Pros & Cons
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- Beautiful hardware.
- Terrific keyboard.
- Dedicated Facebook button makes accessing the world's most-popular social network easy.
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- Slow.
- Tiny, cramped screen.
- Incompatible with many third-party apps.
- Difficult battery cover.
HTC Status (AT&T) Specs
| 802.11x/Band(s): | Yes |
| Bands: | 1800 |
| Bands: | 1900 |
| Bands: | 850 |
| Bands: | 900 |
| Battery Life (As Tested): | 7 hours 14 minutes |
| Bluetooth: | Yes |
| Camera Flash: | Yes |
| Camera: | Yes |
| Form Factor: | Candy Bar |
| High-Speed Data: | EDGE |
| High-Speed Data: | GPRS |
| High-Speed Data: | HSDPA |
| High-Speed Data: | UMTS |
| Megapixels: | 5 MP |
| Operating System as Tested: | Android OS |
| Phone Capability / Network: | GSM |
| Phone Capability / Network: | UMTS |
| Physical Keyboard: | Yes |
| Processor Speed: | 800 MHz |
| Screen Details: | 480-by-320 TFT LCD capacitive touch screen |
| Screen Size: | 2.6 inches |
| Service Provider: | AT&T |
| Storage Capacity (as Tested): | 1.8 GB |
Facebook the world, two lines of text at a time! The $49 HTC Status, the country's first "Facebook phone," entices you to share everything you're doing by pressing its softly glowing dedicated Facebook logo button. But this Android smartphone's tiny, horizontally oriented screen offers a very cramped window on your social world, making this
Physical Features and Call Quality
A beautiful, well-crafted handset, the HTC Status features excellent call quality and one of the best physical keyboards in the business. The phone is a BlackBerry-style slab made of high-quality matte white plastic with silver metal accents and a slight bend in the middle that curves the phone to cradle your face. The bend also makes it easier to type and improves call quality, so I'm all for the bend. At 4.5 by 2.5 by 0.4 inches (HWD) and 4.3 ounces, it's light and fits perfectly in the hand.
The four-row keypad is almost exactly as big as the 2.6-inch touch-screen LCD, and has huge, oval plastic buttons with a very satisfying click. There's no dedicated number row, but there are dedicated cursor keys, and of course that Facebook button.
The Status is a very good voice phone that connects to AT&T's 3G HSPA 7.2 network, and to 2G EDGE networks abroad. Call quality in the earpiece was very clear in my tests; although the phone didn't get stunningly loud, voices sounded quite sharp and punched through background noise. Similarly, while some background noise came through the mic, my voice sounded loud and clear over the noise. The speakerphone was loud enough to use in a car, though not in a noisy outdoor area, and speakerphone transmissions were very clear. There was no side tone, the reflection of your own voice in your ear, which helps some people avoid yelling when they're on the phone. Battery life, at 7 hours, 14 minutes of talk time, was solid.
Voice dialing is a mess. While I could activate voice dialing with my
Data speeds are good. I got approximately 2Mbps down on AT&T's HSPA 7.2 3G network. The phone also works as a tethered modem or as a Wi-Fi hotspot for up to five devices, with the appropriate service plan. Like most modern smartphones, the Status aso supports Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth and GPS.
The Screen Dilemma
The Status is beautiful, but its horizontal, small 2.6-inch, 480-by-320 display isn't very usable. The screen resolution isn't an issue in itself. The
When the sideways screen affects the Facebook app, though, things really hurt. For example: if you're commenting on a photo and your comment is more than three lines, it pushes the Comment button below the screen margin, and there's no way to scroll down to get it. You just have to make your comment shorter.
If you're typing a reply to a Facebook message, you can only see two lines of the message at a time, because the entire rest of the screen is taken up by status bars, the Facebook logo and other guff.
The horizontal screen also makes Web surfing a bit more difficult than on vertically oriented devices, because the status bars take up a larger percentage of the screen (and thus you see less Web page.) The 2.6-inch panel ensures that even at this resolution, text can be too small to read.
Android and App Performance
Under the hood, the HTC Status is powered by a Qualcomm MSM7227 processor boosted to 800MHz from the typical 600. It's running Android 2.3.3 with HTC's Sense UI and a few AT&T apps thrown in for seasoning.
The phone benchmarked slower than I thought it would, more slowly even than 600MHz phones, and I found several hiccups and delays in the interface. When recording videos, for instance, the phone would stutter, and I was left watching a spinning "loading" wheel several times when trying to load Facebook comments or watch the Women's World Cup on AT&T's streaming video service.
I ran into several bugs, as well. The Facebook app crashed, and at one point, I was told my phone's 150MB of internal memory was very low and I needed to clear my caches. I haven't seen that often on other Android phones. And as I mentioned before, third-party apps were liable to load at a 90-degree angle, never to be quite straightened out.
The performance issues are a bummer because the software here is otherwise beautiful. HTC's Sense UI is by far the best of the phone-manufacturer skins. The lock screen is ingenious, letting you drag a ring over the icons of four frequently used apps to jump to them. The useful home-screen widgets have been reformatted to fit the odd screen; the Home screen has a great-looking clock and social networking updates stacked neatly on top of each other, and swiping to the right reveals more updates and your most recent Facebook chats. HTC has altered the app tray to put your third-party apps into a neat category together, but the category selector uses up valuable screen real estate.
Facebook
The Status is the only Android phone I've tested that doesn't ask you to enter a Google account at startup. Instead, it asks for your Facebook login.
The Facebook hardware button is the core of the phone's Facebook experience. Press it to share something. On the home screen, it starts a Wall post. From the camera, it posts a photo. From a Web page, it posts a link and image. From a song, sadly, it just creates a text post about what song you're listening to. The button glows softly, as an invitation to share.
Of course, you can share many of these things on any Android phone, but it takes several clicks, and some of the options are hidden in multi-level menus. The Facebook button brings it all front and center.
Other Facebook features are also a mix of the stuff available on other Android devices and unique new functions. The Status pulls Facebook Chat out into its own app, for instance; on other phones, it's buried as a menu option within the main Facebook app.Like all mobile devices, the Status is missing third-party Facebook apps, like all of those annoying games and quizzes that people tend to like. Excluding those apps from your feed may be a plus for many people, but you can't deny that they're part of the Facebook experience.
As an Android device, of course, the Status also plays well with other social networks. There's a built-in Twitter client, and you can download Google+ as well.
Multimedia
The Status comes with a 2GB MicroSD card hidden in a slot under the battery. This is a serious problem, because I actually couldn't get the back off my review unit after the first day; the back became so stuck, it was impossible to replace the MicroSD card. Three different PCMag analysts tried to remove it! HTC says the phone supports 32GB cards, but I couldn't check.
Music sounds hissy and tinny through the built-in speakers, but fine over a wired headset plugged into the 3.5mm jack or over a Bluetooth headset. The Status plays all the typical music formats; it also has a built-in FM radio that works with a wired headset.
The 5-megapixel camera, with LED flash, takes sharp photos quickly, and refreshingly without much shutter-speed blur in low light. In my tests, the video recorder seemed to tax the processor. The 720-by-480 videos were jerky at 20 frames per second outdoors and 15 indoors, and the recording stuttered at the start. Knocking the resolution down to 640-by-480 helped, but I never achieved 30 frames per second, and still saw the occasional stutter. There's also a front-facing VGA camera for the occasional self portrait.
For playing back recorded videos, the Status supports MPEG4, H.264, and WMV video formats up to about 640-by-480 in size; neither my 720p HD videos nor my DIVX and XVID files would play on the phone. In any case, watching videos on a 2.6-inch screen gets tiring pretty quickly.
AT&T's $8.99/month MobiTV-powered U-verse Live TV is the best kind of bloatware: it has plenty of live and on-demand channels which played smoothly in full-screen mode. YouTube videos also streamed smoothly in HQ mode over AT&T's network.
Conclusions
The HTC Status is a beautiful phone with good Facebook integration and an excellent keyboard, at the right price. But I can't recommend it with much enthusiasm because of how badly many apps (including Facebook!) work with the horizontal screen. Other Android phones don't have the hardware Facebook button, but they still integrate Facebook into their contact books and are more compatible with third-party apps: The $30 LG Phoenix is one affordable example.
If you're looking for a keyboard plus social networking, all of AT&T's offerings have flaws. But I'd take a serious look at the
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Final Thoughts
HTC Status (AT&T)
The Android-based HTC Status, America's first "Facebook phone," opens up a big social world through too tiny a window.