Dá-lhe,
Abaixo você poderá ver um unboxing do Blackberry Bold feito pelo pessoal do CrackBerry, incluindo um comparativo com outros modelos, incluindo um iPhone 3G.
(Unboxing)
HP iPAQ 910 vs Palm Treo 800W HP iPAQ 910 vs Samsung Instinct HP iPAQ 910 vs Samsung Ace SPH-i325 Smartphone HP iPAQ 910 vs Blackberry Pearl HP iPAQ 910 vs iPhone HP iPAQ 910 vs ETEN Glowfish M800 HP iPAQ 910 vs Palm Treo 750 HP iPAQ 910 vs HTC Tilt
Here we are - A gallery of the iPhone 3G in White and some comparisons to the original iPhone 2G. Short version: The iPhone 3G is a bit thicker, a smidge taller, and (most surprisingly) noticeably wider, it feels just as good in the hand because of the curved back. That wider part also means there’s a slight border on the left and right of the screen — but all in all the iPhone 3G is essentially the same slab as the original iPhone.
The plastic backing feels very solid — it’s very hard plastic and though it’s not likely to be as scratch-resistant as the original metal, it’s a damn sight tougher than most smartphone plastic we’ve seen. It is a fingerprint magnet back to front, even in white (though the white hides it better).The headphone jack is flush (yay) and looks to be well-constructed. Unlike many a smarthphone we’ve used before, there’s no jiggle whatsoever when you plug a headset in. Ok, we’ll say it, the headset jack on Treos would often get busted because the soldier points would fail — that doesn’t look to be a concern here. Also great: Speaker quality and call quality are FAR SUPERIOR to the original iPhone.
We’re going to have much much more throughout the day, including a full hardware review, a full review of the iPhone 2.0 OS, some app reviews, and a new chance for you to win stuff from TiPb. Keep on coming back all day, but for now check out our gallery and unboxing video after the break.
Our verdict on the HTC Diamond hardware (at least in it's European incarnation): GREAT. It's tiny, it has incredible screen resolution, it's snappy, and battery life is... just barely acceptable (but acceptable nontheless). We adore this little guy, it's just filled with nice and unexpected design touches. Setting the phone face down on the table to ignore a call: sweet. Having the screen turn on when you pull out the stylus: sweeter. Noticing that the outer edges of the Diamond are metal so you can just slap the magnetic stylus on the side of the device while you have it out: sweeter still. Not needing the stylus 95% of the time because the interface is designed to work with your finger both in TouchFLO 3D and even within classic WM apps: Sweetest.
More verdicts and a gallery of the HTC Diamond alone and with friends after the break!
Our verdict on TouchFLO 3D, the Diamond's fancy new interface: Still a little too slow despite the fact that we're running the official ROM on it. Actually, here's the real deal: TouchFLO 3D is an great casual user interface. It's fairly 'discoverable' in that you can get how to use it fairly quickly. Although it's responsive enough, it does seem to give us fits every now and then when trying to get to a certain panel or swipe instead of tap. It's very, very pretty.
However the slight lags in the interface combined with the fact that it's not always as useful as a full interface make it tough to recommend to power users. We never went so far as to just abandon it during our testing, but we did note that when you do turn it off (it's just an option for the Today Screen), the Diamond felt like the fastest WinMo smartphone we've ever used.
One last verdict: Opera Mobile 9.5. Swoon... but maybe a stitch more resource-heavy than we'd hoped.