MOBILE

HTC One - Great For Music-Lovers (Part 1)

7/5/2013 6:07:10 PM

HTC’s 01 flagship phone of the year combines bIeeding-edge spec and innovative with class-leading design. Is this the one you’ve been waiting for?

IR port

The power button is located on the top-left of the phone, and is a little hard to reach. However, it doubles up as an IR port you can use to control your TV. It's one of the most welcome additional features we've seen in some time

No expansion

The micro SIM slot is located on the top-left edge, and the uncovered micro USB on the bottom. There's no space for a micro SD card slot, and the battery cannot be replaced either

Aluminum unibody

The phone is crafted from a single block of aluminum. The build quality is exceptionally high. It feels extremely solid, high-end and looks fantastic

Dual-speakers

Two speakers are housed on the front, neatly incorporated into the phone's design. They're pretty loud and since they're facing you, give off great sound when you're watching videos

Two buttons

The only buttons below the screen are Back and Home. The task switching function is assigned to a double-tap of the Home button. At no point did we find ourselves pressing the HTC logo instead of a button

Superfast data

The phone runs on 4G networks where available and also supports 802.11ac Wi-Fi for superfast data connections in excess of 100Mbps.

"With the One, HTC has demondstrated that it is one of the few companies willing to try something different."

Back in 2010 HTC was well placed to become Android’s dominant manufacturer. It had popular ranges at all the key price points and had also been chosen by Google to make the first Nexus phone. In 2011 it built too many mediocre handsets, with muddled branding and poor marketing just at the time Samsung was making its move with the Galaxy S II, and all its momentum was lost. In 2012, despite a recognition of its mistakes, the company was still not able to turn a generally positive reception for its devices into sales. Now in 2013 we have the HTC One. It will be HTC's only flagship device of the year, and the product tasked with turning around six consecutive quarters of loss.

It certainly feels like a fresh start. The One displays incredible attention to detail, as if every single feature of the phone has been thought and rethought. HTC has pulled back from the unwinnable specs race, taken its own path in industrial design, and in the process has produced the most impressive Android phone we've ever seen.

Performance tests

As expected, the One betters two of the biggest powerhouses on the Android market currently. It trumps the Xperia Z and Note II in tests for CPU, graphics and browsing, something that was matched in our real world experience. The HTC One delivered a seemingly unprecedented level of speed and smoothness in an Android device.

 

The HTC One delivered a seemingly unprecedented level of speed and smoothness in an Android device

Design and build

The HTC One raises the bar for the design of not only Android devices but all other smartphones. It’s safe to say that it is in a class alone with the iPhone 5, but where such comparisons would normally involve an amount of wishful thinking on the part of the Android camp, here it is not so. You could easily argue that HTC has surpassed what Apple has been doing - the One unquestionably looks like the more modern device, and is beautiful.

HTC has returned to the aluminum unibody design that it helped pioneer and has now perfected. The phone feels incredibly solid, it is weighty but not heavy, and with a curved back helps it fit comfortably in the hand. With a smaller than normal bezel down the edges of the screen, the phone is also a couple of millimeters narrower than you would normally expect of a 4.7-inch device, and that also has great ergonomic benefits.

Stereo speakers sit above and below the screen and are nicely integrated as a design feature. Also below the screen are capacitive buttons for Back and Home. The Menu button is now virtual and only appears as and when needed, and the task switching function is assigned to a double-tap of the Home button. The two buttons straddle an HTC logo in the center, and although it is an irregular arrangement, we never had any issue with it.

Stereo speakers sit above and below the screen and are nicely integrated as a design feature.

Stereo speakers sit above and below the screen and are nicely integrated as a design feature.

The power button is located in the top-left. This isn’t ideal, although in this instance the button serves a secondary function as an IR remote control. Other features are minimal. The micro SIM tray requires a tool to open, there’s no memory card slot and the back plate is, of course, not removable.

Screen

The phone boots incredibly quickly, and within about seven seconds you find yourself staring at the best screen on any smartphone today. Like with last year’s One X the screen is laminated, meaning there is no discernible gap between the actual display layer and the glass above it. The 1080p resolution over 4.7 inches gives a pixel density of 468ppi, higher than any other device. It is noticeably better than 720p displays, and also better than another 1080p display, in the Sony Xperia Z. The One has vastly superior viewing angles, far deeper blacks and more vibrant colors. It’s even viewable in the (winter) sun, although we might need to revisit it in a couple of months to see how it holds up in the middle of summer. The screen goes very bright if you need it to. We found the auto-brightness setting to be acceptable for most purposes, but a bit too dim for video viewing. A quick download of MX Player, with its own app-specific brightness setting, quickly rectified that though.

The HTC One is without equal when it comes to design - this is the best-looking phone ever

The HTC One is without equal when it comes to design - this is the best-looking phone ever

 

Other  
 
Top 10
Review : Sigma 24mm f/1.4 DG HSM Art
Review : Canon EF11-24mm f/4L USM
Review : Creative Sound Blaster Roar 2
Review : Philips Fidelio M2L
Review : Alienware 17 - Dell's Alienware laptops
Review Smartwatch : Wellograph
Review : Xiaomi Redmi 2
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 2) - Building the RandomElement Operator
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 1) - Building Our Own Last Operator
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2) - Discharge Smart, Use Smart
REVIEW
- First look: Apple Watch

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1)

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2)
VIDEO TUTORIAL
- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 1)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 2)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 3)
Popular Tags
Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft OneNote Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Project Microsoft Visio Microsoft Word Active Directory Biztalk Exchange Server Microsoft LynC Server Microsoft Dynamic Sharepoint Sql Server Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Windows 8 Adobe Indesign Adobe Flash Professional Dreamweaver Adobe Illustrator Adobe After Effects Adobe Photoshop Adobe Fireworks Adobe Flash Catalyst Corel Painter X CorelDRAW X5 CorelDraw 10 QuarkXPress 8 windows Phone 7 windows Phone 8