I was excited up until I saw its not bootable. High IO "drives" are useless to most consumers until they are bootable. It's all good and well for the average consumer to watch their game or app open fast, but if windows is still slow... meh. Sure those who need high IO for certain apps will still buy one, I am merely talking the average enthusiast.
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.
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I was excited up until I saw its not bootable. High IO "drives" are useless to most consumers until they are bootable. It's all good and well for the average consumer to watch their game or app open fast, but if windows is still slow... meh. Sure those who need high IO for certain apps will still buy one, I am merely talking the average enthusiast.