the story of successful htc hd2.. cekidot..

It’s hard to believe just how much the smartphone space has changed since *
that* phone, the HTC HD2, was released in November 2009, two years ago. It
was one of the last Windows Mobile devices, but it eventually got ports for
both Android and Windows Phone 7. With this active developer support and a
thriving community, it went on to become the most popular device in
xda-developers history, and was voted as the best HTC device of both
2009<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=599210>and
2010 <http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=9579473> in our
forums.

Now, it’s November 2011, exactly two years later. Time to recapitulate the
story of this extraordinary smartphone.

*How it came to be*

The HD2 was the latest in a line-up that HTC established in 2008, and as a
main differentiator from other Windows Mobile devices included its custom
TouchFLO 3D (codename Manila) interface. It started with the original Touch
Diamond released in May, featuring a strikingly elegant design; later, in
November, the Touch Pro added a dedicated hardware keyboard for the
business type; finally, the Touch HD, released in December, had a (for that
time) huge 3.8″ screen and was targeted at enthusiasts.

This line-up was continued in the first half of 2009, with the successors
predictably named Touch Diamond2 and Touch Pro2. The successor to the Touch
HD, though, didn’t arrive until November, and it dropped the “Touch” in its
name, to be called just HD2. And that name change was significant: The HD2
was the first Windows Mobile device with a capacitive touchscreen, and that
screen was a massive 4.3 inches – the biggest of any smartphone at that
time –, and it was only the second smartphone (after the ill-fated Toshiba
TG01) with the Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, clocked at a massive 1 GHz.
In the US, where it was released in March 2010 exclusively on T-Mobile, it sold
out within four
hours<http://www.bgr.com/2010/03/25/t-mobile-htc-hd2-sells-out-in-four-hours/>
.

Even today, the HD2 is still quite usable and reasonably fast, as opposed
to the other Windows Mobile devices of old. But the hardware, however
impressive, is not the main reason.

*Development and hacking*

This site wouldn’t be xda-developers if not for custom
ROMs<http://www.xda-developers.com/announcements/do-you-have-obsessive-rom-updating-disorder-ord/>,
and the HD2 is no exception. After
HSPL<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=611433>was
released in early Jauary 2010, custom ROMs started to appear with just
about any build
<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=544445>of WM 6.5,
6.5.1, 6.5. and 6.5.5. And, among all those Windows Mobile
devices, the HD2 was the most popular one, with a combined 235.000 posts in
its WM 6.5 ROM development sections, compared to almost 220.000 for the
second one, 2007′s HTC Kaiser (also known as TyTN II). But, again, this is
not the whole story.

It was all clear from the beginning that the HD2 would be crippled, because
it shipped with the Windows Mobile operating system, which, even with
improvements in version 6.5, simply wasn’t designed with finger-use in
mind. The iPhone had taken the smartphone world by storm, and Android,
though promosing, wasn’t yet ready for prime-time in late 2009. HTC had no
choice but to use Windows Mobile – so it dressed it up in an beautiful
interface called Sense (especially awesome with the excellent CHT
mod<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=625483>).
It went much further than the old TouchFLO versions, providing an
incredibly well-designed homescreen with fancy weather animations,
replacements for most of the stock apps and settings, and even multitouch
support in the browser and photo apps. It also spurred a frenzy of
custom themes
and 
skins<http://forum.xda-developers.com/forumdisplay.php?f=535&daysprune=-1&order=desc&sort=replycount>in
our forums. But still, as
Engadget <http://www.engadget.com/2009/11/25/htc-hd2-review/> put it:

The experience was a quick and painful reminder that no matter how pretty
the window dressing is here, HTC has staged its fashion show in a building
that should be scheduled for demolition.

 *Porting Android*

Being open source, Linux had always been popular among developers for ports
to other devices, and among power users for its sheer flexibility and
customizability. Consequently, people wanted “Familiar
Linux<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=217182>”
ported onto 2002′s Wallaby, sold as the O2 XDA, the device that started it
all (well, this site, at least). Ports of Linux never gained widespread
popularity, though, since Linux was a desktop OS: it didn’t even include
phone functions.

Then, in 2005, Google purchased Android Inc., a startup founded two years
ago, and released the first beta version and SDK of Android, the operating
system, in November 2007 (more information can be found on the Wikipedia
article on 
Android<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Android_%28operating_system%29>).
This finally gave Linux ports a real purpose – Android was designed as an
operating system for smartphones, to be used with fingers instead of
styluses, and it was based on Linux. So, even without any actual Android
devices released yet (the first one, the HTC Dream, only arrived in late
2008), ports of the SDK build started popping up; the most actively
supported one of those early ports was for the HTC
Touch<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=382265>
.

The aforementioned line-up of devices, specifically the Touch Diamond, Pro,
HD, Diamond2, and Pro2, also got their own Android ports, beginning in
2009, most notably through the XDANDROID
project<http://xdandroid.com/wiki/Main_Page>.
However, the HD2′s Snapdragon processor was quite different from the CPU
used in those other devices; it always crashed when trying to load
HaRET.exe, the tool used to boot from Windows Mobile into Linux. On June
25, 2010, this issue was finally
solved<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/major-breakthrough-in-porting-android-to-hd2/>;
barely three days later, Android was
booting<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/android-and-ubuntu-now-booting-on-htc-hd2/>on
the HD2, and in June, the first
Android builds were
released<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/android-and-ubuntu-now-released-for-htc-hd2/>(visit
this
thread <http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=719646> for a more
detailed overview).

Development didn’t stop here, though; aside from the usual assortment of
bug fixes and other incremental improvements from various developers and
cooks, another 
breakthrough<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/breaking-magldr-for-the-hd2-boot-directly-to-android/>happened
in the last days of 2010:
MAGLDR <http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=893618>. It
allowed people to boot directly into Android, erasing and thereby
completely bypassing Windows Mobile. With this kind of native NAND support,
development accelerated once again: ClockworkMod Recovery was
released<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/clockworkmod-recovery-for-hd2-android/>a
few days later. Since then, all major Android (
Gingerbread<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/gingerbread-ported-to-htc-hd2/>,
Honeycomb<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/htc-hd2-checks-in-at-the-honeycomb-party-sensefully-steals-several-gingerbread-cookies/>,
Ice Cream 
Sandwich<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/ics-aosp-hits-the-hd2/>)
and Sense 
(3.0<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/hd2-keeps-on-living-sense-3-0-with-working-720p-camera/>,
3.5<http://www.xda-developers.com/android/htc-bliss-rom-with-sense-3-5-nadnd-sd-now-for-hd2/>)
versions have been ported to the HD2.

But still, this is not the whole story. Barely two weeks into the new year,
something else happened.

*Windows Phone 7*

Let’s take a step back first. As we all know, the HD2 shipped with Windows
Mobile 6.5, to the disappointment of many. But what had caused Microsoft to
fall so far behind in the smartphone space? In hindsight, it’s clear that
Microsoft didn’t see the progress early enough. They eventually saw it, and
realized that another pimped up version of the same, old interface wouldn’t
take it anywhere – so, Windows Mobile 7
“Photon”<http://pocketnow.com/smartphone-news/windows-mobile-7-exclusive-screenshots-and-analysis>,
was canceled, and instead Windows Phone 7 was born. These decisions
probably happened sometime in late 2008, but work on the new Windows Phone
would take another two years. They needed something to hold them over – and
that something was Windows Mobile 6.5, introduced at the Mobile World
Congress in February 2009.

A year later, at the MWC 2010, Microsoft finally unveiled Windows Phone 7,
at the time called “Windows Phone 7 Series”, though that “Series” was
dropped <https://twitter.com/windowsphone/status/11493142530> later.
Initial reactions were quite controversial – journalists and bloggers
praised the slick Metro design language, while we at xda-developers thought
it was too locked
down<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/windows-phone-7-series-has-microsoft-failed/>,
missing 
features<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/windows-phone-7-series-has-microsoft-failed-part-2/>…
and 
beautiful<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/windows-phone-7-hasnt-microsoft-failed-part-3/>
.

With an emulator
dump<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/windows-mobile-7-build-7-0-0-6077-out/>and
a leaked
Mondrian 
ROM<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/news-update-on-the-windows-phone-7-rom-leak/>available,
developers scrambled to port the new OS to the HD2; a donation
fund <http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=6523099> in May
reached a whopping 1350$. But several things complicated this process:
WP7′s ROM system was quite different from that of older WM
versions<http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/windows-phone-7-facts-how-about-rom-cooking/>,
and it wasn’t open source, like Android. A proper port would probably have
been impossible, if it weren’t for the fact that the HD2, along with the
Toshiba TG01, was used internally as a testing device (which is also why
the TG01 got a port<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1135193>as
well). This meant that Microsoft and HTC created Windows Phone 7
drivers
for it, which (thankfully) got into the hands of the Chinese
DarkForcesTeam<http://darkforcesteam.com.cn/forum.php>
.

So, coming back to the new year of 2011: On January 12, the DarkForcesTeam
released the first working Windows Phone 7 port for the HTC HD2 on their
website, but it wasn’t publicly accessible yet. One day later, the ROM was
posted on our forums as well, and people were all over it. This original
ROM had a lot of bugs; for instance, you weren’t able to log in with your
Windows Live ID to set up marketplace access. As fixes were
discovered<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=911579>,
though, these were cooked into new custom ROMs.

But when the first Windows Phone 7 update, NoDo, which brought along speed
improvements and copy-and-paste, rolled out in March, there was no port in
sight. Only after two months did an enterprising forum member, YukiXDA,
who’s since left xda for personal reasons, take it into his own hands to
figure out how to port
NoDo<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1080950>.
He even managed to do things that are impossible with real WP7 devices,
like fully rooting and unlocking the ROM.

Things were different, however, when the second update, version 7.5
“Mango”, rolled out in September: YukiXDA and xboxmod had already developed
a ROM <http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1236027> that could
be updated all the way to Mango, using Zune, a full month before the
official update.

Still, a few bugs remain with Windows Phone 7 on the HD2 – for instance,
pictures taken with flash have a green tint, and multitouch is spotty. And
they probably won’t ever be
fixed<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1270444>,
since they’re all related to low-level drivers, which are practically
impossible to implement without any documentation.

*What else*

So, we have one smartphone that’s able to run four different operating
systems – Windows Mobile 6.5, Android, Windows Phone 7, and desktop Ubuntu.
There’s even been work on a MeeGo
port<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=895617>– but
since Nokia jumped ship to Windows Phone, that project is on hold,
though there’s still the (distant)
possibility<http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=18917432&postcount=273>that
MeeGo Harmattan, as used on the Nokia
N9 <http://www.theverge.com/2011/10/22/2506376/nokia-n9-review>, could be
ported over.

Anyway, with the latest Android and Windows Phone versions working on the
HD2, it is surprisingly up-to-date, whereas other Windows Mobile devices
have long faded into obscurity, even here on xda. Sure, development has
slowed, but now, with over 1.1 million posts across all its subforums, the
HD2 has over 100.000 more posts than the second most popular device, the
EVO 4G. Remarkable, considering how Windows Mobile was already outdated
when the HD2 was released.

Maybe there’s something special, tragic, about it, just like with the
N9<https://twitter.com/Livven/status/133999449226756096>:
It’s both ahead of its time and
outdated<https://twitter.com/Livven/status/134000004200267776>,
all at the same time. The HD2 was essentially the blueprint for the EVO 4G,
HD7, Desire HD, and all those other 4.3″ devices from HTC; yet, none of
these can be considered as a real successor – even though they came out
later, their hardware was pretty much the same. And even though the Android
devices also got lots of attention and development here on xda, they never
got any meaningful ports of other operating systems. Probably no future
device will, as the smartphone space is now consolidating around iOS,
Android, and Windows Phone, which are all miles ahead of the old Windows
Mobile in terms of usability, so there isn’t the same kind of desire, from
both users and developers, to port over other operating systems.

The HD2 pushed the limits on size, speed, and industrial design for
smartphones: When it came out, many found it too big, but now, there are
even bigger devices; the Snapdragon went on to be included in lots of other
devices; the industrial design, with impossibly thin bezels, soft-touch
plastic and metal on the back, was, at the time, a class of its own. The
HD2 was a great device all by itself, especially being one of the last ones
to feature Windows Mobile; what made it this special, though, was the
support it got from developers and our community, which refused to let it
die and tweaked and hacked it until it became the most popular device in
xda history.

I also have an 
HD2<http://livven.tumblr.com/post/13351816083/my-personal-experience-with-the-htc-hd2>,
bought in November 2010, exactly one year after it launched. If it weren’t
for this community, it wouldn’t be half as awesome: it’d be stuck with
Windows Mobile. Heck, if it weren’t for this community, I probably would’ve
gotten another phone altogether. I’m glad I didn’t.

With this, let’s say thanks to HTC for this magnificent piece of hardware,
Google for Android, Microsoft for Windows Phone, and: everyone who made the
HD2 the device it is today. Normal users, themers, tweakers, hackers,
developers – thank you. You’re brilliant.

Read full article at
http://www.xda-developers.com/windows-mobile/two-years-later-the-amazing-htc-hd2/

Mr. incredible rides Zeus 1.3.0

-- 
"Indonesian Android Community"  Join: http://forum.android.or.id

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