The race of being the best Smartphone is on, even Google,Nokia,Samsung,HTC,Micromax and others all are now busy investing in smartphones. But I ask What happened to the iPhone iMafia, the Android army, the BlackBerry (BB) boys and the Windows warriors? Where was that famous deep polarisation and devotion that borders on religious mania when your personal phone or platform or company is criticised? If you’re not going to defend your own phone then what else is there left to defend? I am truly surprised and did I mention deeply disappointed? I hope that was a flash in the pan, just a slow week for you – and that you’ll come out all guns blazing this week. Because it’s time to crown the number one smartphone in the world.
Showing posts with label HTC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HTC. Show all posts
Best Smartphones of 21st Century
The race of being the best Smartphone is on, even Google,Nokia,Samsung,HTC,Micromax and others all are now busy investing in smartphones. But I ask What happened to the iPhone iMafia, the Android army, the BlackBerry (BB) boys and the Windows warriors? Where was that famous deep polarisation and devotion that borders on religious mania when your personal phone or platform or company is criticised? If you’re not going to defend your own phone then what else is there left to defend? I am truly surprised and did I mention deeply disappointed? I hope that was a flash in the pan, just a slow week for you – and that you’ll come out all guns blazing this week. Because it’s time to crown the number one smartphone in the world.
HTC One 468Mp Camera Phone on Sale

Taiwan's HTC unveiled a new flagship smartphone in its domestic market
Thursday with revamped designs which analysts said may boost the
company's sluggish sales against rivals Apple and Samsung.
The
much-anticipated HTC One, which carries a 4.7-inch full high-definition
screen, made its local debut following the gadget's launch in London and
New York last month.
HTC Redefines Photography with 468 Mega Pixels Camera
HTC is one of the leading Smartphone maker and its always in race with the other major producers like Nokia and Samsung. HTC was the phone which made Android go viral among the world. And now its also making its Smartphone better in terms of Photography. You might have already read about the 41MP Nokia Pureview-- the phone with maximum Pixels for the best photography and also Nokia is planning to have its 41MP camera in latest Nokia Lumia 920 but HTC is trying to be the best leader even in photography field by introducing its HTC one.
Smartphone maker HTC is looking to breathe new life into its fortunes with its latest product. HTC One, a 4.7-inch phone with the best display in the market at 468 pixels per inch, was launched in Sydney on Thursday 21st.
Smartphone maker HTC is looking to breathe new life into its fortunes with its latest product. HTC One, a 4.7-inch phone with the best display in the market at 468 pixels per inch, was launched in Sydney on Thursday 21st.
With this phone, HTC has taken a big step away from the megapixel race. The camera is rated at just four megapixels, but HTC says that does not matter because it has a large sensor, bigger than that in some compact cameras. This ensures high picture quality.
HTC One is powered by Android Jelly Bean, running the firm’s custom skin — Sense 5. This version of Sense brings radical improvements to the phone. The most noticeable change is called Blinkfeed.
Building on the features in Windows Phone and BlackBerry 10, HTC Blinkfeed lets users integrate all their social networks, calendar, email accounts and displays these with news updates. It is the default home screen on HTC One.
Another feature of Sense 5 is HTC Zoe, the new gallery app. It captures a short video, letting users choose the best frame and save it as a picture. Users can also remove unwanted objects from the picture easily. Zoe can also make a short movie from your pictures and videos; it adds background music on its own. Other additions include a new music player app that adds new visualisations and pulls lyrics from the web, and Sense TV, an app that doubles as a remote.
The phone will be launched in India in March.
HTC Desire X Complete Review
HTC Corp. launched a slew of smartphones over the last year, with most
of the products aimed at the budget to mid-range category. Only recently
did its flagship, HTC One X, see the light of day and even that is soon
going to be trumped by the HTC One X+. In the meanwhile, as is the case
with every other smartphone manufacturer, HTC is trying to pack in as
much as it can in a smartphone while still retaining a mid-range price
on its handsets. After all, not everyone is gonna go for the Rs
40,000-plus handset every time it’s upgraded! One of the most recent
‘budget’ launches from the Taiwanese company was the HTC Desire X, an
upgrade to the very popular Desire, which was released a couple of years
ago. Here’s a look at how worthy an upgrade it is!
Display
It seems as if in under a year, 4-inch displays adorning smartphones
have become the norm. Hence, the screen on the HTC Desire X doesn’t seem
massive; it’s just the new ‘normal’. The screen is big enough for you
to have your favourite, most-used apps in a 4x4 matrix. Virtual buttons
that take you directly to Calls, Emails, Messages and Camera are
accessible at the bottom of any homescreen. As is the launch button for
all the applications that you have stored or downloaded on to the
smartphone. The screen is a Super LCD with a resolution of 480x800
pixels; hence it’s definitely not the most stunning display you would
have set eyes on. However, it doesn’t take away from the quintessential
smartphone experience at all.
HTC continues its habit of designing distinctive back panels with the
Desire X as well. A blue round-edged rim runs around the camera lodged
at the back of the smartphone. Against the white soft plastic body, the
design is understated yet unique.
Pulling the back panel out was a little more complicated than we’d
expect from a seemingly well-designed phone. An awkward wedge-and-pull
yanks the panel off to reveal the rather weirdly placed SIM card slot
(It is lodged under the camera panel, so you slot it in from one side
and push it out of the other to remove it.) You also have a microSD
memory card slot next to this, which is thankfully a lot less
complicated to manoeuvre.
Messages
The messaging client on the HTC Desire X is pretty intuitive. Well, more
than intuitive, it’s a good, quick learner. While at first go, it may
not exactly suggest the word you want to type in, once you do, however,
it saves your SMS vocabulary and has no trouble predicting it the next
time. The keyboard wasn’t cramped either, although personally it’s just
so much simpler to type messages in the landscape mode.
HTC Desire X also comes with a ‘Trace keyboard’ option, which has the
potential to offer stiff competition to SWYPE. As the name suggests,
this virtual keyboard lets you trace your finger across letters to form
words, which the handset itself predicts, and quite accurately at that.
You can swipe to your left or right across the entire keyboard to access
numbers, symbols or special characters.
Camera
As far as pre-shoot settings go, the Camera app on the HTC Desire X
offers quite a few. You can tweak the exposure levels, contrast,
saturation as well as the sharpness of the image before you click it.
Now, these options are accessed through a drop-down menu which takes up a
lot of screen space. So, even though HTC offers a live-view of the
frame while you adjust the settings, most of my subject was just masked
by the in-app menu. Tweaking contrast and saturation levels made the
images a little blurry as well as grainy. Without any cosmetic tweaks,
the images were better than you’d expect of a regular 5-meg camera.
HTC has thrown in a couple of scene modes that includes an HDR option.
The shots taken with the HDF filter on weren’t dramatically different
from the ones taken without the filter. The Macro mode seems to work
well too except the camera overall results in slightly noisy images.
Whenever I happened to take more than a shot or two of the same subject
(with the Continuous Shooting mode on), the camera app automatically
prompted me to choose the ‘Best Shot’ after I was done. I could browse
through the series of pictures and choose the best one and the
smartphone will ask you if it can just delete the rest. I think it’s a
smart move, saving a lot of memory space and time which I would have
spent later trying to sort through multiples of the same shot.
One feature conspicuous by its absence is a front camera on the HTC
Desire X, something that most people have started to take for granted in
even lower-end smartphones. The rear camera gives decent results when
you capture a video. However, it does not offer high-definition results.
Considering most mid-range smartphones now offer 720p recording, I
wonder why the HTC Desire X didn’t come with similar capabilities. One
good thing about the video recorder is the fact that it starts recording
as soon as you click on the video icon (it’s not a camera swap followed
by another press to start recording), which saves you from a lot of
time fumbling around before you can start shooting. The downside is that
you can only adjust one setting during the video shoot; you can choose
between having the flash on or off depending on the ambient light. The
only other video settings - video quality and record with audio options –
have to be chosen before you switch to the video mode.
UI, HTC Sense and Apps
HTC Desire X runs on Android 4.0 and features an HTC Sense 4.1 overlay.
HTC Sense retains some of the direct-access icons from the lock screen.
So you can drag any of these four icons – Phone, Mail, Messages and
Camera – on to HTC’s trademark lock ring and it’ll take you directly to
the desired application. Also, HTC still leverages its motion sensor to
quieten the volume once you pick the phone off your table, or switch on
the speakerphone if you keep it upside down while on a call.
You’ll also find the same ol’ Friend Stream, a social media widget as
well as Friend Channel which lets you follow the virtual updates of just
one person (stalker much?). SoundHound is packed in to make the most of
the stereo powered by Beats Audio. Polaris Office, TuneIn Radio,
Teeter, Google Chrome and Adobe Reader are pre-loaded to take care of
your productivity and entertainment needs. During the setup, the handset
prompts you to log in to your Dropbox account as well. The Dropbox
integration gives you about 25GB of free online storage for two years.
One problem with a series of HTC smartphones that we’ve used over time
is that you are using an app, and then receive a call and eventually
want to end it, the screen doesn’t take you to the in-call menu. You’ll
have to swipe it down from the notification bar to end the call.
Battery and performance
The HTC Desire X is powered by a dual-core 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S4
processor, the first one to be featured in HTC phones. Some new launches
such as the new Windows phone by HTC are also going to be shipped with
the same processor. The handset didn’t give me reason to think it was
struggling to execute applications or multitask. I switched between
playing ‘Bottle Shoot’ when bored and browsing the latest stories on
‘Pulse’, while streaming music from the 8tracks app and the smartphone
handled it all quite well.
On our regular Quadrant Standard benchmarking test, the HTC Desire X
scored about 2769 points – not a stellar performance – but managed to
shoot above the likes of Motorola Atrix 4G and the Samsung Galaxy Nexus.
The HTC Desire X comes with a 1,650 mAh battery and although the screen
is not much of a burner, the handset did manage to last just for more
than a working day. I alternated between Wi-Fi and mobile GPRS
connectivity and attended to about 10 voice calls, some occasional
browsing, gaming and messaging and the indicator was yet to turn red
before the end of the day.
Rs 23,499
Love – Feature-packed smartphone, nice gesture-based tweaks, decent battery life
Hate – Average build quality and camera
Jelly Bean update for HTC One X
At a press event hosted in Taiwan, HTC announced that Jelly Bean will be rolled out to the One X in Asia and the handsets will receive the Android v4.1.2 firmware upgrade. This software upgrade will also feature HTC's newest user interface HTC Sense 4+
At the announcement, HTC General Manager, Jack Tong, stated that the One S too will receive a firmware upgrade. However, he didn’t specify when it would be rolled out to this smartphone.
At the event, the main talking point was the introduction of the HTC One X+ and the One S Special edition. Following in the footsteps of One X handset, the latest model, HTC One X, comes packed with hardware that can compete with the best in the business. The design of both handsets is virtually the same.
The highlighted feature of the One X+ is a quad-core 1.7GHz quad-core Tegra 3 AP37 processor, which is faster than the quad-core 1.5GHz CPU found on the One X. Its battery life was a concern for users of the HTC One X, and it appears that HTC has done well to rectify that. The One X+ is fitted with a 2,100mAh battery, which is larger than the 1,800mAh Lithium Polymer battery found on the handset’s predecessor. On the software fron, the HTC One X+ comes with the handset with Android v4.1 (Jelly Bean) and laced with HTC Sense 4+ user interface (UI).
According to the official announcement, HTC has stated, “The HTC One X+ combines the iconic design, amazing camera and authentic audio experience of the HTC One series, with increased performance, longer battery life and expanded internal storage which is now 64GB”.
Top Five HTC Android Phones That Got Cheaper
Recently,
five HTC smartphones got a price cut including the flagship One X. So Check this
list before buying.
Samsung has definitely
grabbed the lion's share in the Indian smartphone market with Galaxy line of
smartphones. On the other hand, HTC too has launched several handsets with similar
spec sheets, as compared to Samsung. In India, Samsung's Galaxy SIII has
only one competitor that is HTC One X. If you are looking for good Samsung
alternatives, you could consider the HTC phones mentioned below.
Recently, five HTC phones got a price cut, including the flagship One X.
So, if you are visiting your local retailer to buy any of these HTC
phones, then keep a note of the new price tag
HTC Wildfire S
Updated price: Rs 10,300
Specs:
Android v2.3
(Gingerbread) OS
8.1-cm (3.2-inch) touchscreen
5 MP Primary Camera
600 MHz ARM11 Processor
2G and 3G Network
Support
FM Radio
Wi-Fi Enabled
HTC One S
Updated price: Rs
28,700
Specs:
Android v4.0 (Ice Cream
Sandwich) OS
8 MP Primary Camera
0.3 MP Secondary Camera
10.9-cm (4.3-inch)
AMOLED Capacitive Touchscreen
1.7 GHz Dual Core
Processor
Full HD Recording
FM Radio
Wi-Fi Enabled
HTC Desire C
Updated price: Rs 12,100
Specs:
Android v4.0 (Ice Cream
Sandwich) OS
5 MP Primary Camera
8.9-cm (3.5-inch)
Capacitive Touchscreen
600 MHz Scorpion
Processor
Wi-Fi Enabled
Expandable Storage
Capacity of 32 GB
HTC One X
Updated price: Rs 35,000
Specs:
Android v4.0 (Ice Cream
Sandwich) OS
8 MP Primary Camera
1.3 MP Secondary Camera
11.9-cm (4.7-inch) Super
LCD 2 Touchscreen
1.5 GHz Quad Core
Processor
Full HD Recording
Micro SIM Only
No microSD Slot
Internal Storage
Capacity of 32 GB
HTC Sensation XE
Updated price: Rs 24,600
Specs:
Android v2.3
(Gingerbread) OS
8 MP Primary Camera
0.3 MP Secondary Camera
10.9-cm (4.3-inch)
Touchscreen
1.5 GHz Scorpion
Processor
Wi-Fi Enabled
Full HD Recording
Expandable Storage
Capacity of 32 GB
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