But time is ticking for that original HTC One, also known by its codename, M7. Today, it’s been replaced by a new HTC One. A sleeker, more powerful, slightly larger HTC One. The M8.
And what’s more — it’s available for purchase today.
The new HTC One is, quite simply, the best smartphone HTC has ever made.
But it’s not without a few quirks. Join us as we walk you through the new HTC One, as only Android Central can do.
About this review
HTC One video walk-through
HTC One Hardware
More metal, more boomLook and feel: So metal
It’s evident that HTC knows what it’s doing. It’s got the metal down.
A lot of the improved look and feel comes down to the way the back of the phone curves up and over and into the side.
Cards, of the Nano-SIM and microSD variety
BoomSound and those speakers
Back in the day, that was Beats. Now? It’s just … algorithms.

Bezels and buttons

HTC One Internals
Faster, better, strongerSome will fixate on the minor differences between the two HTC One flavors — but we’re not losing any sleep over that errant 200MHz.
HTC One Battery life
That we’re seeing 15 hours of use during a testing week on a device not optimized for the network we’re using points to pretty damn good battery life.
Extreme power saving mode
HTC One specifications
2.78 in
70.6 mm | 0.37 in 9.35 mm | |
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5.76 in
146.36 mm |
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5.64 oz (160 g) | ||
5.0" HD 1920x1080 441ppi Gorilla Glass 3 |
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2600 mAh Talk: 20 hrs (3G) Standby: 496 hrs (3G) Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 |
Full HTC One (M8) specs
MSM8974AC and MSM8974AB, 800/900/1800/2600 MHz, 2.0um pixels, GPS, GLONASS, .ogg, .m4a, .aac, AWS, 5 V, 1.5 A… we won't bore you with all the nitty-gritty specs for the HTC One (M8) in this review. If you want the full low-down on which frequencies on which carriers HTC's latest supports, what kinds of video formats you'll be able to play back, and which regions are getting which version of the Snapdragon 801 processor, hit up our full HTC One (M8) specifications page.As is usually the case, there’s not much of the Android user interface that HTC hasn’t gotten its hands on.As is usually the case, there’s not much HTC hasn’t gotten its hands on. From the new on-screen buttons to the menus to the lock screen and quick settings, app drawer and, well, just about everything. The notification pulldown appears to be mostly unaffected, though. (The notifications are as Google intended, though the timestamps are done in HTC’s font.)
The good news is that it’s not a huge visual shift from Sense 5, and even smaller if you’ve been using Sense 5.5. That’s not to say it’s not improved — because it is — it’s just that you shouldn’t have to relearn too much. The biggest improvements come in BlinkFeed and the camera app, but there are plenty of smaller tweaks to be enjoyed as well.
Homescreens and the app drawer
Once again, HTC’s gone simple here, with a three-pane home screen as the default. BlinkFeed (more on that in a minute) is still anchored to the far left. You can still remove it if you want (we do recommend at least trying it for a bit, though), though HTC’s removed the simple BlinkFeed on/off toggle switch it added in Sense 5.5 and now requires you to drag it to the “Remove” button, just like any other panel. (Less simple, perhaps, but more consistent.)You can remove BlinkFeed if you want, though we recommend trying it for a bit.The main home panel sports HTC’s 4x1 Weather Clock widget — yes, the old-school 4x2 Weather Clock is still alive and well, if you choose to add it — the Google search widget (not embedded into the home screen as on other phones), and the app dock. Our UK model also has a folder of Google apps, but we’d expect that sort of thing to change depending on your region and carrier.
The third panel is blank, left for you to do as you will.
Adding and removing panels is simple. You can either pinch two fingers together to get to the mini view (along with the widgets drawer), or go to Settings>Personalize>Manage home screen pages. From either one you can remove existing panels, or hit the + button to add more, for a maximum of five (plus BlinkFeed).
Simple and effective. Of course if you prefer, you can always install a third-party launcher. But do give this one a shot first.
BlinkFeed is back and better than ever
The basic premise of BlinkFeed is the same as a year ago — it brings news and social information to your home screen in the form of one of those “flip” type layouts. It was a bit controversial at first because it took up a home screen spot, with no easy way to remove it. HTC added the option to remove it in a later version.But by most accounts, BlinkFeed was a surprising success, in part due to the layout, and also because of the back-end work from Mobiles Republic (you likely know them through News Republic or AppyGeek, which makes BlinkFeed easy to set up and easy to use.
All in all, if you loved BlinkFeed before, it’s even better now. If you’re trying it for the first time, give it a good look — it’ll probably surprise you. Just remember that it’s for more casual browsing of what’s going on. Don’t treat it like a full RSS reader. And perhaps most important — remember that you can get the latest from Android Central and all of your favorite Mobile Nations sites in BlinkFeed. (End plug.)
Quick settings
HTC’s quick settings largely remain unchanged from Sense 5.5. The new HTC One has a full deck of a dozen quick settings, which you access by pulling down on the notification bar and then tapping the icon in the top flight to “flip” over. Tap a quick setting to toggle it on or off. To enter that setting’s respective menu, hit the “…” button.If 12 quick settings seems like too many, you can pare them back. Tap the Edit button (it looks like a rectangle and a pencil) in the system bar there, and you can disable or swap out any of the quick settings. You’ve got another 12 from which to choose, by the way.
Lock screen shortcuts and Motion Launch
HTC has added some additional functionality to the lock screen in Sense 6. You’ve got the usual app shortcuts — by default they’re phone, HTC text message app, HTC’s browser and the camera — which you can open directly from the lock screen.That’s old hat, though. Motion Launch is the new hotness, and it comprises five actions that will wake the phone:
- Double tap the display to wake the phone. (Yes, just like what LG’s been doing for some time.)
- Swipe left to “wake the widget panel,” which means open to the home screen.
- Swipe right to wake the phone and launch BlinkFeed.
- Swipe up to simply unlock the phone and return to whatever you were doing when it went to sleep.
- Swipe down to wake the phone and turn on voice dialing.
There’s one other shortcut you can use when the phone’s asleep. To quickly wake the phone and open the camera app, just hold the phone in landscape (horizontally), and hold either volume-up or volume-down. (You can also set the volume button to serve as a shutter button or zoom in/out key, if you like.) It’s not quite as fluid as the wrist-flick on the Moto X, which we’ve ended up using far more than we thought we might. But it’s still a nice shortcut.
If you don’t like the gestures, you can turn them off at Settings>Display & Gestures>Motion Launch gestures. You also can chose to have the Quick Call (voice dialing) bypass lock screen security, if you wish.
By the way, the app shortcuts on the lock screen are slaved to whatever you have docked in HTC’s launcher. If you use a third-party launcher, be sure to set these however you want them first.
Sound profiles and do-not-disturb
Our smartphones tend to make a lot of noise. And they vibrate a lot. And most of us don’t want that happening all the time, particularly at night. HTC’s made it super easy in Sense 6 to shut your phone up.Just like in Sense 5, you’ve got sound profiles in the quick settings, with options for silent, vibrate and normal. It’s a great way to quickly silence your phone, since it seems nobody’s ever going to go back to having a proper physical switch for that. (You old-school HTC fans know what we’re talking about.)
HTC has made it super easy in Sense 6 to shut your phone up.But for even greater control, HTC’s got a proper do-not-disturb mode. The easiest way to get to it is to use the quick-setting shortcut — just tap the three dots — but you also can find it in the “Sound” section of the settings menu. This one will block incoming and calls, turn off sounds and vibration, and kill the LED notification light. You can whitelist groups or individual contacts whose phone calls you want to let through, and there’s an option to always play alarms and timers. (That’s something we’ve seen third-party apps squelch, so it’s a good option to have.)
For occasional use, you can set a timer for DND automatically turn off — from 30 minutes to 12 hours. For for regular use, hit the “Schedule” setting at the bottom. (A setting that inexplicably was missing in Sense 5.5) You can set multiple schedules, which is nice, as well as choose whether you want to allow calls from your exceptions, or from everyone, or from no one — all for each schedule.
It’s not quite as intuitive as the do-not-disturb that’s built into, say, the Moto X, but DND is a feature that must be included in every new device from here out, and it’s good to see it in the new HTC One.
Personalize and theming
It’s worth taking a trip through the “Personalize” section of the settings menu. HTC’s set this up to serve as a bit of a one-stop shop for a lot of the usual things you’ll want to tweak, including your wallpapers, ringtones, notification sounds and alarm ringers. It’s also an easy way to get more apps and widgets onto your home screens.When in doubt? Check the Personalize section.
It’s also where you’ll find the “Themes” section. HTC’s no stranger to theming, but in past iterations of Sense (pre-Sense 5, actually) it’s included completely different home screens for different use cases — one for home, one for work, one for play, etc.
This time around, theming is much more subtle, changing the wallpaper and the color used in the quick settings and settings menus, as well as in BlinkFeed. There are three color options at launch, and a black setting if you’re feeling dark.
The 4-megapixel resolution quickly shows its limitations if you zoom into a picture at all.That’s not to say we didn’t get some rather spectacular shots with it. It’s just that it wasn’t a great all-around camera. It struggled outdoors, almost like it couldn’t help itself in areas of bright light Low-light was a bit of an issue, too.
HTC’s been working on it, though, and it shows in the cameras for the new HTC One. It handles outdoor shots better. Low light is still sort of hit-and-miss. And the 4-megapixel resolution (in addition to being a hangup for the specs-at-all-cost crowd) quickly shows its limitations if you zoom into a picture at all.

For some of us, it’ll be a deal-breaker. Others of us will explore the myriad options and effects and come up with some truly compelling shots. Video Highlights — the combination of still images and video “Zoes” — remain a great way to share your experiences, and HTC has made them both more customizable and easier to manipulate. So, as always is the case in the mobile world, it’s a trade-off. The new HTC One has a bit of a finicky camera that has a number of really cool features, but it occasionally struggles where other smartphones would just shoot the shot and move on.
The new camera app
For as interesting as the original HTC One (M7) camera was, with the introduction of the UltraPixel, the app was a bit of a jumbled mess, with far too many important features tucked behind multiple menu layers. Fortunately, things have greatly improved in the M8’s camera app. (Including being able to launch it without waking the phone first by holding it in the landscape orientation and hitting the volume button.)The new HTC One’s main camera functions have been broken out into their own top-level section of the camera app, which you get to by tapping the four circles. That’s where you’ll find the shortcuts to the main camera app, selfie shots (ie the front-facing camera), dual capture (which uses both the front and rear cameras at the same time, video mode, Pan 360 — Photospheres on HTC, finally! More on that in a minute. — and Zoe camera.
There’s still another layer of menus that you’ll need to visit frequently — hit the three-dot overflow button — and that’s where you’ll find another wealth of options. You’ll need this to switch from Auto mode to night mode, or HDR, panorama, anti-shake, manual, portrait, landscape, backlight, text or macro modes. Yeah, there’s still a lot going on here, but it’s less text-based and a lot easier on the brain.

For even greater control, you can now set ISO levels yourself (200, 400, 800 or 1600). You can control white balance and exposure values. You can set filters. Change the crop from the default 16:9 to 4:3 or 1:1. Change contrast, saturation and sharpness.
And that’s just the start. HTC has taken what we’ve usually had to run to third-party cameras to find and crammed it all into the default app on the new HTC One.
And the really cool part? Once you have things customized just how you like them, you can save that camera profile for easy switching.
The rear camera(s)
With the new HTC One, you technically don’t just get a single rear-facing camera. There actually are two of them making up this new generation of UltraPixel technology. Of course the last time we saw two shooters on the rear end we ended up with half-baked 3D technology that fortunately didn’t last more than a single generation. This time around, the second lens — and that’s a better way to think of it, instead of as a second camera — is used to get depth information, and that opens up a wealth of new features.The last time we saw two cameras we got half-baked 3D. This time around, the second lens gets depth information that opens up a wealth of new features.Being able to defocus part of an image is all the rage these days — basically every manufacturer is doing it. HTC’s implementation is called “UFocus.” Just tap on an area of an image, and it’ll focus on that spot, and defocus on everything else. If you’ve used a DSLR, it’s the same bokeh effect you get by manually setting a low aperture, where you isolate the subject of the image and defocus everything else. It works pretty well here, but you can’t help wonder if we’re not going to see this feature abused on every phone for the next year, until we all decide we’re tired of using it.
There are other fun backgrounding effects — think of all this as the new filters, by the way — which work to varying degrees of success, depending on how hard a line you have between the focal image and the background. “Sketch” turns things into a sort of “Take on Me” background (ask your parents, kids, or watch this video). “Zoom Blur” is a little cheesy but makes it look like the focal point is “zooming” out of the pictures. “Cartoon” sort of does a rough cartoony effect, and “Colorize” attempts to suck all the color out of everything but the focal point. Again, these all work better with hard lines between the foreground and background. Whispy hair will throw it off, for example.
“3D Dimension Plus” is kind of fun, however, and it really stands out in Video Highlights. Tilt (or swipe, if you prefer) to see the foreground image sort of pop out from everything else. It’s sort of like those old-school holographic images, only with a picture you actually want to look at.
The front-facing camera
You gotta love how HTC is embracing the “Selfie,” going as far as naming its front-facing camera mode after everyone’s favorite narcissistic pastime. And you’ll get some great shots from that angle, thanks to the 5-megapixel camera. In fact, that’s a higher resolution than you’ll get out of the rear camera, albeit without all the bells and whistles.You’ll still be able to get wide-angle shots from the front as well and can even shoot in HDR mode. Speaking of wide angles, the default setting for the front camera is a 16:9 aspect ratio, which is cut down from the physical 4:3 ratio of the sensor. So go ahead and switch to 4:3 so you can use all of the pixels you've got — you can always crop it down later. (The rear camera, however, is physically 16:9, so switching it to 4:3 means you'll be losing pixels.)
It’s pretty apparent that HTC decided you can’t fight the selfie. So you might as well take a good one.
Zoes and Highlights
Zoes are largely unchanged from their previous iterations, though you now have more control over them. For the uninitiated, a Zoe is a short video clip from which you also can extract still images, and they’re used as source files for Video Highlights. They’ve lost a little of their initial mystique as moving pictures, especially now that HTC’s changed the way you take them.There’s not really a difference between a Zoe and a video — the end result is a video file — but now you get a little more control over the start and stop.In Sense 5 there was a Zoe button in the camera UI. Tap it, then hit the shutter button, and you get a 5-second .mp4 file. In Sense 6 and the new HTC One, you have to enter the dedicated “Zoe Camera” mode. But once you’re there, things get interesting. Tap the shutter button once, and you get a single still image. Hold it down, and it starts recording a “video Zoe.” (For want of a better term.) Keep holding down the shutter button, and it transitions into a full-fledged video recording. There’s not really a difference between a Zoe and a video — the end result is a video file — but now you get a little more control over the start and stop. That’s good and bad — it requires you to first use the Zoe Camera mode, and then worry about starting and stopping things manually. On the other hand, you get more control.
Video Highlights are great in Sense 6. The Gallery app (not to be confused with Google’s own Photos app, which still lives alongside it) still automatically creates Video Highlights, piecing together images and videos of proximate time and space. (Same day or time, same location.) It’s far more simple to choose what you want to appear in a Video Highlight now, though. Hit the edit button (paper and pencil icon, remember?), and uncheck anything you don’t want to appear. Or add other images and videos. HIt the “...” overflow menu button to get more options, including remixing the video, restoring the pieces to chronological order, adjust the music, and save the highlight to the phone’s storage. Swipe over to the “Themes” tab and choose one of a dozen themes. Hit the “Music” tab and switch to your own soundtrack, if you’d prefer.
Here’s what the 12 themes look like:
HTC’s also got its own Zoe app on the way for sharing and collaborating with friends. It’s not expected to be available until this summer, but you’ll be able to share your Zoes through the cloud and combine them with others for the ultimate Video Highlight. And with the app, you’ll be able to explore others’ Highlights as well. We’ll have more on that app once it’s available later this year.
Photosphere! (aka Pan 360)
Let’s not mince words here: HTC’s finally gotten Photosphere — those cool 360-degree panoramas we first enjoyed on the Nexus 4 and later on phones from LG and Sony — and it’s done so with the best implementation we’ve used thus far. The end results? Well, after a week of test shots, the results are decent. (It’s sometimes tough to tell what’s a stitching problem and what’s user error.
The trick with Photospheres has always been trying to keep the camera in one spot, one fixed point in space, and rotating it around that point. The user interface leads you waypoint to waypoint. HTC uses a large orange rectangle to guide you along those waypoints, and it’s the simplest implementation we’ve used. And more important, those blocks are easy to see when you’re squinting into the sun, trying not to move the phone off that fixed point in space any more than you have to.

HTC's got its own interpretation of viewing Photospheres, too. View one and you’re immediately thrust into a pretty immersive experience You can tap and pan around, of course, but by default you can also just move the camera to look around. You’re even able to flip the world upside down, though we’ve no idea why you’d want to. There’s no “Tiny Planet” option, but you do have the ability to take a still from inside your Pan 360 shot.
HTC One camera samples
We've got a few samples of what the HTC One (M8) camera can do here, but there's a lot more than we could reasonably put in this review. To see how the crazy new DuoCamera performs under more conditions (including darker times where we put the light-collecting UltraPixel sensor to test), go ahead and check out our HTC One (M8) camera samples post.- You can accept a call by simply holding the phone up to your ear in the normal manner. It works pretty well.
- The slick Dot View case, which uses the display to shine information through its Swiss Cheese protective cover, will run $49 and be available from HTC.com. You can get it in any color you want at first, so long as it’s gray.
- The usual bootloader unlocking programs remain in effect, so long as your carrier doesn’t have other ideas about that.
- Or, skip the carrier altogether and buy a SIM-unlocked or developer version. They’ll run $649 on HTC’s website.
- HTC’s keyboard is usable, though we definitely prefer the prediction available from third-party downloads.
- We’ve had nary a problem with Bluetooth, Wi-Fi or GPS.
- Phone calls have worked fine for us, even with the UK version on U.S. networks.
- The camera UI rotates properly in portrait mode, but the on-screen back-home-recent apps buttons do not.
- It's worth mentioning that HTC didn't include a system-level file manager, so KitKat's new restrictions on SD cards are going to be magnified a bit.
The new HTC One has been made available for purchase the same day of its announcement — nearly unheard of in the Android smartphone world.
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