HTC Unveils Wildfire Android 2.1 Smartphone for Teens
The HTC Wildfire will run the Android 2.1 mobile operating system and will feature a 3.2-inch touch screen, a 5-megapixel camera, and social networking and connectivity options galore. As the smartphone is designed for young adults, pricing is expected to be teen-friendly.
With the May 17 introduction of the Wildfire, popular mobile device maker HTC
announced it will be pitching its Android-based smartphone experience to younger
audiences than the broader markets it has sought to reach with previous models,
such as the HTC Desire and Droid Incredible.
While HTC hasn't disclosed pricing details yet,
it's expected that the Wildfire, which will run Google's Android 2.1 operating
system, will be released with a teen-friendly price tag.
"Today's social networks provide an essential forum for friendship with
more than 400 million users-many of whom are young adults-actively sharing their
lives with their friends through Facebook," Florian Seiche, vice president
of HTC EMEA, said in a statement. "HTC
Wildfire makes the HTC Sense experience
available to young mobile users for the first time. It brings all your
communications into one place, whether it's through Facebook, Twitter, text
messages, images or e-mail, ensuring that you are never far away from the
conversation and always close to your friends."
The Wildfire features a 3.2-inch capacitive touch screen, a 5-megapixel camera,
7.3 hours of talk time, and 3G, WiFi and Bluetooth 2.1 connectivity. It
measures 4.2 by 2.4 by 0.5 inches, supports Gmail, Imap4, POP3
and SMTP-based e-mail, SMS (Short Message Service), MMS
(Multimedia Messaging Service), and instant messaging, and has a Web browser, GPS,
a music player and a 3.5-millimeter audio jack. There's 512MB of RAM,
284MB of ROM and MicroSD card support for 32GB of additional memory.
But what HTC expects the kids will go for is
an updated version of HTC's Sense software,
as well as a new application-sharing feature. With Sense, data streams from
Facebook, Twitter and Flickr are all organized into a single update. Also, the
Wildfire's address book attaches to each contact a thread of recent
communications with that person, so it's easy to see past phone calls, texts
and e-mails.
As for the application-sharing widget, it offers a simple way for Wildfire
users to recommend applications to friends and for friends to take them up on
the suggestion.
"We understand that people need a better way to navigate their way through
the tens of thousands of applications that are currently available on the
Android Market," Seiche continued. "In fact, our own independent
research found that consumers are not only hungry for the latest and most popular
applications that their friends are using, they want an easier way to find and
download them. For the first time ever, you can recommend the newest and
coolest apps to a friend or group of friends with HTC
Wildfire."
The Wildfire will arrive in European and Asian markets beginning in the third
quarter of 2010. No carrier partners have been announced.








