My important features of the Android smartphone comparison, between Nexus One and the HTC Desire.
| Features | ![]() |
![]() |
| Form | Visually longer screen although both having 3.7 inches screen Only slightly thicker by 0.4mm Has a slight chin bottom of the phone Rubberized case |
Slimmer and based on the rounded shape, it feels slimmer than 0.4mm Special coating on the cover, smoother feel |
| Weight | 135g | 130g, Based on the specifications, Nexus One is only 5g lighter, but there is a noticeable difference while holding it |
| Speed | ![]() As both of these devices are having very similar hardware specifications, the benchmark is actually very close to each other with minimal significant difference. This is a tie. |
|
| Hardware | As compared to the Nexus One, HTC Desire’s sensor are either too sensitive or not sensitive. The ambient light sensor is not sensitive and the Orientation sensor detects the roll and switch to landscape mode ever too often. It takes difficulty to switch it back to vertical mode. |
Has noise cancellation, light sensor, and G sensor works extremely well Touch screen or multi-touch is not perfectly accurate, same as HTC Desire |
| Software | Runs Eclair, Android SDK 2.1 Runs HTC Proprietary UI, HTC Sense I would rate HTC Sense higher so here’s Desire win |
Runs Eclair, Android 2.1 and latest update is Froyo Android 2.2. With the Nexus One you can always expect early updates from the Android team |
| Navigation buttons | Optical trackpad on the phone is for navigating the links or items acting like a cursor. You need to swipe it like on a Blackberry optical trackpad. | Trackball is my favourite feature on the Nexus One. Check out my videos: ![]() ![]() See how many people supported enabling the trackball lights: http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=6018 |
| Virtual Keyboard | HTC Sense made it so much easy to use the virtual keyboard and in your speed typing |
Stock Android keyboard is just, plain |
| Accessories | Unfortunately, the phone package doesn’t come with a case, although it’s common. No other official accessories comes with the phone besides the battery charger and the headset |
Android Case, and optionally you can purchase the car dock or desktop dock online. You can even purchase battery for backup |
| Warranty and Support | Local Distributor Warranty – this I believe is the major advantage of this phone |
Google online support Due to the phone not sold in stores, you can only get help from Google via the website : http://www.google.com/phone/support |
| Total |
4 | 6 |
Based on my personal opinion, the Nexus One would have two points up against the HTC Desire. However, do keep in mind that certain features has higher importance (weight) against other features. Put that into your own calculation based on your preference and I believe you should be able to make a reasonable choice between the two.
What do you think? Do you agree with the above comparison?
Acknowledgement
This review is not a sponsored post by Maxis, but the HTC Desire phone is given by Maxis for this review. They have specifically spelt out that it does not matter that the review is positive or negative, and there are no rules at all. All that is required is a fair review of the phone.
HTC Desire Review – Part 1
HTC Desire Review – The Phone – Part 2
HTC Desire Review – The Features – Part 3
Tags: #maxis10, Android 2.1, HTC, HTC Desire, Maxis, Maxis10Reviews
The choice did come down to aesthetics (firmly in the Nexus one camp myself), but sadly, Google have decided to can their phone for no, gut feeling is that this is more to do with the actions of the networks than Google.
Hopefully HTC will see sense and continue to sell it in some form, because it is stunning.