Testseek.com have collected 263 expert reviews of the HTC Flyer and the average rating is 72%. Scroll down and see all reviews for HTC Flyer.
(72%)
263 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
720100263
The editors liked
Solid industrial design
Mesmerizing and high quality display
Latest version of Sense UI
Unique offering with HTC Scribe technology
Small form factor and pen design is excellent for children
The 1.5GHz processor is blazingly fast
Even for a singlecore CPU
The pen ($50 addon) functions well and is highly accurate
Excellent digital notebook feature
Fun stylus features such as drawing on photos
Sense interface is a breeze to navigate
Good web and social apps...
Fast performance. Clear
Bright screen. Excellent pen input. Sense UI improves on Gingerbread OS. HTC's extra apps are solid
Portable and comfortable to hold
Vibrant display
Improved HTC Sense interface
Syncs handwritten notes with the cloud
Bright screen. Excellent pen input. Sense UI improves on Gingerbread OS. HTC's extra apps are solid.
Easy and fun to use out of the box
Excellent custom software
Optional pen is great for notes and digital drawing
Solid design and build
Great keyboard
Excellent notes app when used with Ntrig pen
Nice aluminium unibody
Attractive user interface and widgets
Bundled case (some markets)
Cool pen functionality
Fullfeatured
If not very powerful. Pleasant interface as long as you don't use the stylus
Extremely well-built
Very polished Sense UI
Stylus adds a new dimension
Over seven hours of battery life
Fans of 7-inch tablets will appreciate the HTC Flyer's screen quality
Durable construction
HD video recording
And unique features
Such as digital pen compatibility and HTC's Sense UI customization
Optional digital pen
Quick boot time
Excellent screen quality
Great-sounding speakers
Great screen size and qualityMagic Pen is both useful and funAluminum construction ensures durability
Design
Unique stylus
Battery life
High quality screen
Automatically rotating controls
Fan / silent operation
5 MP digicam & webcam
Tablet can be used as modem
Access point and DNLA player
Brilliant colors
The editors didn't like
Not so great with taking photos & videos
Somewhat pricey
Because it is such an integral part of the Flyer experience
I think it was cheap of HTC to not include a pen with the WiFi tablet — or at least offer a less expensive digital pen option
I have an issue where I can't seem to hold the stylus without act
Software doesn't solve any pentablet expected functions
And is not suitable for professionals
Small size makes writing on the device more of a hassle than it's worth
There is nowhere to keep the stylus on the Flyer
Prices vary greatly between retailer
Email is not tablet-optimised
HTC’s interface could mean a while before update to Honeycomb is possible
Average design that harks back to its smartphonesLook and Feel...
Outdated
Nontabletspecific version of Android. Google Talk video chat isn't supported in Gingerbread. Slow browser performance. Cluttered default layout. Cameras are only mediocre.
Expensive pen is optional
Easy to lose
No handwriting recognition
Doesn't sync audio recordings with Evernote
Low-quality cameras
Non-tablet-specific version of Android. Google Talk video chat isn't supported in Gingerbread. Slow browser performance. Cluttered default layout. Cameras are only mediocre.
Runs the phone version of Android OS
Has a single core CPU
Though clocked quite high
Has a
Pen not bundled in US
Flyer only runs smartphone apps at launch
Can?t navigate device with pen
Poor camera
Fragile/fiddly rear cover
Sluggish at times
Nowhere to dock stylus without case
Not particularly fast or particularly cheap. Runs Android 2.2
Not 3.1
At least until HTC delivers the promised update. Stylus is a frivolous gimmick
Stylus costs $80
Poor camera quality
No OCR apps supported
The Flyer is small
Thick
And pricey
And isn't running Google's Android 3.0 tablet OS. Its most unique feature
The Magic Pen
May not come included and is expensive to replace
Expensive
Outdated OS
Single-core processor
PriceHeavy and chunkyFew apps optimized for screen size
La HTC Flyer est une excellente tablette, avec sa finition irréprochable et son interface aux petits oignons, l'expérience utilisateur est très réussie notamment grâce au fameux stylet qui l'accompagne. L'intégration d'Android est tout simplement bluffant...
Abstract: Nous avons testé le HTC Flyer, une tablette Android 2.3 avec un écran de 7 inch, un prix de vente élevé et pas de processeur dual-core...HTC a confirmé la sortie de sa première tablette, le HTC Flyer, au MWC 2011. Cette tablette, qui présente un écran LCD...
Abstract: Plus d’un an après la sortie de l’iPad, la tablette d’Apple rencontre enfin une véritable concurrence : Samsung, HTC, Motorola, Acer, Archos et même RIM (BlackBerry) sont entrés dans la danse, avec plus o...
Abstract: Une tablette 7 avec stylet ... Mon rêve ! Lorsqu'HTC annonça la Flyer, je fus tout de suite convaincu que ça allait être une machine géniale, et que je l'achèterai sans tarder. En effet, le format 7" a quelque chose d'idéal. C'est assez petit pour se...
fonctionnalités au stylet sympathiques, bonne finition, bonnes performances, écran de qualité
intérêt douteux du stylet sur le long terme qui aurait mérité plus d'applications compatibles, pas d’Android Honeycomb pour le moment, absence de port HDMI, chère pour une tablette 7 pouces, autonomie décevante
Avec la Flyer, HTC signe sa première tablette tactile. Cette ardoise se démarque de la concurrence en adoptant un écran 7 pouces, un processeur simple cœur 1,5 GHz, Android 2.3 et… un stylet. Que vaut cette tablette atypique ? La réponse dans notre tes...
Attention aussi parce que la Flyer vous donne l'impression d'avoir en main une sorte de smartphone au format XXL et vous verrez, l'utilisation que vous ferez de la Flyer s'apparente plus à un smartphone qu'à une tablette, et ce, même si tout est optimisé...
Performances, Finition, matériaux, HTC Sense / écran, Nombreux accessoires
Prix, Format MKV supporté partiellement
À la suite des premières présentations officielles, l'impatience suscitée par le projet HTC Scribe a vite cédé sa place au doute. Il faut dire qu'après les échecs relatifs des Galaxy Tab et autres Dell Streak, les tablettes de petit format ne sont pas vra...