HTC 10 hands-on
HTC 10 Price, Hardware, Software, and Everything Else You Need to Know
HTC showed off a new phone Tuesday that it hopes will help it break out from the pack of Android smartphones on the market. The HTC 10, named to honor the number of years the Taiwanese company has made its own branded smartphones, is a 5.2-inch premium phone with a focus on high-end audio and camera features.
It's been interesting to watch HTC's product strategy over the past couple of years. As Apple and Samsung have eaten up the majority of market share and mind share, the firm has tried to find its niche by focusing its product line more tightly - putting its effort into very few products, such as a premium smartphone and its recently released virtual-reality headset. So how does the HTC 10 stack up to the competition? A full opinion will follow once review units are sent out, but HTC's announcement gives us the basics.
Distinguishing features
The main distinct selling points for the HTC 10 are its speakers and camera. HTC has a long history of thinking carefully about audio on its phones - it used to have a partnership with Beats back in the day. The company has put a front-facing tweeter and a bottom-facing woofer on the phone to give the sound a greater depth. It also says it has improved the quality of its headphone sound, promising to "pump out richer sound across twice the frequency range."Hardware
The 5.2-inch smartphone has the same high-end processor found in competitors, such as the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge (Review), and 4GB of RAM. It also comes with 32GB of storage and supports expandable memory up to 2 TB. The company is touting the phone's battery life, promising that the HTC 10 will be able to last for at least two days on a single charge.In terms of its screen, HTC is using what it calls a "Super LED" screen covered in tough Gorilla Glass, promising a display that will show off photos and videos with flair. It also has a fingerprint reader.
Software
The HTC 10 will ship with Android Marshmallow, Google's latest operating system, and has taken pains to cut down on app bloat by preinstalling fewer apps. The layout is designed to be more customizable, meaning that users can choose their own icons and place them where they wish. Rather than the traditional grid, HTC said in a news release, "instead you can get creative by dragging icons, stickers and widgets anywhere you like. Layer them, group them, link stickers to apps or get rid of screen icons altogether, the choice is yours."HTC 10 at a glance:
- Form factor: Metal unibody designed to take a hit (testing included 10,000 drops, scratches, corrosion, 1 week in extreme temps from -20°C to 60°C)
- Screen: 5.2" Super LCD 5 with QHD resolution (1,440 x 2,560px, 564ppi); 2.5D Gorilla Glass
- Camera: 12MP sensor (1/2.3", 1.55µm pixels), 26mm/80° lens with f/1.8 aperture and Optical Image Stabilization; Laser AF and dual-LED dual-tone flash; Manual mode with 12-bit RAW
- Selfie camera: 5MP (1.36µm pixels), 23mm/86° lens with f/1.8 apertrure and Optical Image Stabilization (a first); 1080p video recording
- Video camera: 4K 2160p video recording with Hi-Res audio (24-bit stereo from three mics with noise cancellation); 720p @ 120fps slo-mo; Hyperlapse
- Audio: 24-bit DAC and premium headphones; BoomSound dual speaker with two dedicated amps
- Platform: Android 6.0 Marshmallow with Sense UI; Snapdragon 820 chipset, 4GB of RAM; 32GB or 64GB of storage expandable with a microSD card
- Connectivity: LTE 450Mbps, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.2; Display Port (USB Type-C connector); wireless streaming with Apple Airplay, Miracast, Chromecast
- Battery: 3,000mAh; Quick Charge 3.0 (50% in 30 minutes)
- Misc: Fingerprint sensor (recognition in 0.2 seconds)
Price
The HTC 10 has a recommended price of $699 (roughly Rs. 46,500); pricing plans at carriers may vary. Preorders start Tuesday, and the phone will be on shelves in early May, the company says.
HTC 10 hands-on
Reviewed by Unknown
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