After a series of well designed phones that nonetheless were poor sellers, HTC has adopted an all-or-nothing approach with its latest flagship, the somewhat confusingly-named HTC One.
Here is an overview of Specifications
Specs:
- 4.7-inch 1080p display (468 ppi)
- 1.7 GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor
- Adreno 320 GPU
- 2 GB RAM
- 32 GB internal storage
- 4 MP UltraPixel rear-facing camera
- 2.1 MP front-facing camera
- 1080p video capture
- 2,300 mAh battery
Build Quality:
At 143 grams, it’s not the lightest phone we’ve seen, but the solid feel on such a thin device is worth the trade off.It’s clear that HTC spent a good deal of time thinking over the design elements of the One. Looking over the device, you can see clear inspiration from earlier models bearing the One name, as well as the Butterfly / Droid DNA.
Sound Quality:
At first, I wasn’t sure that the BoomSound HTC was heavily hyping would be anything worth paying attention to, but this is by far the most impressive sounding phone I’ve encountered. While Beats Audio is still going to be a turn off for audiophiles, it really works here, lending a thick, substantial sound to the HTC One’s speakers.
Display:
The HTC One’s display is quite possibly the best we’ve seen in an HTC device to date. At a resolution of 1920 x 1080 spread across 4.7 inches, the pixel density is a whopping 468 ppi, aka. incredibly sharp.
Performance:
Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 chipset, the HTC One AnTuTu test, using the average of three runs, wound up with a final score of 24,258. Epic Citadel provided similarly impressive numbers, producing framerates of 56.7 FPS in High Quality mode, and 57.9 FPS in High Performance mode. Considering that the benchmark is updating 2,073,600 pixels that many times per second, it’s fairly impressive.
Software:
The HTC One runs Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean and, of course, HTC Sense 5. Sense has its share of fans and likely many more who would just prefer stock Android
Camera:
It’s impossible to talk about the camera in the HTC One without talking about UltraPixels. So, what are they? Well, HTC’s reasoning is that it isn’t about how many megapixels you have, it’s what you do with them. So they cut the amount of pixels per photo, but instead use a sensor that captures more light per pixel. This, theoretically at least should lead to a host of cool features like improved low-light performance.Battery:
At 2,300 mAh, news says during heavy testing, the battery ran out after just a tad over 5 hours. Curious, I ran the AnTuTu Tester battery test, which scored the HTC One at 472, reporting a capacity of 18% at 5:55. So under heavy strain, the battery life isn’t as impressive as some other devices we’ve seen.In case you are wondering i dont own the device, Source of images and Info is GoOgle :-p
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