

SPECIFICATION
| Company/Brand |
HTC
|
| Type |
Smartphone
|
| OS |
Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean
|
| Price |
Rs.42,990
|
| Price Range |
Rs. 40,000 - 50,000
|
| Announced |
February 2013
|
| Released |
May 2013
|
| Hype |
5/5
|
| Chipset |
Qualcomm APQ8064T Snapdragon 600
|
| Processor |
1.7GHz quad-core
|
| GPU |
Adreno 320
|
| RAM |
2GB
|
| Battery |
2,300 mAh
|
| Primary Camera |
4 Megapixel Ultrapixel | 1080p Video
|
| Secondary Camera |
2.1 Megapixel
|
| Weight |
143 grams
|
| Dimensions |
137.4 x 68.2 x 9.3 mm
|
| Main Display |
4.7-inch Super LCD3 Full HD
|
| In-Built Storage |
32 / 64GB
|
| Special Features |
HTC Zoe Camera, BlinkFeed
|
| What We Like |
Design, Display and UI |
| What We Don't Like |
Hot to touch after prolonged use |
HTC has been flirting with
Android phones
from the beginning of the Ecosystem, But they only recently picked up
pace thanks to the HTC One Series. The new HTC One, also referred to as
the M7 is a beginning of a whole new
design philosophy for the company. Does the HTC One feature all that is required to be the king of the robotic Jungle? Build Quality and Design
Build Quality and Design
From the moment you handle the HTC One for the first time, you get this
ecstatic expression on your face, you are wow’d by the design and simply
amazed by the display. A shiver passes through your hands as you feel
the Unibody design fit inside you hand almost perfectly as if it was
designed for it.
The HTC One is cast from a single shell
unibody Aluminum block, that curves at the back but is flat in the
front. The two network bands that run across the back add network
strength and aesthetic value to the complete mixture. Also embedded in
the back is a subtle HTC logo.
The build, although very tough and
robust, feels very damage friendly. The front has Gorilla Glass 2 , but
does not have a lay on the table design, in other words if you lay the
phone on the screen, the glass will touch the surface that you lay the
phone on. The phone seems so metallic in-fact, that every time you hold
it, you worry about it getting dented, if you nick it against a door or a
table edge. The fear quickly goes away as you start to use the phone
and realize how tough, and scratch resistant the back of the phone is.
The Design strategy infuses the technology they learnt in making the
HTC Windows Phone
8 and a mix of their research and experience with metals in the past
with their Desire series. The HTC One is a perfect balance, of build
quality, design, aesthetic and that wonderful Awe factor it causes in
you everytime you pick it up.
Hardware
right fuse of external and internal
HTC
has packed the HTC One with just the right amount of specs. Even when a
product can never be ahead of technology, the HTC One is a right fuse
of external and internal technology. Powered by a 2300 mAh non –
replaceable battery, the HTC One carries a Qualcomm Snapdragon 600
Chipset with a wonderfully snappy QuadCore 1.7 GHz CPU. The Graphics are
provided by a Adreno 320 GP which remains superior in terms of Mobile
Graphics rendering. This intense capability is supported by 2GB of RAM
and 32 or 64 GB of storage.
The Back features an
Ultrapixel Camera
which has a larger pixel size, making it sufficient at just 4 MP, and
the front features a 2.1 MP snapper, both capture full HD video. The
main camera is also assisted by an LED flash.
The Gorgeous front features a 4.7 inch
1920 x 1080p IPS LCD 3 display with an intense 469 ppi making is one of
the highest pixel density phones in the market.
UltraPixel Camera on the HTC ONE
Ultrapixel is a word that does not exist in the dictionary, or at
least that was the case before the HTC One. The camera comprises of a
larger sensor and a larger size of the pixels that combine together to
form the sensor. The camera combined with the software on the inside of
the HTC One the is able to capture extremely high detail in an image.
The large sensor and pixel size also opens up the sensor to low light
subjects, allowing for better image quality in dim lighting conditions.
The images come out extremely sharp to about a 8×12 inch size, post which you will see degradation of the images.
We found that the Video Captured by the HTC One is wonderfully vivid
and captured without any stutter, rolling shutter was at a minimum and
almost no aliasing was seen in the video. The Autofocus keeps jumping in
and out during video especially if you are close to your subject, this
can be painfully bothersome while recording or even while playing back.
This is however fixed by turning off Continuos AF during video capture
at the cost of loss of focus.
The
HTC Zoe feature within the camera is a wonderful add on, not only does
it create beautiful timelines and videos demonstrating your photo groups
it also allows you to modify pictures, remove photo bombers, and a lot
more. This truly enables a social sharer to stay on top of his game
adding just a right amount of usefulness.
We did a comparison of the cameras of the top smartphones, and HTC
One performed excellently well in low light and landscape capture.
BlinkFeed and HTC Sense
Here is where we begin to applaud HTC again, whether the BlinkFeed UI
is useful or not, HTC with their new ONE has attempted to totally
change the norm. While most companies just upgrade the UI, HTC revamps
it time and again. They changed it with Sense 4.0 and now they changed
it again with the new BlinkFeed on Sense 5.0.
A lot of previous owners will complain at the removal of features of the
past HTC Sense UI. But, the new experience is a great mix of
practicality and ingenuity. Blinkfeed on the HTC One is nothing more
than an aggregator, it collects your favorite news streams, your Social
Networks and even your connections to display them in a beautiful,
seamless, Flipboard-esque interface which will also remind you of the
Windows Phone UI.
Display and Multimedia
The HTC One has a gorgeous 1920 x 1080p display, and honestly it
looks absolutely stunning, even outdoors. The LCD3 technology with an
IPS panel and extremely high pixel density set it apart for the mix. The
Screen floats right on top with the touch panel, thanks to the fused
display technology borrowed from LG, touching the HTC One feels like
touching the elements of the display.
Watching Videos, playing games and other forms of media is fantastic
thanks to HTC BoomSound, a wonderful thought of putting the Stereo
Speakers in a forward facing manner, makes the audio extremely accurate
and clear. It also eliminates muffling due to accidental finger touches
and is easily heard especially while playing games.
The HTC One also contains a FM radio which does require a headset to
be connected for reception. Audio from the included earphones is
absolutely great and in the history of in box earphones, these have to
be one of the better ones if not the best. Beats audio is available
throughout the array of hardware that you can connect to the
Smartphone.
Performance and Battery
The HTC One came out on top in terms of performance tests. The
hardware is quite capable of handling all the tasks that you can throw
at it with wonderful accuracy and flair. The chipset can handle,
multitasking, heavy gaming and performance tasks with ease and still
have power to calculate under formulas.
Benchmarks for the early developer build beat all scores of the
market at the time. For reference the latest build of the HTC One scores
a fantastic 12030 on Quadrant, without tweaks of any kind.
The phone does heat up a lot with extended use, which is normal for
any smartphone, but the extended use of metals is what makes it
uncomfortable to hold or even pocket.
Battery on the HTC One is wonderfully managed by the interface, when
not in use (aka; standby) the phone barely drains at all unlike other
Android devices,
the Blinkfeed can be configured to refresh manually to even improve
battery life a tad bit more. Often times we found battery life to be
good enough to go on into day two.
Phone and Networks
HTC has always been able to handle networks and phone capabilities in
their devices, same is the case for the HTC One. The networks remained
strong throughout and audio whether incoming or outgoing was crisp as
ever. In our days of testing the phone, we had but only a few dropped
calls, which can easily be blamed on the lack of network coverage.
HTC has kept it usual features for phone capabilities, loud ringer in
the pocket, flip to mute etc are all included making handling of phone
calls an easy recipe.
Conclusion
The HTC One is not a perfect smartphone, no smartphone is. But the
HTC One, comes as close as it can to delivering a perfect balance
between many elements that make up todays smartphone. It is a flagship
so it is priced high, but with that price it brings about a sense of
achievement, a sense of ownership and pride. A mixed bag of feelings and
emotions emerge when you hold and use the HTC One for the first time.
Most people cannot stop themselves from passing a smile when they first
handle this behemoth of a device. A great phone, a wonderful crisp
display enabling a joyful multimedia device and a performance warehouse
of the tech junkie. Sure it lacks a lot of software patches and
gimmicks, but in entirety of usage it lacks almost nothing.
i hope you enjoy my article and you got idea about this phone.
No comments:
Post a Comment