I have a 7501 and it is a great device that is a power pda and business trip laptop replacement, and it is a phone too so instead of 2-3 devices, you just carry this. This is no permanent laptop replacement though. Edu-ma-cation requires a laptop. Also, I don't know why HTC perseveres with the stupid keyboard, lack of the joystick as on the 7500/7501. It also needs a 64+GB HDD or SSD.
As for the pro's of this device, instant on, HSDPA speeds, big screen compared to 'smart phones', great battery life compared laptops - true convergence device. Just wish the Athena2 will have wimax...
Following the commercial success (and technical disappointment) of the original Wildfire -- which featured a miserly 528MHz CPU and QVGA display -- HTC has returned with the Wildfire S.
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
I have a 7501 and it is a great device that is a power pda and business trip laptop replacement, and it is a phone too so instead of 2-3 devices, you just carry this.
This is no permanent laptop replacement though. Edu-ma-cation requires a laptop.
Also, I don't know why HTC perseveres with the stupid keyboard, lack of the joystick as on the 7500/7501. It also needs a 64+GB HDD or SSD.
As for the pro's of this device, instant on, HSDPA speeds, big screen compared to 'smart phones', great battery life compared laptops - true convergence device. Just wish the Athena2 will have wimax...