HTC Desire Z Android Smartphone (Tastiera QWERTY)
- Codice eXpansys: 203897
- , EAN: 5055147557660
- , Mfr: 99HLW008-00
- , Marca: HTC
-
Articolo esaurito - in alternativa, consigliamo HTC ChaCha Android Smartphone (QWERTY, Bianco)
- Esaurito
Contatta il Servizio per le aziende per preventivi a partire da 5 pezzi di uno stesso articolo: 0294751416 o it-pro@expansys.com
Accessori

-
SanDisk 32GB micro SDHC
€ 30,99
HTC Desire Z Android Smartphone Specifiche
Pensato per chi é sempre in movimento, l'HTC Desire Z ti permette di restare connesso con gli amici su Facebook e Twitter, oppure con i colleghi o i clienti!
L'HTC Desire Z svela una comoda tastiera Qwerty per scrivere velocemente, una serie di scorciatoie sulla tastiera e due tasti personalizzabili per accedere con rapidità alle tue applicazioni preferite, senza doverle ricercare nel menu'.
Potrai anche registrare video in HD a 720p e scattare foto con la fotocamera da 5MP.
Il Desire Z é inoltre dotato del processore Qualcomm 7230 da 800 Mhz per aumentare la durata della batteria e dell'HTC Fast Boot.
| Desire Z -Caratteristiche: |
| Display | 3.7" WVGA (480 X 800 pixel) display / tastiera scorrevole |
| HTC Sense | Pannello frontale touch-sensitive con tasti che rispondono perfettamente al tocco delle dita per navigare nel menu' |
| Rete | Naviga e scarica con l'HSDPA |
| GPS | Antenna GPS integrata, Google Maps |
| Fotocamera | Da 5MP per foto e video di qualità / video HD 720p |
| Connettività | Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11 b/g/n), Bluetooth 2.1, jack audio da 3.5 mm |
- Peso impachettato: 0,41kg
Video
Commenti utenti

- by Anonymous
- venerdì 3 febbraio 2012
HTC Desire Z
I've been using the Desire Z for about two weeks now and in the overall I think it's a very good phone with a pretty design. There are two things I would like to point though. The first one is about the keyboard layout. A regular win or mac keyboard has the shift key over the control key, so I instinctively press fn when I want shift and the other way around. Also the menu and search keys are not on the bottom edge of the keyboard, so I always go for the ones next to the display and never use them. The second one is about battery life. It is a real struggle to make it last for two days and I have to charge it almost every night. Despite that I think it's a great phone and all things considered, I'm pretty pleased with it.

- by Ben Jones
- mercoledì 25 gennaio 2012
A brilliant phone for a remarkable price
The HTC Desire Z is my second smartphone, my second from HTC and my first Android device (although I did try Android on my other phone) and, although it took a while to save up for it, the phone is well worth it. First off, there is general concern that the unique ‘Z’ hinged keyboard is a bit loose and at first it may seem so. However, this “looseness” is only noticeable if the keyboard is extended slowly or the phone is help by the screen only. As long as the keyboard is opened and closed quickly (which is what HTC intended), then the motion feels very solid and impressive. The keyboard itself is fairly large, being a full QWERTY keyboard with several special keys to allow you to type numbers and symbols easily. Each key is quite large (although those with large fingers may find quick typing a bit difficult) which means that they are also quite close together, making typing two letters which are next to each other a bit of a challenge. Each key is raised and obvious when it’s been pressed. You can also create custom “shortcuts” to combinations which are frequently used. Because of the keyboard, the phone itself is quite bulky, although it is a lot slimmer than you may imagine – it is not too dissimilar to any other modern smartphone and easily fits into most pockets. The 3.7” screen dominates the front of the phone and when turned landscape, the on screen keyboard is also very easy to use. Even with a downclocked CPU (from 1GHz to 800 MHz), the Android OS mostly feels fast and responds well, although having a lot of apps open may cause the phone to slow down over time. HTC Sense really adds to the OS, making the experience even better. Moving from landscape to portrait and vice versa is very smooth and fairly accurate – and extending the keyboard automatically puts the phone in landscape mode. Be careful if you are going to update to Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) as an issue between 2.3 and HTC Sense occasionally causes restarts when returning to the home screen and can even reset the phone to its factory settings (although this issue is with HTC Sense, not the Desire Z). The final thing I will mention is the battery. The phone is VERY power hungry (which is actually why the CPU was downclocked, to save on battery consumption). Even with everything pretty much turned off and the phone locked it will struggle to get through 2 days. For some people, charging the phone is a nuisance, however I have always charged overnight so this didn’t affect me at all and the phone can easily last a day of on and off use (with the occasional bit of internet use) with ~40% battery left at the end of the day. If you use your phone continuously, you will need to keep a charger and a spare battery with you. Overall, this phone is very impressive. Its performance is truly brilliant and it’s available for a remarkable price: £250 – a bargain. Anyone looking at getting an Android smartphone should really consider this. It has so many positives and all the negatives can be easily remedied with no real effort. Yet again HTC has produce a phone worthy of the podium.

- by Anonymous
- venerdì 20 gennaio 2012
1st Android phone for me
This is my first Android phone. The decider for me was the slide out QUERTY keyboard. I'd read various reviews, and was uncertain as there seems to be an issue about the hinge mechanism being a bit sloppy. A relative has this phone and said it's fine, so I decided to go for it. The hinge certainly felt alarmingly floppy when I first tried it, and I was treating the phone very gingerly for the first day or two. I read another review saying that the screen wobbles when closed, and there is indeed a tiny bit of movement - if you hold the phone up level to your eyes, and press the corners! And there is the tiniest gap on the left side when it's closed, which my ex-engineer husband says is nothing given the mechanism. Not that you'd notice any of this in general use. I've relaxed a bit now, and flick the keyboard in and out with gusto, and don't find it sloppy anymore. It's stable when open, no problems. You won't like it if you've big fingers though. You can see only half the width of the phone is exposed for the keypad, so it's packed in tightly - fine for those with delicate fingers though and everything's in easy reach if you've small hands. The phone has a light sensor, so it shuts off the backlight on the keyboard if it judges there's enough light. Unfortunately, it seems more sensitive to light than my eyes so very occasionally I find I have to move to see the keyboard, but only where say I'm in the darkest corner of a shady room when the sun's really strong outside. The power button is at the top, and some reviews said it's awkward to get to one-handed - but I've quickly got used to it and can easily reach it with my right index finger, holding the phone in my palm one handed. And I have small hands. In fact I prefer it to my old Samsung where the power button was in the middle at the bottom and you had to press it with your thumb. Felt more fiddly than this. I've never used the little tracker pad on the bottom - not sure why you need it with a touchscreen. Maybe they should have put the camera there instead since having it on the back seems to bother some people. Biggest problem I've had with it was the gallery - I tried to delete all the pre-loaded pictures and they kept half coming back (files but no image) and photos I was taking with the camera were disappearing although I can find them when I plug in to my laptop, which was irritating. But then, I have a camera for photography, and don't plan using the phone camera much anyway, unless to immediatly send to facebook or email, so so what? And I sync'd it with my Flickr account, but it won't let me put the Flickr icon on my homepage with my facebook and gmail icons, and I can't find out why. Can't comment much about the rest - tekkie views on the screen, the OS or any of that as this is my first ever smartphone, so I can't compare, but I find the screen nice and smooth, quick and responsive, and I like that the text wraps to the screen when I zoom in and out, and it quickly flips to landscape when I turn the phone on its side, making it comfy to surf the net. I've not encountered any problems I haven't been able to solve on the HTC users' forum. I wasn't prepared for the battery life though - I have to charge it almost fully every night - which may or may not be typical of smartphones! Obviously wifi/bluetooth etc eat the battery, so I'm keeping them off unless in use, and as the novelty wears off I might slow my use up and it'll last longer. But if I was awa
Forum di assistenza
| Argomento | Latest Post | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Vedi tutti i messaggi | |||
Upgrading a Desire Z from 2.2 to 4.0?da NateM il 09 gennaio 2012 a 02.08 |
Risposte: 0 |
da NateM |
|
Is the Desire Z Rooted?da Ben Jones il 31 dicembre 2011 a 00.47 |
Risposte: 1 |
da Eilertsen |
|
User's manual - HTC Desire Zda Eilertsen il 22 dicembre 2011 a 11.45 |
Risposte: 0 |
da Eilertsen |
|
Htc desire z Phone loses tone and photosda msalokan il 29 ottobre 2011 a 16.18 |
Risposte: 0 |
da msalokan
|
|
QWERTY keyboardda Lihis il 17 agosto 2011 a 13.49 |
Risposte: 0 |
da Lihis
|
|
Is HTC Desire Z available on t-mobile?da sold_out il 07 novembre 2010 a 12.57 |
Risposte: 1 |
da moonright
|
|
Caratteristiche tecniche
- CPU speed:
800 MHz - Platform:
Android™ with HTC Sense™ - Network:
HSPA/WCDMA Europe/Asia: 900/2100 MHz
Upload speed of up to 5.76 Mbps and download speed of up to 14.4 Mbps
Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
(Band frequency, HSPA availability, and data speed are operator dependent) - Memory:
Internal phone storage: 1.5 GB
RAM: 512 MB - Display:
3.7-inch touch screen with 480 x 800 resolution - Keyboard:
Z-slider QWERTY keyboard - GPS:
Internal GPS antenna - Sensors:
G-Sensor, Digital compass, Proximity sensor, Ambient light sensor - Connectivity:
Bluetooth® 2.1 with FTP/OPP for file transfer, A2DP for wireless stereo headsets, and PBAP for phonebook access from the car kit
Wi-Fi®: IEEE 802.11b/g/n
3.5 mm stereo audio jack
Standard micro-USB (5-pin micro-USB 2.0 - Camera:
5.0 megapixel color camera with auto focus and flashlight
720p HD video recording - Expansion slot:
microSD™ memory card (SD 2.0 compatible) - Special features:
Support sharing pictures, video or music to your big screen TV or PC display via DLNA® (Digital Living Network Alliance) - Battery:
Rechargeable Lithium-ion battery
Capacity: 1300 mAh
Talk time:
· Up to 400 minutes for WCDMA
· Up to 590 minutes for GSM
Standby time:
· Up to 430 hours for WCDMA
· Up to 430 hours for GSM - Weight: 180 grams (6.35 ounces) with battery
- Dimensions (LxWxT): 119 x 60.4 x 14.16 mm (4.69 x 2.38 x 0.56 inches)
- In the box: Battery, Stereo Headset, microUSB cable, AC Charger, 8GB microSD card, Quick Start Guide
I clienti che hanno comprato quest'articolo hanno comprato pure
Consigliamo

Acer Allegro M310 Blu scuro
- € 171,99

BlackBerry® Bold 9790 QWERTY
- € 389,99

BlackBerry® Bold 9900 QWERTY,Nero
- € 544,99

BlackBerry® Curve 9320 QWERTY, Black
- € 224,99































































