Weekend Chatter on Google Phone
Few Tweets from prominent bloggers on the Web spark rumor on a phone, allegedly coming from Google that could be released as soon as next month.
Details actually confirm what we posted previously: The G-Phone actually will be an unlocked voice + data capable, the Google-branded phone will be built by the Taiwanese phone maker HTC, and will incorporate a processor from Qualcomm and Google promises to be one of the most advanced smartphones, with a large touch-screen display and a processor almost twice as fast as the one powering Apple’s iPhone 3GS. It will probably be the first phone to run a new version of Google’s Android software, codenamed Flan, offering high-speed 3-D gaming said to be as good as that of many handheld consoles.
HTC roadmap for 2010 showing 5 Android power phones, in which 2 high-end phones that most likely are candidates: the HTC Bravo,1GHz Snapdragon, 3.7 AMOLED touch-screen, 5MP camera 720P video capture capable or the HTC Legend, 600MHz Qualcomm, 5MP camera, 3.2” AMOLED capacitive touch-screen,…
The most incredible source posted by Cnet’s Jason Howwell, his comments depicts that Google has given out these phones to its employees for testing, however, surprisingly no pictures have yet leaked out to the Web.
“I was given the phone for a very limited time from a Google employee. It resembled an HTC Hero to my eyes, though a tiny bit smaller and DEFINITELY thinner. I kept looking over at the guy using it, thinking to myself that it WAS a Hero, but when I asked, he spilled the beans. Google employees were handed the phones today. He reiterated that there would probably be a decent amount of information hitting the tubes this weekend. With my limited time with the device, I saw it running Android 2.1. The home screen had this animated background image that looked nifty with red and blue lasers shooting across it. The gray bar at the bottom of the home screen was replaced with the “house” line art used on the face of most Android phones that takes you to the home screen. Looked sleeker. Super light phone too.
This phone was unlocked, though the guy had thrown an AT&T sim card into it.
That’s about all I was able to glean in my minute’s worth of dabbling. It was sleek and nice looking, but I am scratching my head trying to figure out what the real difference is between this and any of the newer HTC Android phones. Scanning the apps, I didn’t see anything that really stood out as different from what I have on my Droid. And being that it was Android 2.1, the only really differences I saw were a few visual ones. So it doesn’t appear (in its current state) to really be offering “the *real* Android” experience that’s mind blowingly different from what’s out there so far. Maybe I just didn’t dig deep enough to find it though.”
[Via TechCrunch MobileTechworld]

Chào mừng bạn đến với TechTiVi, một chương trình video ngắn, phát hình trên đài truyền hình 



