This holiday season we have seen the release of some power house phones
on Big Red’s network. The first being the Razr, the second being the
Rezound and the third finally being the Galaxy Nexus. As you should now
well know, the Nexus is out. Hey! Where’d you go? Oh, well, for those
of you still here and reading, this review will feature the Rezound in
all its glory. So without any further hesitation here it is; the review.
Design
The first thing you’ll notice when you pick up this phone is that it
has some serious heft. Weighing in at 5.78 ounces, this phone is almost
1.5 ounces heavier than the Droid RAZR and about an ounce heavier than
the Galaxy Nexus. The phone is 0.54” thick which is about two times the
thickness of the RAZR. Other specs are 5.1″ x 2.6″ which gives the phone
a decent size even with the 4.3” screen. However even with the size and
heft I was able to move my entire thumb over the whole screen with
ease.
The phone also feels balanced in your hand so holding it for any
length of time shouldn’t be tiring. The contour ridged back on the phone
gives it a great grip to prevent slipping and adds a nice feel to
holding the device. The phone basically looks like a bigger, thicker
version of the Incredible 2 but with a nicer screen. One gripe I did
have with the phone were the power and volume rocker buttons. I found
that they were hard to find and press without a little fumbling around
first. I did eventually get used to them after a while. Continuing on.

Textured Back and Duel-LED Flash for Camera
Hardware
The full hardware specs include a 1.5GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S3
MSM8660 dual-core processor, with 1 GB of RAM and 32GB of storage (12GB
usable with 16GB SD card). It has the first 720p qHD LCD (color TFT/TFD)
display in the U.S. and also boasts a higher PPI resolution than that
of the iPhone, 8MP rear camera with 1080p video recording, dual LED
flash and a 2MP front-facing camera. The phone comes with iBeats
headphones that double as a headset. It comes with Bluetooth 3.0, wifi,
and miniUSB and Android 2.3.4 with Sense 3.5 (sort of). We will get to
the sort of here in a bit. One thing, if you buy this phone, do not get
thrown off by the miniUSB port as normal miniUSB plugs fit into it. I
don’t know why HTC decided to change this up but it kind of threw me off
at first.
Different Micro-USB Plug In
Battery
Out of the three power house phones the Rezound has the smallest
battery at 1620mAh. Given moderate use, two or three phone calls,
constant emailing and texting, some music use, I have found that the
battery is decent. I don’t have 4G in my area because well, I live in
the boonies of Montana. However, I was still impressed with how long the
battery lasts. After 14 hours and said moderate use I am still sitting
at 43% battery life, even with Sense. For most people who have HTC
phones you know the battery isn’t the strongest aspect of the phone, but
like I said, this battery did a lot better than expected.
Performance
When I first booted the phone I was zipping right along. The entire
phone was both snappy and responsive and I saw no lag time. I did not
benchmark the phone but based performance on use. I use my phone as I
see a typical business user would. Emails were sent and received quite
quickly, I was able to zip through apps and multi-task without a moment
of lag.
The qHD LCD display while not as crisp as some of Samsung’s Super
AMOLED displays was in itself, quite crisp. The entire screen just
looked, polished. I don’t know what it is but it seemed that the
backlight was a little dull, so while the screen looked crisp, it just
didn’t pop. However for the average user, you will be quite impressed
with it. Video displayed on the phone was crystal clear.
The one thing I did notice about the phone that I found somewhat
annoying was that the backlights used to light the capacitive buttons
showed up on the touch screen, leaving small amounts of light showing
(see below). While minor, it detracted from the finish and polish of the
phone. Sound quality was clear and I was able to hear conversations
crystal clear. Speaking of the capacitive buttons, I found the backlight
sometimes didn’t turn on where as other times it did. Apparently, after
some searching around on the internet, the reason the lights seem to
“randomly” turn on is because it’s based on ambient light. If you have
great ambient light, the lights don’t turn on, if it’s darker, they do.
In my opinion this is a pretty awesome feature, although it takes a bit
to get used to.
Capacitive Lights Bleed
Software
The phone comes with Android 2.3.4 and Sense 3.5 (sort of, again I
will get to that). As HTC has said, the Rezound will be seeing Ice Cream
Sandwich but won’t be until sometime next year. Sense is installed and
the current version is somewhat on here. The reason I say sort of and
somewhat is that this phone is missing a few key Sense 3.0+ features
that come with others. There is no HTC hub which I don’t get. For those
that don’t know, this hub allows you to download different widgets,
apps, alerts, and ringtones and so on. Another thing that was missing
was the shortcuts and clock widget. The new weather animations are
gorgeous and looked good as well.
When I first started up the phone I went through the usual account
sign up process. However the first thing I noticed was that instead of
re-downloading my apps like previous phones it just synced my contacts,
emails and so on. I don’t know if this has something to do with people
having data caps but I miss not having to re-download each individual
app while also trying to remember which free ones I downloaded, quite
tedious nonetheless but after I downloaded all these apps I was back in
business. I did notice that the Rezound has only 2GB of storage set
aside for apps which to me seems kind of small. Maybe because of
App-to-SD support, this isn’t an issue but with these flagship phones
being all about storage and capacity it seems weird that so little was
allocated for apps.
The camera worked well and the panorama mode is pretty awesome. The
phone takes decent photos as you will see from the pictures below. There
wasn’t much in terms of shutter or photo lag. Check out the photos
below to see how well the camera held up. I tested out the video and it
held up pretty well and the picture was decent. Some aspects of the
phone caused bleeding. Look at the picture of the shop chihuahua and you
can see what I mean. Yes, we have a shop chihuahua, don’t judge me.
There was one nagging bug in the software that I found after a little
use. When you go to send a text message and are in landscape mode the
keyboard kind of tweaks out. The message will “glitch” and when you hit
the space bar it will act like hitting the return key and add a new
line. However it only does this once and the backspace key doesn’t do
anything until you return to portait mode. I wasn’t able to replicate
the bug in the email app so it appears that it’s localized to the
messaging app.
Beats Audio
The Rezound boasts the fact that it is the first U.S. handset to have
Beats by Dre integrated into it. This comes in two flavors. First is
the optimized music app with the special Beats (EQ) profile. Coupled
with a pair of iBeats in-ear headphones valued at $100 retail the
Rezound offers one of the best headsets out there.
I popped some music onto my SD card and plugged these puppies in. I
experimented with various genres and found that the bass sounds amazing,
even with both rock and classical songs. I was amazed at the sound
quality and if you want a phone with awesome sound the Rezound is your
choice. However I did notice that when Beats was disabled the music did
sound somewhat flat. When it was enabled though, it was well received
and I enjoyed using the headphones immensely. Some have complained of a
lack of bass sound but I found that this was only true when the
headphones weren’t set properly in my ear. A quick readjust fixed this
and I was rocking along. The only downside was that it’s Beat by Dre’s
way or no way. You have no ability to change your EQ settings.
The headphones double as a nice headset and the party on the other side
was able to hear me quite clearly most of the time. I say most of the
time because about 10 minutes into my first phone call I noticed a
strange crackling sound and the other party could barely hear me. I
fiddled with the connection a little bit and the crackling got worse. I
don’t know if this has something to do with the
sound issues some Rezounds are having but after that one time I haven’t had another issue like that. So honestly I don’t know.
Summary
In closing, I have to say I am thoroughly impressed with this phone.
It’s thick and sturdy but after you get used to the heft you will barely
notice. Ice Cream Sandwich will eventually come to this phone but I
will have to say that the Nexus has that over both the RAZR and the
Rezound. However if you are looking for a phone that will eventually see
ICS and enjoy phones and headsets that put out great sound then the
Rezound is a great choice for you. The display while a wee bit
lackluster still looked crisp. I am still saddened by a few aspects of
Sense 3.5 missing but if you haven’t used them before, you will not miss
them now.
The Beats Audio is for lack of a better description, amazing. Even
with other genres the headphones put out amazing sound and the phone
makes a great iPod or MP3 player replacement. The phone’s other
specifications puts it right up there with the best of them and this
phone has some staying power. So if you are in the market for a new
phone I recommend this phone immensely. Like Robert, who wrote up the review on the RAZR, I am impatient when it comes to Ice Cream Sandwich
so I bought the Nexus. However if ICS isn’t on the top of your list in
terms of priority then you can’t go wrong with this phone. For those of
you having a hard time deciding, look for our upcoming review of the Galaxy Nexus to help with your decision.