Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. Reviews

HTC Hero Review

Add as a preferred source on Google
“There are a treasure trove of enhanced operational gems buried inside the Hero just waiting to be joyfully discovered.”
Pros
  • HTC Sense Android OS; multi-touch interface; outlook contact/calendar sync; visual voicemail; 3.5mm headphone jack
Cons
  • 5MP photos often out of focus; no flash; sluggish operation; confusing USB connectivity; short battery life (4 hrs. talk)

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Summary

If you’re a Sprint customer tired of listening to your rapturous iPhone-owning buds rave about the device while waiting for a decent smartphone alternative to arrive on the network, rejoice – your wait is over. Sprint’s Android-powered Hero, made by HTC, isn’t perfect – in fact, the cellular handset’s often really sluggish – but it does offer several compelling reasons to buy. Think multi-touch pinch in/out resizing of photos and Web pages, plus Outlook sync – just like the iPhone. In addition, the device actually improves on Apple’s offering in several noteworthy ways, including a sharper 5MP camera, haptic feedback on its QWERTY keyboard and a microSD slot for expandable storage.

HTC HeroFeatures and Design

Recommended Videos

Coming across as super-sleek with its silver gray and black exterior and both smooth and rounded aesthetic, the Hero looks as cool and sophisticated as James Bond in a tux. As noted, it’s got a 5MP camera but no flash, WiFi connectivity and the usual spate of touchscreen Android/HTC endowments – including, finally, a 3.5mm headphone jack. Instead of all buttons being located under the screen, the usual Android Menu, Home, Search and Back controls are flat rocker panels surrounding the trackball. HTC has also added an enhanced Android-plus interface called HTC Sense, which adds a passel of personalization preferences as well as four extra home screen panels – plenty of room to display all manner of apps. But what you’ll really be excited to learn: The Hero’s touchscreen finger scrolling is every bit as smooth and fluid as that found on the iPhone.

Ports & Connectors

HTC insists on having a mini USB instead of the industry standard microUSB jack. But the manufacturer does offer a standard USB jack at the other end of the cable that connects to the AC transformer, an arrangement we applaud. Once connected to a Mac or PC, though, you have to tell the Hero that you want to “mount” the SD card to sync contacts or transfer media. We’ve encountered this with other so-called smartphones and can’t understand why an intelligent device doesn’t know when it’s connected. That said, the 3.5mm jack is found on the top, but the microSD card is located underneath the battery cover.

Multimedia Features

Both the music player and the Hero’s video capabilities are top-notch, and, in some ways, better than those found on the iPod. For instance, to browse your music queue forward or back, you simply swipe through albums while the song is playing. We couldn’t find any EQ choices, however. Nonetheless, the HTC Hero’s 3.2-inch screen is crisp and colorful and plays videos without a hitch or hiccup.

HTC HeroPhone Functionality

Call quality at both ends was fine, if a mite noisy. But HTC has cleverly combined the dialpad with your contact list and you can easily toggle from the scrollable list to the dialpad and back again. Importing your Outlook contacts and calendar is easy, although it put all of our Outlook 2003 contacts in alphabetical order by first name.

Web

The Hero’s HTML browser always seem to frame articles in readable type within the borders of the screen, a trick not accomplished often enough by other phones. When you’re within range of 3G coverage, pages snap into view in three-to-five seconds.

Camera

Even though the 5MP imager gives you lots of quantity, the quality lacks. Parts of photos are sharp and other parts are fuzzy and out of focus, and tones seem to shift from shot to shot (see the two shots of the apartment building on the cliff). With no flash, it was nearly impossible to get a clear shot indoors.

Conclusion

When it goes on sale on Oct. 11, the HTC Hero could rescue Sprint – this is easily the best iPhone-like handset the carrier has ever had. But the handset’s biggest drawback is its sluggishness – it doesn’t react as instantaneously as other phones. Still, there are a treasure trove of enhanced operational gems buried inside just waiting to be joyfully discovered.

Pros:

  • HTC Sense Android OS
  • Multi-touch interface
  • Outlook contact/calendar sync
  • Visual voicemail
  • 3.5mm headphone jack

Cons:

  • 5MP photos often out of focus
  • No flash
  • Sluggish operation
  • Confusing USB connectivity
  • Short battery life (4 hrs. talk)
Stewart Wolpin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Apple’s iPhone Ultra could one-up the Galaxy Z Fold 7 with a bigger battery
4,883mAh total capacity, two cells, and two screens drawing power. Somewhere between "fine" and "I hope Apple's software does the heavy lifting."
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Apple's foldable iPhone is getting closer to its September announcement. Despite rumors of a delay, a recent report claimed that Foxconn is hiring temporary workers to ramp up production of the Ultra. Now we have a number for one of its most important specs: the battery.

I'll be honest: when I saw the battery figure, my reaction was somewhere between "that works" and "I was hoping for more."

Read more
The next “flagship killer” is coming from Motorola, but it may not reach the US anytime soon.
The Motorola Edge 70 Max looks great on paper, but only India is getting it on July 15.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Motorola is building the most ambitious phone in its Edge 70 lineup, but it might not be available in the United States. 

Specs like a 7,000-nit display and MagSafe-style magnetic wireless charging belong in a conversation that often includes flagships, but it looks like Motorola wants to break that norm. 

Read more
Your Google Voice calls just got an AI note-taker, and a cheaper price tag
Your calls just got a personal assistant, and your wallet just caught a break.
Google Voice Featured image

Remember when Google Voice was just that free number you used to dodge spam calls? It's come a long way since then, and today it's taking its biggest leap yet: letting Gemini quietly sit in on your calls and handle the note-taking for you.

How does AI note taking work on calls?

Read more