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HTC 10: Hands-on first impressions
The HTC 10 may look like a small upgrade from the M9 and One (M8)
which went before it, but dig beneath the skin of the latest flagship
Android smartphone, and there is more than meets the eye. Experts has been hands-on with the 10 to find out more.
The
big selling point of the new HTC 10 is its audio capabilities. The
phone produces sound which is 'Hi-Res Audio Certified' which means it is
- or at least, should be - of higher quality than other smartphones on
sale today.
HTC
improves the sound in two instances; first, when listening to music out
loud the phone has a tweeter in the earpiece to deal with high notes
and a regular speaker on the bottom edge to deliver the rest. Each
speaker is driven by its own amplifier and when you turn the 10 sideways
to watch a video its sound output switches to deliver equal left and
right channels through the two speakers, creating stereo. The system is
called BoomSound Hi-Fi Edition. Then,
when headphones are used the phone sends an equally impressive hi-res
certified sound directly to your ears. We will report back on how good
the HTC 10 sounds in a full review soon.
Moving onto the phone
itself, the HTC 10 is a solid slab of metal carved into a one-piece
unibody chassis. There is a glass panel covering the entire front of the
handset which isn't broken or interrupted by anything - even the home
button is capacitive and has no physical click. Instead, there is a
small nudge of haptic feedback (vibration) when you press on it, or when
the fingerprint reader recognises you (which takes a claimed 0.2
seconds).
To my eyes - and fingertips - the HTC 10 looks and feels
much better in silver or gold than it does in black. The black option
feels less metallic and looks at first glance as if it's already wearing
a protective case. The silver and gold feel far more premium without
being as brashly in-yer-face as the gold Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge.
As with the S7 and iPhone 6S, the HTC 10's rear camera protrudes from the back slightly. This caused a stir when it was first spotted on the iPhone 6
in 2014, but now I'd bet most of the industry is past caring if the
lens sticks out a bit. Underneath sits a 12-megapixel sensor with extra
large pixels and optical image stabilisation (OIS) which will hopefully
team up to reverse HTC's photography fortunes. The M8 - and especially the M9 - had distinctly average cameras, but from an hour or so with the 10 we can say HTC has finally started to rectify this.
With
the rear camera hopefully - finally - sorted, HTC has turned its
attention to the front camera, which has a 5-megapixel sensor and also
benefits from OIS, a first for any smartphone. HTC has so much
confidence in the front camera that it has coined (and trademarked) a
new term - UltraSelfie. Moving
onto the HTC 10's software and it runs Android 6.0 Marshmallow with the
company's own Sense user interface over the top. So far, so familiar,
but HTC has made two important changes. One is how it has teamed up with
Google and removed all duplicate apps. Too often, smartphone makers
produce their own photo app - or calendar app, or messaging app - then
install them alongside Android's own, thus giving the user a complicated
choice to make.
HTC has still included some of its own apps, but
only when it believes its offering is better than Google's. When it
thinks the Android version is better, it has stuck with that. Further
help comes from HTC's apps being designed to look like the stock Android
offerings, making the whole operating system a cleaner, less cluttered
and more intuitive and consistent experience.
The
rest of the HTC 10 is par for the premium smartphone course. The 5.2in
screen has a Quad HD resolution of 2560 x 1440 and a pixel density of
564 per inch; power comes from a Snapdragon 820 processor with 4GB of
RAM - same as the Galaxy S7 - and there is a 3,000mAh battery with quick charging and a claimed two-day life.
During
my limited hands-on time with the HTC 10, I found the screen to be very
good indeed. I have some reservations about the lack of a physical home
button, but am willing to try it out for a few days before casting a
firm judgement; perhaps the 10's capacitive approach will win me over. My
first impressions of the HTC 10 are good - apart from my dislike of the
black version - but the cameras, software and music quality will have
to seriously impress for me to rank it as highly as the current
champion, the Galaxy S7 Edge.
The HTC 10 goes on sale in the UK and Europe soon and is priced at £569 unlocked from HTC.
It said Daljinder Kaur gave birth to a baby boy at a fertility clinic in the northern Indian state of Haryana, following two years of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. The report noted that though Kaur doesn’t possess any official paper to justify her age, but doctors at the hospital have registered her age as 72 years. It noted that if Kaur’s age is correct, that makes her one of the world’s oldest woman to become mother.
I believe that we were all sent here for a reason and that we all have significance in the world. I genuinely feel that we are all blessed with unique gifts. The expression of our gifts contributes to a cause greater than us.
The son of former Nigerian military head of state Yakubu Gowon is due to return to Nigeria after spending 22 years in a US prison after being convicted on drug-related charges. It is believed Musa Gowon was released from the Taft Correctional Facility Bakersfield, California, after US President Barack Obama granted him pardon earlier in November.
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