I had the first Droid Incredible as a personal phone before I went to the Motorola Droid X and since then I have missed that little stylish beveled bundle of joy. Check out the full story with pictures and HD video review below! Hardware is exceptional with a nice rounded edge to accentuate that beautiful SLCD glass.
The SLCD screen works well in the sunny skies and provides great viewing angles in the hand. The back camera is still 8 megapixels and provides the same dual flash we saw before. The real news is the front facing camera which gives us a 1. HTC kept the trademark beveled battery door but added a nice extended antennae embedded inside the back of the battery door to extend and help the range of signal.
The phone itself has a nice plastic material that I love, it feels as though I could drop it without it taking alot of damage yet it feels soft in my hands. I love the fact it weighs less then the bigger screen smartphones out there and is ready to easily fit in to your pocket. It does have pin hole mics on the top and bottom of the phone to help with noise canceling and to give the user a better sounding call.
The speaker itself sounds a little bit different in a good way, music sounds more surround then my old Incredible I had. One good thing they did was remove the track sensor pad on the bottom which I myself never used, and they went with a nice flush piece of glass keeping the capacitive buttons below.
Speaking of those bottom capacitive buttons, they got a make over as well. When you turn the phone from portrait to landscape the buttons themselves follow the rotation 90 degrees to give the user a personalized feel.
Sure the buttons are cosmetic but these are the things that separate it from other phones out on the market. According to the technical specifications shown to Mr. Incredible by Mirage on the way to Nomanisan Island , the Omnidroid 08 has five bisymmetrical, segmented legs with four-fingered grappling claws that can also be spun like buzzsaws for pentilateral movement, bi-polar sensor clusters, and revision 4.
Plus, like the Omnidroid 07, it can collapse itself into a sphere and roll itself around for faster movement. This is the only Omnidroid to be shown to have had bright blue optic visors on its sensor clusters. Its thick, near-impenetrable armor could also withstand the harsh, unforgiving temperatures of molten lava.
In the video game based on the film , the Omnidroid 08 is also shown to fire lasers from the visors of its sensor clusters, with a laser that leaves a fiery trail from the upper sensor, and a rapid-fire burst from the lower sensor. It could also collapse its sensor clusters and spin itself like a buzzsaw to try and cut the target with its spinning claws. This fearsome robot was fought by Mr. Incredible when he had first come to Nomanisan Island , sent there in the pretense of a mission to deactivate the robot when it had supposedly "gone rogue".
Their battle took them to a volcanic crater, where he managed to pull off its lower sensor cluster, toss it into the lava, and climb into the innards of the superhero-killing robot. The 08 punched holes in its own armor in a vain attempt to remove Mr. Incredible, but it only damaged itself severely. Incredible then tossed away the upper sensor cluster, before luring it into tearing out its own brainpan, shutting down the robot.
X9 is the ninth prototype Omnidroid, heavily modified from the previous 08 when it was defeated by Mr. X9 has omnidirectional, trans-universal articulation, bi-polar sensor clusters, and a new version of the artificial intelligence. It also has orange optic visors on its sensor clusters. A vast improvement on the 08, this Omnidroid easily defeated Mr. Incredible , and would have finished him off were it not for its creator intervening to reveal himself to his former childhood hero.
The robot was never defeated, but it was used as the basis for the Omnidroid v. It is unknown what happened to it afterwards. The pinnacle of the Omnidroid series, the Omnidroid v.
It is the largest, smartest, and deadliest version of the Omnidroids, proving more than a match for any one Super X9, but with new modifications to make it even more dangerous. In addition to its increased size, Syndrome added a sixth leg to its body and laser guns on the sides of the robot's sensor clusters. In addition, its claws have been modified with rocket boosters, allowing the Omnidroid v.
In the video game, it was shown to be able to fire incendiary and rapid-fire laser beams from its sensor clusters, similar to the Omnidroid It was deployed via rocket to attack the city of Metroville , where Syndrome would then go up against it in a fake fight, and use the remote control on his wrist to "defeat" it and get all the glory for the victory, as part of his long-term plan to sell his inventions to the world, eventually making his customers equally "Super" and rendering the term meaningless.
However, the robot turned on Syndrome when it noticed the remote control - identifying the device as a threat to itself, it blasted the remote away before knocking its creator unconscious.
It was then fought and defeated by Mr. One last thing worth noting is that the Incredible 4G lacks a dedicated physical shutter button.
Of course, some compromises had to be made. Still, that matters less on a smaller screen, and there was nary a jagged, pixellated edge to be found. In the end, how much you or any other potential customer will like this phone depends a whole lot on your thoughts about screen size. That initial sense of screen-related claustrophobia subsided after a few days, but my heart ultimately still yearns for something bigger. Similarly, the Incredible handled my usual test suite of HD videos and games with aplomb — this little guy has plenty of oomph.
There are very few other physical buttons on the Droid Incredible. On the left side, there's a volume rocker and a Mini-USB port and on top of the device, you'll find a power button and 3. As with most all handsets, the camera and in this case, the dual LED flash, are housed in the back but what's unusual about the Droid Incredible is the back's topographic design and the phone's innards. Instead of a smooth surface, the battery door has bumps and ridges, and it's only after you pop it off that you realize it actually follows the lines of the internal parts of the phone.
You'll notice that the insides of the phone are red. Does it add any value to the smartphone? But can we appreciate that HTC wanted to highlight some of the engineering that went into the device and make it beautiful inside and out? For more add-ons, please check our cell phone accessories, ringtones, and help page. While there will be purists who prefer the standard Android skin, in most cases, we'd choose a device running Sense, and we think it's something that actually gives the Droid Incredible a competitive advantage.
Out of all our custom skins for Android Motoblur, TouchWiz, etc. Not only does it give Android a more user-friendly interface, it actually, in many cases, improves on the core functions by better integrating the features.
This includes a revamped mail widget that can take you to a list view of all your e-mail instead of just one message at a time. Once in the mail app, there's a handy tabbed interface at the bottom that lets you view unread messages, attachments, meeting invites, and more with a simple touch. The Agenda widget also now displays your whole agenda on the screen, and like the HTC HD2, you get an animated weather widget right on the home screen that automatically displays the current conditions based on your location.
You also get a new Group Contacts widget, which lets you, well, organize your contacts by groups. For example, you can set up one for work colleagues, another for friends, and another for just family--whatever you please.
The UI looks good, and it's simple to add contacts to a group, though removing them requires a few extra steps. Another feature called Friend Stream provides a single place for all your social-networking needs, piping in updates from Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr all into a single place. Unlike Motoblur, it's not server-based; the phone connects to the sites and pulls information directly from there. By far, our favorite new feature, however, is the Leap screen.
By pinching the home screen or pressing the home button if you're on the center panel , it brings up a thumbnail view of all your home screen panels, so if you have your favorite apps and widgets on those screens, you easily "leap" to the screen you want and access them.
The Droid Incredible offers seven home screen panels, and there are different "Scenes," which presents a whole new set of seven home screen panels that you can customize by the theme of the Scene Social, Work, Travel, Play, and so forth. Admittedly, it can be overwhelming, but the best part is that you can use as many or as few of the features as you want; the device is completely customizable to your needs.
HTC throws in a couple of its own extras as well, including its Twitter app, Peep, and Footprints, which allows you to geotag photos and add notes and audio clips to the "digital postcards," among other things.
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