The camera interface, too, is really well thought out, starting with the excellent two-stage camera button. It’s a machined aluminum bit, with an interesting circular ridge pattern milled into the top. HTC took an idea out of Microsoft’s playbook and implemented the same idea with pressing and holding the camera button to open directly to the camera application. You can disable the feature in settings, but it’s brilliant kinds of useful. 

The camera button works in practice too, due to the rolling image capture. I tend to have major issues with physical camera buttons, because they usually end in me taking a blurry picture. Having no shutter lag takes that out of the equation for me, because it pulls an image from when it registers a shutter click instead of directly afterwards, when the force I apply on the camera button destabilizes the entire phone. That isn’t to say that it completely eliminates the issue, as you’ll see in a bit. For the most part though, it’s brilliant. 

The camera application takes over from LG’s as the best in the business for me. Beyond the headlining SweepShot, ClearShot HDR, and BurstShot modes, there’s also an Auto mode, a Night mode for low light pictures, Action mode for settings that require a faster shutter, Macro and Portrait modes, and a Manual mode, where all the options come out to play. You can mess with exposure, contrast, saturation, sharpness, white balance, ISO (up to 800), aspect ratio (16:9 or 4:3 only), and resolution. 

There are four translucent buttons on the left side of the camera application, overlayed on the preview image - mode selection, flash on/off/auto, front/back camera, camera/camcorder. The right side has a compact shutter button, along with a camera roll shortcut in the bottom right corner. Hitting menu brings up the camera settings, with the self-timer, various effects (sepia, grayscale, distortion, others that probably interest preteens and nobody else), resolution settings, autofocus, geo-tagging, whether or not there’s a fake shutter noise when you take a picture, etc. If you’re in manual mode, this is where all the exposure and ISO options live, but they’re greyed out in all the other modes. 

You can tap a specific part of the preview image to focus in a particular spot, and from there it’s just point and click. It’s just a very sleek looking app that has a lot of features and goes about it’s business with a minimum of fuss. HTC clearly put a decent amount of thought into designing a clean and intuitive app with no odd interface actions.

T-Mobile MyTouch 4G Slide - Camera Hardware T-Mobile MyTouch 4G Slide - Camera Performance: Still Images
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  • FrederickL - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link



    @Vivek Gowri

    Very informative review. With regard to your experience with the 2G I think that the problem may have been that the first shipments of the Desire Z (2G) did indeed have a problem with the construction of that hinge. As far as I can tell (from what I read on various fora at the time) the problem appeared to be largely cured with succeeding shipments. I have had a Desire Z for about half a year now and although the hinge-action has an unusual "feel" to it because of the structural design I have in fact not had any problems with it at all. The disappointment you experienced may be due to the fact that you were an uber early adopter of that phone!

    -:)

    Frederick
  • FrederickL - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link



    @Vivek Gown

    Another thought just struck me looking at your battery life tests (although I know that this is somewhat off topic). If Nokia manage to produce a WP7 phone with something like the N8's build quality, the camera *and* bring their traditional strengths in call quality and battery life to the table (I am thinking that nobody yet gets seriously near the iPhone's battery life) then they *may* prove the doomsayers wrong. Furthermore if they brought those qualities to one of their classic slider packages I think that even a gentleman like yourself who perhaps feels a touch jaded after seeing so many phones might feel pleased! -:)
  • VivekGowri - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link

    I definitely agree about the G2 - I went through two in the first week, and they both felt like crap. The later hardware revisions I played with at the T-Mobile store were definitely better, but they still weren't what I would call "confidence-inspiring". I'm comfortable with my decision to sell when I did, but man was that a brilliantly functional phone for it's day.

    The Nokia WP7 lineup has me so ridiculously excited, you have no idea. I'm an out-and-out Nokia hardware fanboy who has loathed Symbian since the N95 started to get long in the tooth. The first Nokia WP7 device (Sea Ray, the one that looks like the N9) is gonna be bomb, and if they do one like the E7 or the MeeGo slider phone (rumoured to be the N9 back in the day, don't remember the official name off the top of my head), I'll be basically thrilled. I've been using Mango on my HD7 recently, I'm pretty psyched to see it paired with Nokia's brilliant HW design.
  • dlochinski - Sunday, August 14, 2011 - link

    You actually can buy a spring for the g2, (rather cheap and rather strong) and replace the spring inside the g2, then voila, no issues! It is rather unfortunate that it had problems in the beginning, but it is a good phone beyond that.
  • FrederickL - Sunday, August 14, 2011 - link


    @Vivek Gowri

    Indeed. I currently run my "Z" as my primary and my dear old "Wildfire" as my backup. I will be looking to upgrade my main phone in about a year and as far as I can see my likely choices will be between HTC's then current Android slider and whatever Nokia has presented as its high end WP7 slider. My good lady runs an N8 and as far as the hardware is concerned she loves it but as far as the os is concerned she uses language that would make a Navy Seal blush! I would certainly be looking in about a year (we have an important anniversary coming up) at whatever is then Nokia's flagship cameraphone. All in all the coming year bodes well for choice of good kit in the marketplace. I look forward to it.
  • Johnmcl7 - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link

    This is the wrong way round:

    "The lower the F/#, the larger the aperture and the higher the diameter of the lens opening. This gets you a greater depth of field and allows more light to reach the image sensor"

    As you widen the aperture the depth of field is reduced, not increased although perhaps that's just the way I read 'greater' to mean deeper depth of field. Either way on such a small focal length the slightly increased aperture isn't really going to have a noticeable effect on depth of field which is going to be very deep anyway.

    Thanks for the review although frustratingly while there were rumours of this phone being released in Europe as the HTC Doubleshot (the G2 was released as the Desire Z with Sense intact) I can't see any sign of it on preorder lists so like the Droid 3 it looks like it's not going to be sold here. Which is particularly frustrating given there's no other high end qwerty sliders after the Desire Z.

    John
  • anandtech pirate - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link

    It looks like HTC needs to stop being cheap on the internal storage. 4GB when the standard now is at least 8gb to 16gb.
  • bplewis24 - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link

    Completely agree with the Custom UI rant you threw in there. I hope more reviewers keep harping on it.

    The Moto D1 had a dedicated camera button that could be long-pressed to open the camera application, so I don't think HTC was copying MS on that one.

    Lastly, great review as always. AT is the go-to site for smartphone reviews now. I can't tell you guys how many times I have debunked irrational and subjective criticisms of specific phone/hardware with objective analysis and evidence from these reviews.
  • VivekGowri - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link

    Yeah, I guess I didn't mean that they were copying Microsoft, but the idea was definitely marketed pretty heavily by the WP7 devices. HTC has put out enough WP7 devices in the last year that taking that feature to Android seems pretty logical.
  • Bristecom - Saturday, August 13, 2011 - link

    Good find on the use of two different CMOS sensors. I'd be very interested to see some direct comparison shots and video - particularly in low lighting. I hope you can figure out what sensor the Samsung Galaxy S II uses, although I'm pretty sure it's the S5K3H2.

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