@adriannn You better lookout man, I bet HTC is watching this page and wants to hire you to design their next phone. We already know the name you'd choose - The HTC Slap-a-Biatch.
@(Unverified) Too complicated? These are the Japanese we're talking about here, dude. They can figure it out. A simple video-editing software will allow them to "make it brighter" where two clips overlap, or lose focus when the clips get bigger or smaller. Like, have you ever seen The Matrix? Yeah, that came out 10 years ago. FAKE!!!
More thought - the animation has a framerate. If the projectors were shooting at the wall, there should be completely smooth movement of light.
@skyblaze. Ya I've had it on my HTC Touch. I think it's a real step forward as far as usability goes. The top bar is pretty cool looking, it pulls down for some icons (I don't use those). Its like they basically finished 6.5, then said, "okay lets merge that with some features of other systems" like Android. They have the top bar with notifications, and they added the feature of moving icons in the programs menu by clicking and dragging.
I used it on my HTC Vogue (almost 3 years old) and I liked the system. It's definitely not hard to use, it just has a whole different set of apps and widgets that are cute and furry looking, unlike HTC Sense UI which looks like something out of the matrix.
"I'm heading to university next year, and I've purchased a MacBook. I'm also taking my four year old desktop, just in case I'm left with no computers when the MacBook is being repaired or whatnot. With only two USB ports on a MacBook, I want a Bluetooth mouse. Budget is about $100, and of course, it needs OS X support. Thanks for the help!"
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