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HTC unveils Sensation 4G smartphone

Doug Gross
The HTC Sensation 4G, unveiled on Tuesday, features an updated version of the multimedia system Sense.
The HTC Sensation 4G, unveiled on Tuesday, features an updated version of the multimedia system Sense.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • HTC unveils the Sensation 4G, a "multimedia superphone"
  • Phone has HTC's Watch video system and a 4.3-inch widescreen display
  • No price was announced for the phone, which goes on sale in the U.S. this summer
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(CNN) -- HTC on Tuesday unveiled its newest smartphone, the HTC Sensation 4G, calling it a "multimedia superphone" with a focus on entertainment.

The phone runs Google's Android operating system and will be exclusively available on T-Mobile in the United States. It will be released sometime this summer, according to a written release from the company.

Prices have not been announced.

The Sensation includes the HTC Watch video feature, an app that provides access to a library of recent movies and television shows. The app's technology lets users begin watching a video without having to wait for the entire file to download, according to HTC.

The feature also lets users buy or rent videos and play them across multiple HTC devices.

The Sensation -- which had been widely referred to as the HTC Pyramid while it was in development -- also features HTC's Sense system which, among other things, lets users program their "lock" screen to show social-media updates, photos, weather and other media.

"Consumers have quickly transformed smartphones into consumer lifestyle hubs that are pocket-sized entertainment centers that enable people to take their favorite multimedia content with them wherever they go," said Peter Chou, HTC's chief executive, in the release.

Sense is already available on the HTC Legend and HTC Inspire phones, but the version on the Sensation is updated with new features.

The phone has a 4.3-inch widescreen display, an 8-megapixel camera and a dual-core processor.

Early reviews have been largely positive. PC World, which got a hands-on demo, called it a "beautiful, dual-core beast" and CNET's Bonnie Cha writes that, by the end of a demo, she was "trying to think of ways to distract HTC so I could run off with the smartphone."

[TECH: NEWSPULSE]

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