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Why did they change the menu button?

And most other Android phones use an icon for menu. Personally I like the consistency. But I can see how HTC originally thought that the typical image used for "menu" was not very intuitive.

They also simplified the little house icon for the home button. The Evo's house has a chimney, and the roof overhangs the walls.

The Evo 3D house looks more like home plate.

This is all of course really really important stuff :)
 
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And most other Android phones use an icon for menu. Personally I like the consistency. But I can see how HTC originally thought that the typical image used for "menu" was not very intuitive.

They also simplified the little house icon for the home button. The Evo's house has a chimney, and the roof overhangs the walls.

The Evo 3D house looks more like home plate.

This is all of course really really important stuff :)

OMG. WTF, I want my house back! Seriously, does HTC think we're too poor to afford a house with a chimney now or something?

This phone better be priced at $150 to at least atone for the plain, crappier house now...
 
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You sure? cause I wanted that super a-moldy screen too.

Lol I've used many Galaxy Devices to see all the hype around the Super-Amoled screens and its really hit or miss with it. Some pictures look really good, others don't. Often however, my EVO showed more detail while the Super-Amoled screen was just a giant blur of over-saturated colors. Also, everything on the Super-Amoled is tinted dark blue, even with brightness at a maximum. It really bothers me looking at the device and not getting a true white. Which is why I prefer the SLCD screen, Improved quality, and true colors along with that qHD res :D
 
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^snicker

Srsly - I'm not sure I like the streamlined home button - do people not like chimneys??

And is three or four lines a good menu icon?? Do menus look like that??

Reminds me of the history of Chinese ideograms - they started out very much like pictures of what they meant, but over time became symbolic until many bear no resemblance to a picture of the thing - sometimes simplifying, other times getting more complex.
 
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My B. Same character formation though, right? :)

Same families, separated by a straight. There is an indigenous people on the island - just like we have Native Americans - but on the whole, the population of Taiwan tends to identify themselves as Taiwanese as a nationality, Chinese as a people.

OK - it doesn't come out exactly right in English unless you're Taiwanese and then it gets explained more clearly. That's the best I can do.

But - the T in HTC does stand for Taiwan (just kidding - it stands for Tech), so as a company, it's Taiwanese, not Chinese.

Mandarin Chinese is the predominant language, as opposed to Cantonese - but the writing is effectively the same - a mixture of Han character sets, with some regional dialectic differences.

(Remember - I've lived there.)
 
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