One thing that’s pretty clear from HTC’s history is that they know how to make some pretty great smartphone keyboards. The Touch Pro 2, the original Tilt/TyTN II, the old school T-Mobile MDA, etc. - they all have excellent keyboards, and the G2 is no exception. In fact, the G2’s slide-out keyboard is pretty similar in both look and feel to the Touch Pro 2 keyboard, and that’s not a bad thing. The keyboard has very tactile feel, positive feedback for key presses, good spacing and layout, and even some shortcut keys that can be programmed to launch apps. Coming off the iPhone’s admittedly great virtual keyboard, I had zero trouble adjusting to the G2’s keyboard. Simply slide it open, start typing. That’s it. (I will say that the spacing is awful if you’re playing Quake 3, since you can’t use three separate fingers for the WASD keys, but that’s a different story and a problem with smartphone gaming in general.)

I felt obligated to at least try the virtual keyboard, and I’m happy to report that it works pretty well. It’s the default Froyo keyboard, and it doesn’t look or feel too different from most other virtual keyboards. It’s there, it works, but given the excellent physical keyboard, why bother?

Display Brightness

Display Brightness

Display Contrast

The display is the same resolution and size as those as on the Nexus One, Desire, and Incredible - 3.7” 800 x 480 - but is based on a different technology, Super LCD TFT. After the Samsung AMOLED shortages over the summer, HTC seems to have migrated over to the more commonly available Sony S-LCD panels on all of its 3.7” devices. I’m a fan of 3.7” screens, they strike a nice balance between the somewhat cramped 3.5” iPhone and the massive 4” Vibrants and 4.3” EVO’s of the world. The contrast ratio of just over 800 is significantly higher than HTC’s previous LCD screens (EVO 4G and HD2), and is fairly competitive with the iPhone 4 and Droid X, though the Droid and Droid 2 IPS panels are far, far higher. Overall the screen looks pretty good, though the max brightness of 273 nits is fairly low by superphone standards. You’ll get more in-depth analysis on the display in the full review, but I’ll leave you with this: unless you’re coming off an iPhone 4 or you enjoy blinding yourself every time you look at your cellphone screen, you shouldn’t have too many complaints with the G2’s screen.

The camera is a 5MP unit with autofocus and an LED flash, and it does fairly good work. I was pretty impressed by the flash, finding it better than even the EVO’s blinding flash. The dedicated camera button is nice to have, but even nicer than that are the camera settings. Like I mentioned, I’m mostly used to the iPhone, so having any kind of option is pretty new. You can change the white balance and exposure to suit the lighting conditions, turn the flash on and off, and mess with the focus and zoom (up to 2.0x). As you can see from the sample shots, the G2 is pretty solid by smartphone standards. It won’t wow you like some of the iPhone 4 HDR photos will, and it definitely will not come close to replacing a real camera, but for quick snaps, the G2’s camera should be serviceable enough when the pictures are scaled down to web size.

The video camera is pretty cool. It shoots video up to 720p and features a myriad of options, including flash on/off, the same white balance options as the still camera, and four filters (black and white, sepia, negative, and solarize). The mic is pretty bad, and it has some issues with high motion action and settings where the lighting changes rapidly, but it will replace a Flip video camera pretty easily.

T-Mobile G2 - Hardware Impressions T-Mobile G2 - Performance, Battery Life, and HSPA+
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  • strikeback03 - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link

    Installing programs to the SD card is a function of both the OS and the app developer, Froyo now allows it but the developer also has to enable it. So right now I would imagine some programs can be moved and some can't.
  • jmunjr - Sunday, October 10, 2010 - link

    T-mobile disabled tethering on the G2. I used a G2 last night and this is the first T-Mobile smart phone I've been sold on...until I found out there is no native tethering support. Well there is but T-Mobile disabled it. Funny thing is tethering support exists in their prepaid Tap device... So silly...
  • Jon Niola - Monday, October 11, 2010 - link

    I went and sprung for the G2 this weekend. I am a software developer who is getting into the mobile space now and figured it never hurts to have another test environment.

    So mind you - I already own an HTC Droid Incredible and HTC Evo 4G and I am using them as a comparison.

    First off - the thing that Vivek mentioned that I was most nervous about was the hinge mechanism. I have to say after being a bit rough with it (intentionally) it is strong and I have zero concerns about it breaking from regular use. The hinge actually has a horizontal support piece underneath as well that reinforces the two "posts" that connect the top half.

    As for battery life it is actually holds charge longer than my Incredible or Evo 4G. While I am not doing a byte-for-byte, use-for-use comparison, I have been impressed at how even idle the battery goes down slower than the other two.

    The build quality of this thing is actually impressive. Yes it is heavy - but a good heavy. It feels like a friggin tank in the hand. The brushed aluminum is a winner too. Does not feel cheap or plasticy at all but rather feels like a refined, well-made device.

    Still getting use to the vanilla Android vs the Sense-enhnaced that I am used to but from a developer standpoint it is nice to have a clean test bed like that :)

    Honestly I feel it was worth every penny.
  • rester555 - Monday, October 11, 2010 - link

    I went to a T-mobile store to see if the OS was stock? It was indeed running Android Froyo 2.2, but it was not stock. It had the tethering options disabled.

    So is this really a stock version of Froyo?
  • Jon Niola - Tuesday, October 12, 2010 - link

    News going around today that a stealth OTA update is re-enabling native tethering.

    Why it was disabled is beyond me but looks like it is coming back.
  • synaesthetic - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link

    It's not stock. It's almost stock; there are some crapware apps that CANNOT be uninstalled without root (which, due to the G2's restore-on-reboot function, does not stick).

    Tethering is also disabled and removed, as you've noticed, though some folks have (supposedly) received an OTA update re-enabling USB and Wi-Fi tethering as well as adding T-Mobile's Wi-Fi Calling app.
  • lukeevanssi - Tuesday, October 12, 2010 - link

    when I saw this mobile phone than I understand to about this feature and details so I found here..
    http://burnxtreme.net/
  • jeans_xp - Wednesday, October 20, 2010 - link

    HAHA, first smart phone is iPhone 3GS. I find a good website for smart phone news and latest technology:
    www.mobilegoing.com
  • jeans_xp - Sunday, November 7, 2010 - link

    No Samsung Galaxy S.

    www.mobilegoing.com

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