The HTC One
has done what few phones have done before. A year after its release, it
still holds up. That’s not always the case with a smartphone, and HTC’s
had its share of phones that disappointed in the long-term. The HTC
One, however? Still a good buy.
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 Today, it’s been replaced by a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 original HTC One was the company’s first major push into an all-
(OK, mostly) metal construction, milling out a single block of aluminum
for what was a pretty striking phone. But the new HTC One? Downright
futuristic. More metal. A more impressive design. A bigger display. And
the best software HTC’s ever put together, with HTC Sense 6 and its
wealth of features running atop Android 4.4.2 KitKat.
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
Some background on this review: As always, we’re trying to be as
thorough as we can here. The new HTC One is a hell of a phone and
deserves as such. But a little context is in order. We’ve used the phone
for a week now. That’s plenty of time to get a really good feel for it,
kick the tires, crawl around and see what’s hiding where. But there may
still be some gremlins lurking about that might not be evident in the
short-term.
We’ve got a UK model here in the United States. As is the case when
that happens, we don’t get a full feel for real-world battery life
(which is the kind we care about) because we don’t get LTE data. And
while we do have HSPA+ connectivity on AT&T, the radios still act up
a little. That’s not unexpected, but it’s also not quite ideal. We’ll
revisit that once we’ve got U.S. carrier versions available. It also
means we’ll see slightly different software in the United States, thanks
to carrier additions. (OK, OK. Bloatware.)
There also will be some relatively minor tweaks to the internals
depending on what region of the world you’re in, specifically the clock
speed used by the processor. We’ll touch on that here but don’t expect
it to affect things too much.
HTC One video walk-through
HTC One Hardware
More metal, more boom
The broad strokes on the new HTC One: Usually we’d call a phone with a
5-inch display a “5-inch phone.” That doesn’t quite apply to the new
HTC One (or the old one, for that matter) because of the front-facing
speakers above and below the display. So it’s a 5-inch phone in a larger
body, but one that’s beautifully designed. (Warning: There’s some
serious gushing going on in the next section.)
Technically speaking, we’re looking at a Super LCD3 display at 1080p,
covered by Corning Gorilla Glass 3. Nothing really to say here other
than it looks great — just like before. It’s decent in direct sunlight,
has great viewing angles, and there’s virtually no gap between the
display and the glass. Top marks here.
We’ll talk more about BoomSound in a bit. The short version is it’s
back, and boomier than ever. HTC didn’t mess with an already great
thing, except to make it better.
Processor? Some of the latest from Qualcomm. Cameras? Three lenses,
actually. HTC tried something new with the 2013 HTC One, and it’s trying
more this year while in improves on the previous model.
Look and feel: So metal
It’s evident that HTC knows what it’s doing. It’s got the metal down.
Think back to the original HTC One. Both on and off the record, we
quickly learned that the M7 was a difficult phone to produce. Milling
out all that metal. Injecting a bit of plastic. That HTC was able to do
it at all — especially in something as sleek as the finished product —
was probably a minor miracle.
With the new HTC One, it’s evident that HTC knows what it’s doing.
It’s got the metal down. That’s not to say that it’s gotten any easier —
chance are it hasn’t — but this much is clear: The new HTC One may well
have the best look and feel of any phone the company has produced, and
that’s saying something.
The new HTC One is a tad bigger than the old HTC One. It’s nearly a
full centimeter taller, a couple of millimeters wider and just about as
thick, though that’s tempered by the slope to the sides. You notice the
difference mostly in the height — but the way HTC’s done the buttons
minimizes that a bit.
You’ll also find you’re using the power button a lot less, thanks to
the new “Motion Launch” and double-tap to wake. Yes, HTC borrowed LG’s
baby here. Tap a sleeping HTC One twice to wake it. (There’s no tapping
again on a home screen to put it back to sleep, though.) Or, better yet,
use one of the gestures to wake directly into something more useful.
More on that in a bit.
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.
By the way, the power button’s still up top, still a little hard to
reach, and it’s moved from the left hand-side to the right. That
actually makes it a little easier to hit, since you’re already on that
side for the volume buttons. But it can still be a stretch to get all
the way up there. So remember to tap your screen, m’kay?
A lot of the improved look and feel comes down to one thing — the way
the back of the phone curves up and over and into the side. Gone is the
beveled edge that, while stylish, very much broke up the line of the
phone. Now it’s just a gentle curve that rolls over onto the back. It’s
still a pretty sharp angle to the vertical, but the transition in no way
feels like a sharp edge.
HTC’s attention to detail is very much still in effect, though, from
the beveled front edge as it meets the display to the top edge, which
houses the power button and IR port and any other magical device. The
brushed finish on the gunmetal gray — easily our favorite of the three —
is a wonderful touch. It’s possible to put pits in it, of course. It’s
is metal, and try not to drop your phone. (Any phone, for that matter.)
It’s also just a wee bit slick to hold, thanks to that smooth finish.
But let’s just put it this way: the new HTC One looks and feels like a smartphone from the future.
Cards, of the Nano-SIM and microSD variety
It’s worth mentioning that with the new HTC One, we’ve moved to a
nano-SIM card. It’s likely smaller than what you’ve had before, so you
might need to swap yours out. (Or, if you’re brave, just cut it down
yourself.)
And once you go down in size, you’ll need a SIM-card adapter if you ever need to size back up.
Also new is the addition of a microSD card. It’s back after a couple generations on the sidelines — and it comes at an interesting time for external storage.
The new HTC One supports cards with up to 128 gigabytes of storage, or
roughly 21 times what I took with me in my computer when I went to
college in the late 1990s.
BoomSound and those speakers
Behold, the awesome power of BoomSound! For those who haven’t had the
pleasure, BoomSound is the name HTC’s given to its front-facing
speakers along with the software that powers them. Back in the day, that
was Beats. Now? It’s just … algorithms. (The Beats logo in the system
bar has been replaced with some sort of “b” by the way.) And it truly
does change the way you experience games and videos and, yes, music on
your phone.
Back in the day, that was Beats. Now? It’s just … algorithms.
If you thought the old HTC One was loud, wait till you hear the new
one. HTC says total output is about 25 percent louder, thanks to a new
amplifier and some extra space carved out behind the speakers. Sound
also is slightly more full. You’ve got a whole new sound palette to play
with as well. Notifications seem to be a little less harsh this time
around. (Or perhaps we’re just used to their level, finally.)
BoomSound isn’t just a name, though. It’s also a setting. You can’t
toggle it unless you’ve got headphones or another speaker plugged in,
but its effect is basically the same as Beats’. Turn the BoomSound
setting off, and music sounds a little more muddied. Turn it back on,
and things are more crisp (the high end stands out much more), but also
more compressed.
Fun fact! The speaker grilles on the new HTC One are part function,
part facade. On the M8, it’s a little easier to see where the actual
speaker is (about the first third of the space), and the holes for the
microphone. This was true on the M7 as well, but not as visible.
Bezels and buttons
So yeah. HTC has finally moved to on-screen buttons, getting rid of
the awkward back-home scheme and with that that big black band with the
HTC logo and — oh, wait. The buttons have moved, but the band is still
there. What the hell?
For what it’s worth, HTC says there’s still a good bit of
functionality (some of it having to do with the display) tucked back
there. So what if it looks a little funny. It’s certainly smarter than
anyone who cries “Dat bezel.” We got over this plenty fast and suggest
you do, too.
But here’s the thing: Put the capacitive buttons from the original
HTC One next to the on-screen buttons of the new HTC One, and it’s just
about a wash. You end up with a little extra real estate for apps that
use immersive mode.
HTC One Internals
Faster, better, stronger
As you’d expect, the new HTC One packs in some of the fastest
smartphone internals available in early 2014. Most markets will get a
2.3GHz Snapdragon 801 CPU (MSM8974AB), one of the latest and greatest
from Qualcomm. But China and some other parts of Asia will get a
slightly faster 2.5GHz model — still a Snapdragon 801, but the top-end
MSM8974AC variant also found in Samsung’s Galaxy S5. We’re reviewing the
2.3GHz model, which numbers aside is blazingly fast. Some will fixate
on the minor differences between the two M8 flavors — but we’re not
losing any sleep over that errant 200MHz, and neither should you.
Some will fixate on the minor differences between the two HTC One
flavors — but we’re not losing any sleep over that errant 200MHz.
Whatever speed processor your HTC One (M8) uses, it’ll be backed up
by an ample 2GB of DDR2 RAM, and 16 or 32GB of internal storage. There’s
no 64GB model this time around, which is unfortunate for those wanting a
massive helping of built-in flash. But at least you’re able to plug
that gap with up to 128GB of microSD storage, which can be used for the
two major smartphone memory hogs — photos and music.
HTC One Battery life
As we mentioned at the outset, it’s a little tough to get proper
real-world testing done on a UK device here in the United States, if
only because we don’t get the opportunity to use it with LTE data. But
that’s not to say we haven’t been impressed by battery life on the new
HTC One.
Capacity this time around hasn’t increased all that much, up 13
percent to 2,600 mAh. But you can really see the difference the
Snapdragon 801 system on a chip has made, and how much it, along with
software optimization, has affected overall use.
Put it this way: That we’re seeing 15 hours of use — and this during a
testing week as well, in which we’re taking a lot of pictures and using
the phone more than we might otherwise, just trying to figure things
out — all while on a device not optimized for the network we’re using
points to pretty damn good battery life.
It’s safe to say we’re easily getting another 5 hours or so (give or
take) over the original HTC One. HTC says that we should expect 40% more
battery life over its predecessor.
Charging the phone should be a little less of a pain this time
around, too. The original HTC One was purposefully slow. But the M8
supports Qualcomm’s Quick Charge 2.0, which combines technology in the phone itself along with technology in the wall charger for extremely fast charging times.
There’s a pretty big catch here, however. The 1.5A wall charger that
comes with the M8 doesn’t actually support the quick charging. HTC says
it’ll offer a charger later this year that outputs at 1.67A and supports
Quick Charge 2.0.
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
While the 13 percent increase in battery capacity is nice to see,
it’s not all that great in the scheme of things. And HTC’s done some
work on the software side. New in the new HTC One is “EXTREME POWER
SAVING MODE!!!” (Don’t judge. That’s what it sounds like in our
collective head.)
Basically it shuts down all connections but still allows phone calls
and texts to come through. You can manually refresh e-mail if you want —
but only in HTC’s e-mail app. Your smartphone essentially is turned
into a dumb phone. And to make sure you don’t cheat and try to actually
make it do things, the M8 gets a new home EXTREME home screen,
with shortcuts to the Phone, Messages, Mail, Calendar and Calculator
apps. To exit EXTREME mode, you’ll need to hit the dedicated “Exit”
button.
HTC says that with only 5 percent battery remaining, you can eke out
15 hours in this EXTREME mode. On a full battery? It’ll last something
like a dozen days. We’d consider this to be more of an emergency mode
than EXTREME, however.
The actual results? Yeah, it lasts a long time. Not actually using
your phone will certainly extend battery life. Again, we’d treat this
more as an emergency mode.
Note: This feature isn't actually available for U.S. models yet, as we wait on carrier certification for the software update. Outside the U.S.? You should be good to go.
There’s a secondary power management feature as well. It’s a more
subdued “Power saver” that gives options for conserving CPU usage,
reducing the screen brightness, turning off the vibration motor, and
turning off the data connection when the screen is off.
HTC One specifications
HTC One (M8)
|
| 0.37 in
9.35 mm |
|
5.76 in
146.36 mm
|
|
5.64 oz (160 g) |
5.0" HD
1920x1080
441ppi
Gorilla Glass 3 |
2600 mAh
Talk: 20 hrs (3G)
Standby: 496 hrs (3G)
Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 |
-
Rear: Duo camera — 4MP UltraPixel BSI sensor, 28mm ฦ/2.0 lens + depth sensor
Front: 5MP, f/2.0 88° wide-angle lens, HDR
-
Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 quad-core processor
2.5Ghz (Asia/China)
2.3Ghz (US/EMEA)
-
2GB RAM
16GB or 32GB internal storage
micro SD (up to 128GB)
-
LTE
HSPA/CDMA
Wi-Fi 802.11ac
Bluetooth 4.0 with aptX
-
Android 4.4.2 KitKat
HTC Sense 6
HTC BlinkFeed
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.
The new HTC One software
The sixth Sense
The new HTC One launches with Android 4.4.2 KitKat — the most recent
version available, for those of you keeping score at home — and a new
version of HTC’s custom user interface — Sense 6.0.
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.
The big differences this time around are a slightly new design and a
new exploration option. BlinkFeed uses the same colors as the theme you
have selected (more on that in a minute) and allows more color to come
through, giving everything a flatter look. You’ve still got more options
than you probably should use — BlinkFeed loses some of its power when
you overload it, we think — but a powerful new option is restaurant
recommendations from FourSquare. (We’d prefer to be able to add Zagat or
Urbanspoon, perhaps, but partnerships are what they are.) Those results
will vary, of course, depending on what’s around you.
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.
Note that these all only work when the phone’s in portrait mode.
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 new HTC One camera
UltraPixels are still UltraPixels
Cameras are one of the most important parts of a smartphone these
days. We document everything. And for all the talk about how
revolutionary the camera was in the 2013 HTC One, with its “UltraPixels”
letting in way more light, never mind the relatively low 4-megapixel
resolution — well, it was a little bit of a let-down.
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.
Then there’s the “Seasons” effects, which will add animated foliage
or snow or even dandelions to your picture, much in the same way that
Google+ has done, with snow for winter and hearts for Valentine’s Day.
It’s cheesy, for sure.
“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.
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.
A few other tidbits we’ve found with the new HTC One:
- 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.
HTC has been noticeably excited about the HTC One for some time now,
and rightfully so. It’s a hell of a smartphone. It’s an imperfect one,
sure. The camera still trades resolution for features, but the features
tend to be pretty compelling, and it’s not like you aren’t able to take
some beautiful shots. That’s probably our single complaint about the new
HTC One.
The new HTC One has been made available for purchase the same day of
its announcement — nearly unheard of in the Android smartphone world.
And don’t dismiss the business side of the HTC One launch. It’s
available for purchase the same day as it’s announced — nearly unheard
of in the Android smartphone world. In the U.S., it’s available in
Verizon stores today. Online today on the other carriers, and available
in stores April 11.
And if you don’t want to go the carrier route — and this is a
direction we’d recommend at least looking at if the frequencies and
finances make sense — you can buy unlocked versions directly from HTC.
For those who prefer a more “stock” experience, a Google Play edition is
available. (And it’ll still be able to take advantage of that secondary
camera.)
HTC over the last year retired its trademark “Quietly Brilliant”
mantra. It did so at a tumultuous time — the company (and those of us
who cover it) aren’t ignorant to the fact that it still faces some
pretty serious financial questions. But HTC has become bold, and without
(too much) bombast.
And, above all, it continues to do what it does best: Bring us the best smartphone it possibly can.