HTC One M8 Review: The Most Luxurious Smartphone On The Market
The HTC One M8 is surely one of the most hotly anticipated handsets of 2014 and one of the most leaked phones we’ve ever seen in a long history of incredibly leaky devices. While the original HTC One received a boatload of praise from critics and better sales than any previous HTC handset, it wasn’t enough to drag the Taiwanese manufacturer out of its rather precarious business position, or pull it into serious competition with rival industry giants such as Samsung – which is currently cleaning up in the Android space.
The HTC One M8 then, has a lot of work to do. So have HTC’s changes with this successor model made a significant difference?
I’ll confess, I was not a massive fan of the original HTC One. I appreciated the aluminium build and the overall aesthetic, but there was something clunky and uncomfortable about the handset during operation, the battery life was poor and then there’s the camera.
Although HTC’s Ultrapixel technology managed to get impressive results considering the 4-megapixel rating and sensor size, it still wasn’t up there with what you could typically (and reasonably) expect from a premium flagship, and its contemporaries left it in their wake.
So it’s with some nervousness that I approached the HTC One M8. The leaks said the camera had a very similar spec, and when it launched it emerged that not only was this largely true (on paper at least), it had also lost a few features (more on that later). The body had been re-designed, which was of course a positive thing, but the battery had only been boosted from the HTC One’s 2,300mAh to 2,600mAh – a good deal short of the 3,000mAh and above we’ve been seeing on many rival flagships, which consistently seems to deliver decent use-time. What else was new? What else was significant? Was this all enough?
SPECS
General | 2G Network | GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 |
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3G Network | HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 - EMEA, Asia | |
HSDPA 850 / 1900 / 2100 - AT&T HSDPA 850 / 1700 / 1900 / 2100 - T-Mobile |
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4G Network | LTE 800 / 900 / 1800 / 2600 - EMEA LTE 700 / 1700 / 2100 - T-Mobile |
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LTE 700 / 900 / 1800 / 2100 / 2600 - Asia LTE 700 / 850 / 1700 / 1800 / 1900 / 2100 / 2600 - AT&T |
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SIM | Nano-SIM | |
Announced | 2014, March | |
Status | Available. Released 2014, March |
Body | Dimensions | 146.4 x 70.6 x 9.4 mm (5.76 x 2.78 x 0.37 in) |
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Weight | 160 g (5.64 oz) |
Display | Type | Super LCD3 capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors |
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Size | 1080 x 1920 pixels, 5.0 inches (~441 ppi pixel density) | |
Multitouch | Yes | |
Protection | Corning Gorilla Glass 3 | |
- HTC Sense UI v6 |
Sound | Alert types | Vibration, MP3, WAV ringtones |
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Loudspeaker | Yes, with stereo speakers, built-in amplifiers | |
3.5mm jack | Yes |
Memory | Card slot | microSD, up to 128 GB |
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Internal | 16/32 GB, 2 GB RAM |
Data | GPRS | Yes |
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EDGE | Yes | |
Speed | HSDPA, 42 Mbps (21 Mbps - AT&T), HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps; LTE, Cat4, 50 Mbps UL, 150 Mbps DL | |
WLAN | Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, Wi-Fi hotspot | |
Bluetooth | Yes, v4.0 with A2DP | |
NFC | Yes (market/operator dependent) | |
Infrared port | Yes | |
USB | Yes, microUSB v2.0 (MHL), USB On-the-go, USB Host |
Camera | Primary | Dual 4 MP, 2688х1520 pixels, autofocus, dual-LED (dual tone) flash, check quality |
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Features | 1/3'' sensor size, 2µm pixel size, automatic simultaneous video and image recording, geo-tagging, face and smile detection, HDR, panorama | |
Video | Yes, 1080p@60fps, 720p@60fps, HDR, stereo sound rec., video stabilization, check quality | |
Secondary | Yes, 5 MP, 1080p@30fps, HDR |
Features | OS | Android OS, v4.4.2 (KitKat) |
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Chipset | Qualcomm MSM8974AB Snapdragon 801 | |
CPU | Quad-core 2.3 GHz (US/EMEA)/ 2.5 GHz (Asia, China) Krait 400 | |
GPU | Adreno 330 | |
Sensors | Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass, barometer | |
Messaging | SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email | |
Browser | HTML5 | |
Radio | Stereo FM radio with RDS | |
GPS | Yes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS | |
Java | Yes, via Java MIDP emulator | |
Colors | Gunmetal Gray, Glacial Silver, Amber Gold | |
- SNS integration - Google Drive (50 GB cloud storage) - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic - TV-out (via MHL A/V link) - DivX/XviD/MP4/H.263/H.264/WMV player - MP3/eAAC+/WMA/WAV/FLAC player - Google Search, Maps, Gmail, YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk - Organizer - Document viewer/editor - Photo viewer/editor - Voice memo/dial/commands - Predictive text input |
Battery | Non-removable Li-Po 2600 mAh battery | |
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Stand-by | Up to 271 h (2G) / Up to 496 h (3G) | |
Talk time | Up to 14 h (2G) / Up to 20 h (3G) |
Misc | SAR EU | 0.42 W/kg (head) 0.22 W/kg (body) |
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Price group |
Tests | Display | Contrast ratio: 1256 (nominal), 2.371 (sunlight) |
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Loudspeaker | Voice 65dB / Noise 64dB / Ring 75dB | |
Audio quality | Noise -95.4dB / Crosstalk -93.2dB | |
Camera | Photo / Video | |
Battery life |
Endurance rating 71h
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Design and Build
During a briefing with HTC it was made very apparent that the key selling point for the HTC One M8 is its build and design. HTC is hedging its bets on the idea that consumers want a beautiful, luxurious and finely crafted smartphone, and unless you’re some kind of puritanical pragmatist it’s very difficult to argue against this line of thought. The success of the iPhone supports this theory more than anything else.As a result, much of HTC’s development of the HTC One M8 has focused on the exterior, build and aesthetics – and to be sure the result is a beaut. If you’ve seen an HTC One in the flesh (metal) before you might look at the HTC One M8 and think: “It looks the same.”
Again though, minor gripes; on the whole the phone looks really slick. The punched speaker grilles still give it a cool edge which you don’t really see elsewhere, while the black banding on the rear panel also looks sharp. The One M8 is a little heavier than its predecessor but it’s not unwieldy by any means. The power button has shifted across to the top-right, making it much easier to operate, and the headphone port is now in the base of the device.
It's not unusual for manufacturers to launch their own case for a new
flagship these days, and certainly in HTC's case with a somewhat
delicate metal phone it makes a good deal of sense.
For the One M8, HTC has produced the Dot View case, available in blue, red, orange and black. We've also got a grey one, but it's not listed on HTC's official product page - go figure.
So what’s the Dot Case all about? Well it’s a soft-touch plastic flip-cover which fits nice and snug to the handset’s back panel. The front cover is attached via a rubber leaf along one edge and the front panel itself is perforated with hundreds of little dots. The purpose of these dots is to allow you to see parts of the display underneath – when the case is closed the phone knows about it through some kind of sorcery (or perhaps sensors - who can say?) and displays the time and weather through the dots when you activate the handset.
Many of the Motion Launch gestures still work through the case’s
front panel even when closed – you can answer calls without opening it
and simply raise the phone to your ear, or you can double-tap to wake
the phone and see the date/time/weather. Other functions are still
available as well.
While this stuff is quite nice, I do have a few gripes with the Dot View cover. Firstly, the rubber leaf holding the front cover doesn’t allow you to fold it back flush to the rear of the device, which makes grip awkward. Perhaps more importantly, the cover design seems at odds with the design of the HTC One M8 – you immediately lose all of that lovely shaped metal. I can’t help but think case manufacturers will probably come up with a more elegant case which will properly compliment and emphasise the handset’s exterior while still providing protection. And they probably won’t have that annoying issue with the flip cover not folding back properly either.
For the One M8, HTC has produced the Dot View case, available in blue, red, orange and black. We've also got a grey one, but it's not listed on HTC's official product page - go figure.
So what’s the Dot Case all about? Well it’s a soft-touch plastic flip-cover which fits nice and snug to the handset’s back panel. The front cover is attached via a rubber leaf along one edge and the front panel itself is perforated with hundreds of little dots. The purpose of these dots is to allow you to see parts of the display underneath – when the case is closed the phone knows about it through some kind of sorcery (or perhaps sensors - who can say?) and displays the time and weather through the dots when you activate the handset.
While this stuff is quite nice, I do have a few gripes with the Dot View cover. Firstly, the rubber leaf holding the front cover doesn’t allow you to fold it back flush to the rear of the device, which makes grip awkward. Perhaps more importantly, the cover design seems at odds with the design of the HTC One M8 – you immediately lose all of that lovely shaped metal. I can’t help but think case manufacturers will probably come up with a more elegant case which will properly compliment and emphasise the handset’s exterior while still providing protection. And they probably won’t have that annoying issue with the flip cover not folding back properly either.
Display
HTC was somewhat evasive about what display technology it had crammed into the HTC One M8. Previously the HTC One had used a Super LCD3 (SLCD3) at 4.7-inches with a full HD 1080p resolution at 469 pixels-per-inch (ppi), and at the time it launched this looked fantastic. Colour was rich, brightness robust with very pure whites, and things were nice and sharp with text being particularly clear. HTC has only hinted that the new phone features updated and improved display technology from its predecessor, but wouldn’t name it as SLCD3, SLCD4 (does that exist?) or indeed any other specific title.Hardware, Storage and Connectivity
The HTC One M8 is following the same path as several other recent Android flagships by opting for 16GB of onboard storage and backing this up with microSD support for cards up to 128GB.There’s two things worth noting here. Firstly, the HTC One lacked microSD, so it’s great to see it added aboard the successor. Second, there is a 32GB onboard storage variant of the HTC One M8 in existence, however, at present it is only available in certain markets – namely Asia and with certain US carriers. At time of writing HTC has not revealed any plans to launch the 32GB model anywhere else. Could it come to the UK eventually? Possibly, but in the meantime we’re going to have to assume it won’t.
Other gestures are designed for waking the phone while also readying a certain function. With the phone in portrait orientation, swiping in from the left of the screen wakes it with BlinkFeed ready, while swiping down from the top activates voice dialling, prompting you to speak a contact’s name. Meanwhile, in landscape mode, pressing the volume up key wakes the device with the camera ready to go. The gestures are called “Motion Launch” and can be toggled on or off en masse in the settings menu, but you can’t individually toggle them.
Personally I found the call answering and camera activation useful and easy to remember. The double-tap had its moments, but the rest seemed a bit superfluous. Additionally, all too often I found the handset was getting activated in my pocket or simply when picking it up, and I ended up turning the gestures off as a result. Hopefully HTC can iron out a few of these kinks with a software update in the future.
Battery
I was not expecting great things from the HTC One M8’s battery. A phone with a faster processor and a larger, brighter display, yet only a 300mAh increase over its predecessor (which offered poor battery performance anyway) did not look like a promising recipe on paper.HTC has clearly done some extensive fettling to improve the situation, however, because the HTC One M8 actually doesn’t fare too badly alongside its contemporaries.
Our usual Django test – running all of Django Unchained for 2 hours 45 minutes on full brightness and with Wi-Fi and mobile data toggled on, from 100% charge – chalked up 50% battery remaining when the credits rolled up.
That’s not too far off the usual 60% or so we’ve typically seen from 3,000mAh cells inside rival devices. You can probably expect to get at least 5 hours 30 minutes of video playback from one charge, while more casual use (a spot of social networking, browsing, and the odd call) should net you about a day and a half without needing to plug in.
As usual, gaming is one of the most intensive things for the battery and I found that a 15 minute stint of Real Racing 3 saw a consumption rate of roughly 1% per minute of gameplay. At the very least this means you can easily calculate how long you can spend gaming before things go kaput.
Processor and Performance
The HTC One M8 runs on Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon 801 quad-core processor (MSM8974AB), an upgrade from the Snapdragon 800 commonly seen in rival handsets from late 2013 and into 2014. It uses Qualcomm’s Krait 400 core architecture clocked at 2.3GHz with 2GB of RAM and an Adreno 330 graphics processing unit (GPU). While the HTC One’s Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 chip was well-optimised and delivered smooth performance at time of launch, the difference with the Snapdragon 800 family is noticeably smoother. In terms of actual use scenarios gaming is ridiculously good; not only are the graphics console-like but the zero-latency delivery is very reminiscent of what you’ll find in one of the big-name game boxes, with absolutely no hiccupping whatsoever.As with other Snapdragon 800-based devices you can happily stack a boat-load of apps on top of each other running in the background with not so much as a squeak from the handset. The multitasking is tackled virtually effortlessly.
In short, this is a powerhouse of a handset.
Software
Regular readers may be aware that I’m a bit of a stock Android aficionado, so generally I approach custom UI overlays with a few reservations. However, Sense 6 is one of the few interfaces which I’ve actually grown very fond of having played around with it for a little while.Firmware Update Brings Stability Fixes
The HTC One M8 has now received two different firmware updates, the first one worked on the Extreme Power Saving mode but the second brought extra overall stability.You’ll receive the update OTA at some point and it comes in somewhere around 70MB. The extra stability comes in to help out a variety of applications, here’s the official changelog from HTC.
System improvements
- Radio stability improvement
Application improvements
- Camera stability
- Video Highlight stability
- FM Radio stability
- Weather app barometer update
Once you receive the update it’ll give the phone that little extra kick to make it even better than it was before. As you’ll find in this review we already found the HTC One M8 to be incredibly stable but it never hurts to try to improve things.
FitBit
The iPhone 5s has its M7 coprocessor and Samsung has its S-Health suite of apps and accompanying range of smartphones. Fitness and well-being is a big deal in 2014’s smartphone space, which is probably why HTC partnered up with FitBit to bring some basic health and fitness tracking to the HTC One M8.It’s not quite as accurate as wearing a band, but for basic step counting it is more than adequate. Setting up FitBit on the One M8 is simple: locate the app, register, select the appropriate option (use FitBit Band or use One M8’s sensors), add in your details and, boom, you’re done. The HTC One M8 is now tracking you.
Camera
What’s this good for? Well a number of things, actually, but the most prominent in HTC's marketing push is the Lytro-style “U Focus” which allows you to select a new focal point on the photo after capture. Each time you pick a new focal point and save the image it will save it as a copy – which cannot subsequently be edited – but the original can be re-focused and duplicated in this way as many times as you like.
This should be useful in enabling the HTC One M8 to be very much a “fire and forget” cameraphone, and we’re sure that would appeal to a lot of people who don’t want to have to faff to get the perfect snap. However, it's not quite as good as it could have been. You can see U Focus in action in the images below where I shot a picture of Cut The Rope’s OmNom mascot and selected a couple of different focal points.
Likewise with OmNom, I selected the keyboard as the focal point and yet it's the same clarity in both images, all that's happened in the edited snap is that OmNom himself and other surrounding areas have become more blurry. Again, hopefully HTC can improve this with a software patch, but ultimately this doesn't impact on the basic image quality, which is decent.
Other features include a 3D mode which uses a parallax effect to simulate a 3D hologram, meaning you can rotate the camera slightly around a subject. This doesn’t work very well for landscapes or groups of people, as it ends up looking like a flat image being tilted. However, for individual objects such as a cuddly toy or a pint of beer it works very well indeed. Unfortunately, it’s very difficult to demonstrate this here using picture samples as they will lose their 3D-ness if not viewed on the phone’s display.
All told, the HTC One M8’s camera is a very comprehensive setup, but more than that it’s clearly been designed for the needs of your average phone user who wants a decent camera but doesn’t require something a pro might drool over. That means all the tweaks and tools onboard have been designed with quick and easy capture and editing in mind, and it’s a refreshingly effortless device to use as a result. Imaging quality is not the best on the market but it’s still better than its predecessor and is pretty damn good overall.
Well done HTC.
HTC Opens Up Dual Lens SDK To Developers
HTC has revealed its plans to open up its dual lens technology to developers. The firm announced its Dual Lens SDK Preview, which can now be downloaded by eager developers with an HTCDev account.Speaking to Pocket-lint, HTC said, "Our hope is that developers will use this SDK to tap into the power of the Duo Camera and come up with their own cool, creative ideas for the depth sensor. Use of the SDK is free and open to any developer."
Hopefully this will mean you'll soon be able to download new applications and plug-ins which can do interesting things for your photography via HTC's depth sensor.
Conclusion
The HTC One M8 is a difficult handset to judge. On the one hand, you have the paradox of a device where the emphasis is very much on the good-looking exterior, and yet it seems too fragile to survive for long without cladding it in a protective case – a move which effectively undermines all that visual flair in one go. But, is that enough to counter all the other positive stuff?For one thing, I’m used to treating phones like some kind of ancient heirloom because I know they have to go back to the manufacturer in one piece and actively being as careful as possible can indeed work (don’t put your phone in the same pocket as your keys, for example). But aside from that, there are other far more expensive things which you could, potentially, damage very easily – and yet people still buy these things. We’ve all heard of people driving a new car out of the showroom straight into a truck, but would that stop you from buying a new car? Ultimately you’ll have to decide yourself on whether it’s worth the risk (you could always grab some insurance), or whether you’re happy simply covering up all that lovely curved metal with a rubber or plastic casing.
But either way, the rest of the phone is top-notch and well worth a look, it's simply a really enjoyable device to use on a daily basis.