Affordable 0 price tag for a premium piece of hardware. Stellar battery life and solid performance. Impressive audio for a smartphone
Outstanding build quality
Gorgeous display
Excellent audio experience
Camera's low-light performance is top-tier
Sense 5 is responsive and adds value
Superfast processing power
Best smartphone display we've used
Great design
Plenty of storage
Gorgeous aluminum design
Brilliant 4.7inch 1080p display
Stunning
Richprofile sound
Buttery smooth performance
Build quality is amazing
Design is unique
Phone is well-weighted
BoomSound changes the way you use the phone
Display is unbelievably good
Snappy performance no matter what
Wide-angle front-facing camera is helpful with group shots
Silver version i
Beautiful display
Good ultrapixel camera with HTC Zoe
Battery life could last a whole day
Almost no lag
High quality aluminum case
Infrared port for TV control
HTC Sense 5 user interface
Extensive communication features
Convincing 4.7-inch display with 1
080 x 1
920 pixels (1080p
SLCD3)
Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 SoC
Application and graphics performance
Marvelous performance
Features and speed Incredible craftsmanship 1080p video recording on both cameras HTC Zoe and HTC Share are great fun Weighted feel is comfortable and easy to hold
Gorgeous design
Camera does very well in low light
Powerful quad-core Snapdragon 600 chip
Stunning 4.7-inch
1080p display
Clever features like Zoe Share and Highlight Reel
The editors didn't like
No Expandable Storage
Lacks Android 4.2
Non-replaceable battery
HTC One | $199 | AT&T
T-Mobile
Sprint
HTC One Review Guide
HTC One Video Review
Design
Display
Performance and Hardware
Battery Life
Call Quality
Camera
Video and Photo Samples
No expandable storage
No replaceable battery
The Verizon HTC One is a powerful device
HTC One | $199 | Verizon
Verizon HTC One Review Guide
Hands On/Video Review
Video an
Mediocre camera
Poor battery life
Sense still has some issues
Not the largest display out there
No crazy cutting edge features. No memory card slot – although 32GB of built in storage should suffice for most
Video quality is pretty good but lighting can be inconsistent and shaky. Sense keyboard can be frustrating
Dan
Battery life needs help
Already running an obsolete version of Android
Almost too large for my taste
Non-expandable storage
Mitchell
Battery life
Slow charging
Barely smaller than its 5-inch competition despite smaller display
Camera is not on the flagship level
Poor power key placement
BlinkFeed generates a lot of data traffic
Stuck on Android 4.1.2 which means
It's missing some features of Android 4.2
Like Quick Settings
Which HTC won't make up in its own UI
It's also missing a Menu button
Which isn't supported by some Android applications
Ugly
HTC's information-or
The sealed case design means no SD expansion slot or user-replaceable battery. The BlinkFeed software can't be completely removed
Battery can't be removed
Limited 4G LTE coverage
Button layout could be better
Zoes feel half-baked
Battery life could be better
Zoe function is gimmicky
Too much AT&
T software
Odd button arrangement
No wireless charging
Zoe feels a bit gimmicky
Can be a stretch to operate with one hand
Expensive. No removable battery or memory card slot. Camera performance suffers a bit without HTC's software processing
Heavy Android skin. No removable battery or memory card slot. Lots of bloatware
Gimmicky Zoe feature
Below-average battery life
No removable battery
Zoe feature feels gimmicky
Subpar battery life
Subpar camera quality
No user replaceable battery
No microSD card slot
Strongly flavored Android skin. No removable battery or SD card slot. Sprint LTE is currently limited market
So much bloatware. UltraPixel camera creates problems with cropping and zooming
No removable storage
Battery isn't user replaceable. Has only 2 of the usual 3 capacitive buttons
Strongly flavored Android skin. No removable battery or microSD card slot. T-Mobile has very little LTE coverage so far
Volume and power buttons can be hard to locate
BlinkFeed can't be disabled
Camera performance
Average battery life
Runs slightly older version of Android
No microSD expansion
A little too large
Zoe not that impressive
BlinkFeed
While useful
Definitely apes WP tiles/Flipboard
Comes with Android 4.1 (4.2 is promised
Though)
Sealed-in battery
Mediocre battery life
Phone runs hot
BlinkFeed isn't that useful yet can't be removed
Sense is better than ever
But still not better than stock Android. Comes with an outdated version of Jelly Bean. The camera is good in low light
But lags everywhere else. No microSD card slot — choose between 32GB and 64GB at the time of purchase
Overall camera quality is meh
And could use better image stabilization. Windows Phone platform still lacks many bigname app and game titles
Non-removable battery
Non-expandable memory
Camera resolution could be higher
Sprint 4G network buildout lags competitors
Camera is a bit disappointing
UltraPixel is a bit too hyped up
Camera is good but not great
Camera only takes 4MP shots
Has inadequate color saturation and sharpness
Off-center Home button can be annoying
Phone is quite tall
Difficult to use with one hand
HTC TV needs more options to be useful
Purchasing/Availability
You can b
Build issues
Button layout is not convenient
Bad reception sometimes
Slow battery charging
No card reader
UltraPixel-Camera could be better
No microSD slot support Battery is easily taxed on moderate to heavy use
A few aspects of the Sense 5 UI feel like a step backward
Abstract: After reviewing so many smartphones over the years, HTC One is the first device that makes me enjoy sharing my images and videos. If HTC One can make a person like me who shares only about 3 photos a week to post dozens over the past 7 days, imagine what...
Published: 2013-04-23, Author: Matthew , review by: zdnet.com
Abstract: You will find many articles here on the HTC One (links are listed on the last slide), and after spending a couple of months with it, I am convinced it is the best smartphone I have ever used. I ordered a T-Mobile HTC One on Friday and it arrived yesterday...
Is this the device to get? Is this the one for you? If you're already a fan of Android, then absolutely. You'll want to show this phone off to everyone, and I have no doubts that you'll want to have it in your hand more often than not. Should you switch f...
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Published: 2013-04-22, Author: Robert , review by: talkandroid.com
There is no question that the HTC One is the best phone on the planet, but the real question is if you should buy it. As I mentioned in my opening, consumers tend to choose what's popular because the “best” doesn't always translate into anything useful fo...
Abstract: I told you guy guys yesterday about the email I received notifying me that my HTC One Developer Edition had been delayed from Wednesday, to a vague “before the end of the month” time frame. Can't say I was too thrilled about the news but lo-and-behold, th...
PositivesBest display on the market — hands downBoomSound stereo front facing speakers4MP UltraPixel camera takes superior low-light picturesGreat battery lifePremium aluminum build qualitySense 5 UX is revamped and kicky fastNegativesInconsistent build q...
Stunning design, quality aluminum alloy casing, superb full HD display, fast, pleasing software customizations
No removable storage, battery isn't user replaceable. Has only 2 of the usual 3 capacitive buttons
The HTC One is the company's best phone yet. You have my blessing: go ahead and buy one. It's not just fast, the display is superb and the design is elegant. Cutting edge CPUs and graphics are Android's bread and butter, much like PCs and it takes more...
I mentioned in the beginning that I'm torn on the HTC One. And after running through that entire review of mostly positive things with a few nitpicked quirks here and there, you are probably confused. Rightfully so. It's an amazing phone. The hardware i...
Stellar Design, Good Battery Life, Great Performance, HTC Sense 5, Great front-facing speakers
No Expandable Storage, Lacks Android 4.2, Non-replaceable battery, HTC One | $199 | AT&T, T-Mobile, Sprint, HTC One Review Guide, HTC One Video Review, Design, Display, Performance and Hardware, Battery Life, Call Quality, Camera: Video and Photo Samples,
The HTC One is the best built Android smartphone we've used, and with HTC Sense 5 on board it delivers an equally well-tuned software experience. The HTC One doesn't offer all the flashy features of the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the smaller screen are turn of...
Published: 2013-04-17, Author: Russell , review by: Geek.com
Abstract: HTC has a serious chip on its shoulder, and the company is bragging all around town that the One is everything your phone isn't. After spending some time with HTC's flagship Android phone, I can say for sure that there are a few key areas where the HTC On...