particularly with video. The auto-exposure isn’t particularly smart, and it adjusts too quickly when filming video, with ugly results compared to the camera in the HTC Titan and Sensation XL — which have far better camera units. Moreover, as you’ll hear in the sample video above, the sound recording is terrible: its default sensitivity of the mic is way too high, resulting in clipped audio whenever the person holding the camera speaks, or when there’s a gust of wind or any other sharp noise.

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Master the New Gmail with These Tips, Shortcuts, and Add-Ons

Posted by Ken S. on November 23, 2011 in General Tech, Google |

Gmail is the best email client around, and chances are you use it all day, every day. It’s also filled with tricks, shortcuts, and time-saving tools you can use to kick the crap out of your email. Today, we’re going into exhaustive overdrive, covering all our favorite Gmail tricks, both old and new. Even if you already consider yourself a Gmail ninja, there’s bound to be something here you haven’t yet discovered.

Photo remixed from an original by Katerinar-spb.

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How to Create a Fake Identity and Stay Anonymous Online

Posted by Ken S. on October 28, 2011 in General Tech, Hacking |

You don’t need to have evil motives for wanting to fake your identity or go incognito online; for many people, it’s a matter of privacy and avoiding spammers and scammers. Thankfully, there are a great many tools for staying anonymous online. Here are a few of the best.

The Browser’s Incognito Mode

The private browsing mode in Google Chrome, Firefox, and other browsers records no information about your browsing, including form data you enter, files you download, or history of pages you visit. It’s handy for many things beyond porn. To launch a window in private browsing mode, use these keyboard shortcuts:

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Google Doodle Honors Jim Henson and Friendly Monsters

Posted by Ken S. on September 24, 2011 in Google |

Saturday marks what would have been the 75th birthday of Jim Henson, the puppet pioneer and beloved conductor of many a fuzzy childhood friend, from Big Bird to the Cookie Monster. In his honor, today’s Google Doodle, which represents the company logo on the search engine’s home page, is an interactive puppet show, designed by Google and the Jim Henson Company.

Here’s a video from those two companies describing their collaboration on the doodle, as well as the prolific puppeteer’s creative process.

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Hack Your Way Into Facebook’s New Timeline Featur

Posted by Ken S. on September 24, 2011 in General Tech, Hacking |

Hack Your Way Into Facebook’s New Timeline Feature

Facebook’s new Timeline view.Most users will have to wait a few weeks before they get to see Facebook’s most drastic changes to the service since the company was founded, but you can use a developers’ workaround to gain access to the Timeline feature right now.

Developers already have access to early beta versions of the new features. Luckily for users eager to try out the revamped Facebook, becoming a developer is a simple process that shouldn’t take you more than 5 or 10 minutes.

Facebook announced the updates Thursday at the company’s f8 developers’ conference.

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The turn it off or leave it on question

Posted by Ken S. on September 23, 2011 in General Tech |

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Call me a tree-hugger if you must, but I see no reason to keep a computer on when it’s not in use. That wastes electricity, which is bad for your pocketbook and bad for the planet. And it’s probably bad for the computer.

Yes, I have seen occasional arguments that shutting down a computer, then starting it up cold, cause more wear and tear than leaving it on for 12 hours. I just don’t buy them. All computers potentially suffer from heat problems, and one that never gets a chance to cool down will suffer from more of them.

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Unlocking Your Bootloader For HTC Devices (Launched prior to September, 2011)

Posted by Ken S. on September 10, 2011 in Android, HTC Sensation, Root |
HTC is committed to listening to users and delivering customer satisfaction. We have heard your voice and starting now, we will allow our bootloader to be unlocked for 2011 models going forward. We plan on releasing the updates that will allow you to unlock your bootloader in the coming months, please keep an eye on this website for more details on which devices will be adding this feature. We are extremely pleased to see the energy and enthusiasm from our fans and loyal customers, and we are excited to see what you are capable of. HTC eagerly anticipates your innovations.

It is our responsibility to caution you that not all claims resulting or caused by or from the unlocking of the bootloader may be covered under warranty. Please note that unlocking your bootloader does not mean that you will be able to unlock the SIM lock. Unlocking your SIM lock is at the discretion of your operator/carrier and is not part of the bootloader unlocking scope.

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HTC Sensation bootloader unlocking tool released

Posted by Ken S. on September 9, 2011 in Android, HTC Sensation |

HTC Bootloader Process

 

HTC has unveiled the full process for unlocking bootloaders on some of the phones in its 2011 lineup. HTC is sticking to its timeline by starting with compatibility for the European HTC Sensation and promising to bring along support for the Sensation 4G on T-Mobile and the EVO 3D on Sprint later on. The website for the process, HTCdev.com/bootloader, is full of stern warnings, details on how the entire process works, and how any issues you face as a result of unlocking your bootloader won’t be covered under warranty — including any future OTA updates that may not be compatible with your unlocked device.

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Singel-Minded: Why Feds Are Right to Block AT&T, T-Mobile Merger

Posted by Ken S. on September 5, 2011 in T-Mobile / AT&T |

ANALYSIS – The feds unexpectedly walked into a federal court Wednesday to file a lawsuit seeking to block AT&T from buying T-Mobile for $39 billion.

Though you’ll likely hear a lot of bitching and moaning about the move from politicians in the coming days, this is best thing to come out of Washington, D.C., since the Do-Not-Call list.

For those who haven’t been watching, AT&T is seeking to become the nation’s largest wireless carrier by outright buying T-Mobile, the nation’s fourth largest carrier. AT&T says the merger will help with its urban congestion problems, let it hire more people and allow it to extend 4G to more than 97.3 percent of the population (current plan is 80 percent).

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HTC Sensation 4G update causes problems, we have a solution

Posted by Ken S. on September 5, 2011 in HTC Sensation |

HTC Sensation

T-Mobile starting pushing out the Android 2.3.4 update for the HTC Sensation 4G recently. The list of fixes and improvements the update is supposed to bring is very promising. Better screen responsiveness, a better battery and other fixes are a just of few of the things the Sensation 4G is getting. However, you may run into some issues with the update as I have. Fortunately, there is a solution.

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