HTC First smartphone with Home by Facebook http://goo.gl/XdXhuv


BodyUnibody design
Dimensions126 x 65 x 9 mm
Weight124  grams
Hardware buttonsVolume keys and Unlock/power button
Body ColorsBlack white blue red
SIM cardYes

Hardware

Processor1.4 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 krait
GraphicsAdreno 305 GPU
SensorsAccelerometer  Proximity Sensor  Light Sensor Compass gyro

Display

Screen  size4.3 inches
Screen technologySuper LCD 3
Resolution720 X 1080 pixels
Pixel density341 ppi
colors16 Million colors
Touchscreen typeMulti touch
Screen ProtectionNA

Storage and Memory

RAM1 GB
Internal storage16 GB
ExpandabilityNo

Camera

Rear camera5MP with  LED flash
Video recording1080p Full HD Recording
Front facing camera1.6 MP
Video recording1080p Full HD

Software and OS

Operating systemAndroid 4.1 jelly bean
User InterfaceCustomized UI with Facebook Home preinstalled launcher
OperationCapacitive buttons
Notificationhap-tic feedback
FM radioYes with RDS
Headphone3.5 mm
Noise cancellationYes
Apps storeGoogle Play Store
BrowserChrome
Voice commandGoogle Now

Battery

Capacity2000 maH
TechnologyLi –ion  technology
Stand by timeNA
Talk timeNA

Connectivity

Mobile technologyGSM  UMTS HSPDA  LTE
Data networkGSM – 850  900  1800  1900  UMTS – 2100 HSPDA- 900/2100 MHz
Bluetooth4.0 version
Wi-Fi802.11 b/g/n with Wi-Fi mobile hotspot
USBMicro USB 2.0 with charging mass storage and USB charging
NFCYes
GPSA-GPS with Glonass
Other featureOTA sync

Availability and Pricing

Price99 USD  with carrier contract
Launch in IndiaExpected in Q2 2013

Officially Announced

Officially Announced4 April 2013
Market Status12 April 2013 in US( AT &T)
The HTC First is the device Facebook has chosen as the launchpad for its new mobile software experience, Facebook Home.
But forget the phone. It barely matters. It’s slim, simple and low-profile, a middling device designed to fade into the background and bring one thing, and one thing only, to the forefront: Facebook.
Facebook Home is the social networking giant’s Android takeover, or apperating system, as we’re calling it. I’ve been using it since it was unveiled last week, and I can tell you, it’s off to a promising start. Surprisingly, Facebook Home doesn’t bash you over the head with the “Facebook product.” Rather, it elegantly integrates with the Android operating system. You still get access to all of your standard Android apps like Chrome, Maps, Play Store, and Spotify. If anything, Home could benefit from more integration with the broader Android platform as it continues to grow.
A little about what Facebook Home is, exactly. It’s a software interface created by Facebook that changes the look and feel of the Android OS. It comes pre-installed on the HTC First, which sells for $100 with an AT&T contract, and you can also download it for free from Google Play starting Friday, April 12. It only runs on select Android devices for now — besides this phone, it will install on Samsung’s Galaxy S III and Note II, and HTC’s One X and One X+. It doesn’t replace Android, it merely augments it by using Facebook’s services to power the key social interactions you perform on the phone — browsing social media updates, chatting with somebody, sharing a picture, and sharing links.
To that end, it is a success. For people who spend a lot of time on Facebook and want to stay connected to their Facebook friends, Facebook Home makes absolute sense. There’s little reason not to get Facebook Home if you already have a compatible Android device. And even if, like myself, you don’t spend tons of time on the social networking site, Facebook Home adds value to the Android experience without feeling invasive.
The core of the Facebook Home experience is Cover Feed, a constantly refreshing visual display of your Facebook News Feed. It serves as your lock screen and your home screen. And it’s not shy — each individual update takes up your entire screen, showing large imagery and text, along with the profile thumbnail photo of the friend who posted the update. You can just stare at your lock screen as it slowly scrolls through updates, or you can take a more active role and start swiping through updates, Flipboard-style, which is also the same mechanism that unlocks the phone.
It’s a highly immersive experience, and to create it, Facebook Home’s designers actively diverged from the traditional, vertically organized mobile News Feed in Facebook’s Android and iOS apps. (“If you give each story its own space to live, it makes you appreciate the content a little more,” Facebook product designer Joey Flynn explained to me.) And in a lot of ways, Cover Feed is a better way to browse your updates. Swiping through full-screen photos is more tactile than scrolling through a long list of updates. Also, you can tap and hold a post to get a zoomed-out view of the image. You can double-tap to “like” something (borrowed from Instagram) and tap on the comments icon to see all the interactions with a post, all without leaving Cover Feed. Facebook wants you consuming and interacting with your friends’ photos and posts as much as possible, so that’s where Home is centered. It works: I found myself double-tapping to like posts a lot more often in Cover Feed than I’m used to on the desktop or inside the Facebook iOS app.
The most impressive feature that comes with Facebook Home, however, has nothing to do with updates from the News Feed. It’s the centralized messaging system, Chat Heads. It’s a weird name, but it’s a fantastic, multitasking, mobile chat application.
A chat comes in either over SMS or Facebook Messenger. Instead of you having to switch to a messaging app, a little circular icon showing your friends’ face floats on top of your home screen, or whatever app you’re currently running. Just tap that Chat Head to continue the conversation, or swipe it downwards to forget about it. Once you’re in the messaging interface, you can have multiple Chat Heads at the top, and they remain there as long as you want to continue a conversation. It’s the one feature of Home I most want to see ported to other mobile operating systems.
That said, Facebook Home still needs a whole lot more polish and growth. The Chat Heads feature works well if you’re messaging with Facebook friends. But when you sync your contacts from Facebook, it doesn’t recognize when one of your Facebook friends has text messaged you. Instead, a bland “SMS” Chat Head pops up, even if you have that person’s number in your contacts. It’s a bug Facebook will surely fix in a future update (the company has committed to monthly updates, and since Home runs as an app on top of Android, it can be updated independently of the OS) but is also indicative of Facebook Home’s infancy.
As Facebook rolls out more updates, it will need to integrate more with the Android platform. For example, Facebook Home doesn’t currently have the capability to sync Facebook photos into the Gallery app or Facebook events to your Calendar. When you tap and hold a photo in Cover Feed, you can’t rotate your phone to view it horizontally. If you want to see somebody’s Timeline, you have to jump into the main Facebook app — a jarring experience, since Home and the Facebook app use differing design languages. There’s also no way to jump from a specific post in Cover Feed to that same post in the app.
Many of these features are already available on another mobile operating system: Windows Phone 8, where Facebook is also deeply integrated. On current Windows Phones, your Facebook photos appear in your gallery, and you can view your Facebook events in the main WP8 calendar app. Contacts sync seamlessly. Overall, that’s a good thing for Facebook. “We wanted to turn as many phones as possible into ‘Facebook phones,’” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told Wired recently. But Facebook Home does need to play a bit of catch-up. It seems only inevitable that Home will continue to push further and further into Android until it reaches a point where it’s more integrated into Google’s mobile OS than Microsoft’s. And since we’re expecting monthly updates to Home, all of these missing elements are more than likely already on Facebook’s to-do list.
As for the hardware, Facebook says it is already working with phone manufacturers and carriers to build more handsets that come pre-installed with Facebook Home. If the HTC First is any indication, these phones will be competent and affordable mid-range devices. The First is about what you’d expect for a $100 handset. It has a 4.3-inch screen with a 1280×720 resolution, a 1.4GHz dual core processor and 16GB of storage. There’s a 5-megapixel camera in back and a 1.3-megapixel eye in front. It’s an AT&T phone with LTE support, and it’s running Android version 4.1. The First also has a relatively large 2000mAh battery — the hardware has been optimized for the animation-heavy software, so you don’t have to worry about battery life on this phone. In my tests, I subjected the HTC First to continuous image-heavy Facebook Home updates and refreshes, and the First’s battery lasted longer than my iPhone 5, which has a 1440 mAh battery. Results may vary if you install Home on your Galaxy S III.
And if you’re worried about data usage, Facebook Home has a “Data Use and Image Quality” setting to let you control how often posts refresh in Cover Feed. You can throttle your data consumption by setting the update frequency to high, medium or low. It’s a thoughtful addition, considering how costly data overages are.
HTC First, Facebook Phone Specification, Price and Launch Date



New HTC First smartphone with Home by Facebook coming to Europe with Orange in France and EE in the UK as exclusive launch partners

  • HTC is launching the first smartphone with an entirely new Facebook experience, called Home, exclusively with Orange in France and EE in the UK
  • The launch of the 4G HTC First with Home builds on long-standing relationship between Facebook and Orange to deliver the best Facebook experience to Orange customers
  • The HTC First will be available from Summer 2013.  EE and Orange France will confirm pricing and exact availability at a later date
Paris, 4th April, 2013 – Today Orange is announcing it is the exclusive European launch partner of Facebook in bringing the new HTC First smartphone to customers with Orange in France and EE in the UK. 
The HTC First with Home by Facebook is a 4G smartphone providing an entirely new Facebook experience on two of the best mobile networks in Europe, along with the best services from EE and Orange. With Home, Orange and EE customers will get friends' updates directly on their home screen, messages and notifications will reach them no matter what they’re doing, and photo sharing becomes even easier – all via the new 4G network in France with Orange, and 4G on EE.
“Orange has worked with Facebook to bring the best possible Facebook experience to our customers around the world for years, from increasing mobile access to Facebook in emerging markets to the launch of Home today,” said Jean-Paul Cottet, Executive Vice President, Marketing & Innovation at Orange. “We are proud to be Facebook’s exclusive partner in bringing the HTC First, with the most advanced and richest mobile Facebook experience available, to our customers on the best 4G mobile networks in France and the UK.”
“With Home enabled out of the box, you’ll be able to get everyone's latest updates and messages right on your home screen,” said Dan Rose, Vice President of Partnerships at Facebook.
"True to HTC’s track record of providing cutting edge design, and being first to offer new smartphone experiences to the market, the HTC First offers a unique home experience to Facebook's many users," said Peter Chou, CEO HTC. "Along with our partners and fellow innovators—Orange in France and EE in the UK—we anticipate excitement from customers when the HTC First becomes available, putting a user's friends and family at the centre of their mobile experience.”
The HTC First transforms the Facebook experience, featuring:
  • Cover Feed: A constant stream of photos and updates from friends that is always available at a glance. Swipe through to see more and interact with friends by liking, commenting, and sharing right from the Cover Feed.
  • Notifications: Thanks to Home’s deep integration with the HTC first, notifications from apps appear alongside updates from friends right on the home screen. It’s easier to see when you have a missed call, calendar reminder or new message.
  • Chat Heads: Keep chatting with Facebook contacts even when using other apps. Reply right from Chat Heads, or move them around if you're not ready to respond, and send SMS and Facebook messages from the same place.
  • App Launcher:  Set favourite apps and access them directly through Facebook Home.
The HTC first will be available from Summer 2013, with Orange France and EE in the UK confirming availability and pricing at a later date.
To keep up with the latest information on the HTC first, customers can visit www.facebook.com/Orange.France for Orange France and http://www.ee.co.uk/Facebook for EE in the UK.

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