If you want to see price of this HTC one M9 click here
in U.K click here
See other product :
* Samsung Galaxy S6 * Amazon Fire Phone
* Sony Xperia Z3 Compact D5803 * Motorola Moto G (2nd Generation)
* Samsung Galaxy A5 * Samsung Galaxy Young 2
* Samsung Galaxy S3 mini * Samsung Galaxy J1
* LG Realm * Nokia Lumia 635
* Nokia Lumia 520 * BLU Advance 4.0 A270A
* HTC Desire 510 (A11) white * HTC one M9
PC Advisor says :
A
gorgeous flagship Android phone but hardware hasn't moved on much for
2015 - See more at:
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/reviews/mobile-phone/3599835/htc-one-m9-review-new-smartphone-flagship-2015-uk-best/#sthash.mNzGJfsH.dpuf
A gorgeous Flagship Android Phone but Hardware hasn't Moved on Much for 2015
By : Chris Martin
The
new HTC One M9 is absolutely gorgeous, but hardware hasn't moved on
much so can it compete with the iPhone 6 and Samsung Galaxy S6? Read our
full and in-depth HTC One M9. HTC One M9 specs, HTC One M9 display. -
See more at:
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/reviews/mobile-phone/3599835/htc-one-m9-review-new-smartphone-flagship-2015-uk-best/#sthash.mNzGJfsH.dpuf
The
new HTC One M9 is absolutely gorgeous, but hardware hasn't moved on
much so can it compete with the iPhone 6 and Samsung Galaxy S6? Read our
full and in-depth HTC One M9. HTC One M9 specs, HTC One M9 display. -
See more at:
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/reviews/mobile-phone/3599835/htc-one-m9-review-new-smartphone-flagship-2015-uk-best/#sthash.mNzGJfsH.dpuf
The new HTC One M9 is absolutely
gorgeous, but hardware hasn't moved on much so can it compete with the iPhone 6
and Samsung Galaxy S6?
Competition in the smartphone market is tough at both ends of the
price range, so can HTC take on the iPhone 6 and Samsung Galaxy S6
with the new HTC One M9? Here's our full and in-depth HTC One M9 review.
Announced at MWC 2015, the HTC One M9 is
the Taiwanese firm's flagship smartphone for 2015. It was announced on the same
day as the Samsung Galaxy S6 which is one of its main rivals - at least until
LG and Sony unveil their new premium handsets.
UK release date and price
The HTC One M9 hits the shops today
(31 March 2015) with an official price of £579. That makes it £20 cheaper than
the Samsung Galaxy S6, which will arrive on 10 April. Unusually the iPhone 6 is
now a cheaper option as it starts at £539 - but the entry level Apple phone has
just 16 GB of storage. .
The HTC's price is acceptable, but
more than was the HTC One M8 when it
launched at £550. With the M9 being a similar phone, as we'll explain, the
older generation looks like a bit of a bargain at the £350 mark saving you more
than £200 – it could well drop even further once the M9 goes on sale. It's
similar to the situation with the LG G2 and the LG G3 - if you're happy to not
have the latest handset, there are bargains to be had.
If you don't think you can afford
the HTC One M9, the firm does normally offer a mini version
but there's no sign of it yet. Don't worry because HTC didn't announce them
together last year. For now we'll have to focus on the full-size phone.
The Galaxy S6 is, of course, the
HTC's main competitor but watch out over the coming months for the LG G4 and Sony Xperia Z4 which
will both want to upset the party.
Design and build
As you can see from our photos, HTC
hasn't altered the design of the M9 much compared to the M8 or even the
original HTC One. It's more a case of design evolution which the company likens
to that of the Porche 911. .
It might be easy to criticise HTC for
having another similar looking smartphone but we can hardly blame it
considering how nice the previous two generations are. If you look close
enough, there are some changes, though.
The HTC One M9 is made from a
similar metal block to that of the M8 and uses the same curved shape and
hairline finish while using angular features from the HTC One M7 (the
original HTC One). The firm tells us the process takes 70 steps to complete.
New features in the design include a
scratch-resistant coating, machine drilled buttons and a sapphire glass lens on
the rear camera. The power button is now on the side instead of the top which
we think is a much better place for it and it has a textured finish so you can
feel the difference next to the smooth volume buttons. It's still easy to get
confused between them, though and the volume buttons might have been better
placed on the left. Motion Gestures mean the power button isn't needed half as
much, though – see software, below.
Colour options are similar but HTC
has employed a new two-tone look with the back and sides getting contrasting
adonisation. In our photos you can see the rear cover has a silver finish while
the sides are gold. If this model doesn't float your boat then there will also
be 'gold on gold' and 'gun metal grey on grey'.
All in all the HTC One M9 is a very
desirable smartphone when held in the hand – easily one of the most desirable.
It fits nicely and like the M8, is one of the only phones on the market to
compete with the iPhone on build quality. It screams of craftsmanship but the
stepped design might not be to everyone's taste as at certain angles it looks
like a case.
We were hoping for a thinner and
lighter design and although HTC tells us the device is slightly lighter than
its predecessor we weighed them both at 158 g, it's also marginally thicker at
9.7 mm compared to 9.6 mm. It's 10.4 mm where the camera slightly sticks out.
HTC's original Dot View case was a
winner and there's a new version for the M9. It's a pretty similar affair and
you can customise what is shown through the tiny holes in the front cover. The
big difference is a clear back which partly wraps round the side so you can
still admire the metal chassis. There's nothing worse than buying a gorgeously
made product then hiding it behind a case.
Hardware and specs
HTC has decided to stick with a 5in
screen for the M9 and has also kept the resolution at Full HD (1080 x 1920).
There's no upgrade here so it might seem lower grade than Quad HD devices such
as the LG G3 but HTC tells
us the higher resolution isn't needed on a display this size and would mean a
sacrifice in the battery department.
5in is a solid size which is neither
too big, nor too small but we can't help but feel disappointed that HTC has
done nothing here to upgrade. We've seen Quad HD on the LG G3 and now the
Samsung Galaxy S6 and it's simply better. The M9's screen looks good but the
aforementioned rivals look incredible.
There are some other things which
remain the same too, such as 32 GB of internal storage (around 21 GB available)
and a microSD card slot capable of accepting up to 128 GB cards. There is a 64
GB model but this has not been confirmed for the UK market.
Wireless setup remains strong with
11ac dual-band Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0 with aptX, NFC and an IR blaster. The One
M9 also supports 4G LTE networks via the nano-SIM slot if you have the right
tariff. If you were hoping for any new features like a fingerprint scanner or
heart rate monitor then it's bad news. What HTC has done instead is focus on
improving existing hardware in the audio and photo departments.
While the above remains the same
compared to the M8, there are some hardware improvements. Memory has been boosted by 50
percent to 3 GB and there's a new processor in the form of Qualcomm's
Snapdragon 810 which is both octa-core and 64-bit (quad-core 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53
and quad-core 2 GHz Cortex-A57). It comes with the Adreno 430 GPU and we really
can't fault the performance. It's really only the camera app which doesn't open
instantly.
This is the first phone with a
Snapdragon 810 processor we've benchmarked in the lab and the results are
impressive. It's got the best Geekbench 3 score we've ever seen and matches the
iPhone 6 on graphics. The SunSpider web browsing score isn't as good as the M8
but we've not has any problems in this area from a user perspective. We'll add
the Galaxy S6 into this table once we've had it in the lab.
Geekbench 3
|
GFXBench T-Rex
|
GFXBench Manhattan
|
SunSpider
|
|
HTC One M9
|
3778
|
50 fps
|
24 fps
|
867 ms
|
HTC One M8
|
2761
|
30 fps
|
12 fps
|
583 ms
|
iPhone 6
|
2794
|
49 fps
|
26 fps
|
351 ms
|
.
The BoomSound front facing stereo
speakers are still a key feature and HTC has added support for High-Res 24-bit
audio putting the phone on a parr with Sony's top-end
smartphones and tablets. It has also
added Dolby Audio. Once again the built-in speakers sound amazing offering the
best experience you'll find on a smartphone. Now you can annoy people on the
bus with even better sound.
A new audio feature is called HTC
Connect and means a simple three finger swipe will send the audio to a
connected speaker – a reverse gesture will bring it back. We tested this out
with the Harmon/Kardon One (above) will be exclusively bundled with the M9 and
it worked first time although with a slight delay.
With BlackFire technology and some
more speakers you'll also be able to have a multi-room setup playing different
tunes in different rooms or the same one on everything. Other M9 users will be
able to hook into the system and queue their own tracks.
Cameras
As you've probably noticed from the
photos, the HTC One M9 no longer has the Duo Camera setup consisting of two
camera lenses. Instead, HTC has gone for a 20 Mp rear camera with the same
dual-LED flash. This is the biggest hardware change compared to the M8 and
confirms HTC has given up on the refocussing element.
We like the stylish and easy to use
camera app which has various modes. There's Camera, Selfie and Panorama but you
can add more like Bokeh and Split Capture. With 20 Mp on offer, there's plenty
of detail and we found the camera accurate at auto focussing and shooting
quickly. The M9 does crop to 16:9 by default though, so you'll need to head
into the settings to get all those available pixels.
You can shoot in a regular mode, but
quickly switch to others such as HDR, Night and Macro. If you're feeling a
little more adventurous, you can enter manual mode and start fiddling with the
white balance, ISO, shutter speed and even focus. It's displayed on the screen
in bars like the Lumia 1020. The move from UltraPixel to simply more pixels
does mean the M9 isn't as good in low-light compared to its predecessor.
On the video side it can now record
video in up to 4K resolution and uses a 'dynamic exposure algorithm' to mimic
the human eye, we're told. Default is Full HD, though and to rival the iPhone
there's a Slow motion mode which can do up to 120 fps.
HTC hasn't completely given up on
the UltraPixel (which lets in more light) as the front camera on the M9 is the
rear camera from the M8. Whether or not it was good on the back of the last
generation, it makes for a good selfie camera on the M9 with a crisp and
detailed image which works well in low light.
To go with the new hardware is a
software feature called One Gallery which we haven't been able to try out but
will in theory bring all your photos together from the likes of Dropbox,
Flickr, Google Drive and Facebook into one place.
Battery life
HTC increased the battery size from
the original HTC One to the One M8 and has done so again with the new One M9.
It's now 2840 mAh compared to 2600 mAh which is a slightly smaller jump from
last time around and the battery is still non-removable which is the same
across most flagship smartphones.
Despite the larger capacity, we’ve
found the battery life to be no different to the HTC One M8. With an average
usage pattern, the M9 lasted us a couple of days before needing to be charged.
That's still a good effort with many phones only managing just one day.
There's no wireless charging which
is a shame but HTC still offers its Extreme power saving mode which put the M9
into a basic mode (although not greyscale like similar features on rival
phones), allowing access to a small selection of simple functions like phone
and messages.
Software
As you would expect, the HTC One M9
runs on Android 5.0 Lollipop
which is the latest version. However, HTC doesn't leave it as is so puts its
own skin or user interface over the top. The M9 introduces Sense 7.0 which
means you get HTC's style including icons and apps but there are also some new
features.
HTC largely does things its own way
with BlinkFeed to the left of the main homescreen, a grid view recent apps menu
and a vertically scrolling app menu. However, the stock dropdown notification
bar is in use (with some HTC style added) and the good news is that you can customise
which quick settings you want – thanks, HTC.
Luckily you can tweak the way you
want to use the phone so the BlinkFeed panel can be removed, you can opt for
the stock Lollipop card system for recent apps and although you can't make the
app menu scroll horizontal you rearrange around, hide them and adjust the grid
size.
Talking of customisation, this is the
main emphasis of Sense 7.0 so there's a new Themes app where you can download
various user interface themes. However, you can edit details yourself such as
icon styles and fonts (see above). The software will also generate a theme for
you based on a photo which is pretty cool.
Motion Launch Gestures are still
part of Sense and mean you can do handy things like double tap the screen to
turn it on and off. Up, down, left and right swipes will unlock, turn on voice
dialling, launch the widget panel and open BlinkFeed respectively – all with
the screen off.
We've already mentioned HTC Connect
and One Gallery in relation to audio and photo but another new feature is
called HTC Sense Home – it's not an app but the launcher with HTC now uses. The
software is location aware so you can use a different lock- and homescreens
depending on where you are.
For example, when at work you'll get
icons for your email and calendar and these will automatically get replaced
with a remote control app and Facebook when you get home. You can select what
you want for each layout but suggestions will be made based on your habits.
We've only been using it for a few days but it's already pretty handy, although
the suggestions can be annoying.
The HTC One M9 is a genuinely
desirable smartphone with the best design and build available in Android land,
even with Samsung upping the ante. It's good to see the powerful Snapdragon 810
and more memory, however, some key hardware remains the same meaning M8 users
are unlikely to be tempted to upgrade – and the old model is now an attractive
buy at around £350. The fact the Galaxy S6 costs the same yet has more impressive
specs is bad news for HTC.
in U.K click here
See other product :
* Samsung Galaxy S6 * Amazon Fire Phone
* Sony Xperia Z3 Compact D5803 * Motorola Moto G (2nd Generation)
* Samsung Galaxy A5 * Samsung Galaxy Young 2
* Samsung Galaxy S3 mini * Samsung Galaxy J1
* LG Realm * Nokia Lumia 635
* Nokia Lumia 520 * BLU Advance 4.0 A270A
* HTC Desire 510 (A11) white * HTC one M9
A
gorgeous flagship Android phone but hardware hasn't moved on much for
2015 - See more at:
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/reviews/mobile-phone/3599835/htc-one-m9-review-new-smartphone-flagship-2015-uk-best/#sthash.mNzGJfsH.dpuf
A
gorgeous flagship Android phone but hardware hasn't moved on much for
2015 - See more at:
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/reviews/mobile-phone/3599835/htc-one-m9-review-new-smartphone-flagship-2015-uk-best/#sthash.mNzGJfsH.dpuf