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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

HTC One X Review: First Impressions




The aces of HTC have been quiet for some time. Fortunately, they managed to fire out a couple of high-end handsets complete with Beats Audio last year in the form of the Sensations XE and XL, and there was of course the Evo 3D with the visual performance “Amazings!” it offered, but other than that, there’s been a distinct lack of activity from the Taiwanese techlords.


It’s this downtime that made us think that they must be up to something (well, that and the continual leaks about the HTC Ville and quad-core behemoth HTC Endeavor). So, being the intrepid mobile sleuths that we are, a stealthy trip to HTC HQ (try saying that after a few shandies) was organized in order to find out exactly what they’re up to. Turns out it was quite a lot as it happens, and that quad-core device whipping the tech blogs into a speculation-fuelled frenzy does actually exist, but getting our phone-hungry mitts on it would be quite a challenge.


Key Features
  • 1.5 GHz quad-core processor
  • 4.7-inch 1280×720 resolution display
  • 8 MP camera
  • Beats Audio as standard
  • Android Ice Cream Sandwich OS
  • HTC Sense 4.0 


Design & Hardware
Now the device we managed to get our hands on wasn’t a final version, but we were reliably informed that the form factor and materials used in the outer casing are the same ones that it’d launch with, and thankfully, they were. That means that the fast-becoming iconic HTC unibody design makes a welcome return, only this time, the casing is made from an ultra-glossy white plastic as opposed to the aluminum efforts which showed up on the likes of the HTC Sensation XE and XL.


As you’ll be able to see from our exclusive snaps, a 4.7-inch 720p display sits proudly on the front fascia and glistens like an iced over lake on a crisp winters morning. Unlike a frosty expanse of water, the screen provides quite an impressive viewing experience and the visuals it knocks out are crisp and vibrant. At the foot of that sit three touch sensitive navigation buttons, which is quite surprising really as we’d have thought that HTC would have gone with the software keys made capable by Ice Cream Sandwich (as exhibited by the Samsung Galaxy Nexus). That said, you can’t go wrong with semi-tactile buttons, and besides, if they’d got shot of them, it’d spoil that instantly recognizable HTC look.


There’s an 8 megapixel camera on the back with a flash and it’s capable of shooting in ‘proper’ HD (more about this later) but perhaps most impressively, the One X is powered along by a hefty 1.5GHz quad-core processor, meaning that there’s not even the slightest whiff of stutter or lag and streaming video, gaming and multitasking is faultless. And that was on a prototype, so just imagine how swift the final version will be.


Software & Multimedia
Unlike quite a few smartphones recently released by the top manufacturers, Sandwich features as the operating system. Yay! That means that there’s been a bit of an overhaul of how the insides both look and work so you can now do stuff like easily close down applications by swiping them off the side of the screen. There’s also a new version of HTC Sense to whet your appetite and this has seen the addition of a couple more themes and those swish widgets we liked so much about it in the first place.



Alongside that quad-core CPU is 1GB of RAM and 32GB of onboard storage, and although there’s no SD card slot for memory expansion, you do get 25GB of cloud storage courtesy of Dropbox. Just as well really because the impressive camera chops include a load of cool shoot modes and something called dual-capture — which allows you to take a snapshot whilst recording video without toggling between the two functions — so you’ll forever be snapping away.


Beats Audio comes as standard on HTC kit these days, so you’ll always have studio-quality sound whatever it is that your listening to, including YouTube vids and downloaded movies as well as your tunes. And whilst we didn’t get to test out the One X’s connectivity prowess, it is pleasing to hear that alongside the usual Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is NFC3, DLNA and wireless HDMI which, when used with HTC Wireless HDMI Unit, lets you magically stream digital content to similarly enabled devices. Nice.


Performance & First Impressions
It wouldn’t be fair to pass judgment on the One X without putting it through our stringent testing procedure (which generally comprises of  playing with it for days on end). However, the snatched hours spent in its company were more than enough to get us salivating at the prospect of a final version rocking up at P4u Towers, especially since it’ll provide us with the opportunity to put the awesome camera through its paces and see if that quad-core business justifies the hype. So keep checking back for a full review.

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