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HTC One M7 (2013) review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £504
inc VAT

It might have been superced by the m8, but the HTC One M7 is still a beautiful handset with an amazing screen and innovative camera

Specifications

Android 4.1 (JellyBean), 4.7in 1,920×1,080 display

http://www.handtec.co.uk
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An Android smartphone can be beautifully designed and have an amazing screen and top-notch chipset, but none of this will make any difference if the software is rubbish. HTC sails closer to the wind than most on this front, as it heavily customises Android with its latest Sense interface.

Sense has always divided opinion, but this time HTC has really pushed the boat out. Running on top of Android 4.1.2 is Sense 5.0, and with it comes the end of the traditional Android homescreen, with its mix of widgets and icons.

Instead, you get what HTC calls BlinkFeed. This consists of a rolling grid of tiles, containing information aggregated from various news websites and your social media feeds. You can add all the major social media services, such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Flickr, but the choice of news websites is quite narrow; you get the Guardian, the Independent and Reuters for news, and CNET and TechCrunch for technology. For those used to getting their content from a wide variety of sources the BlinkFeed selection will seem very narrow.

HTC One

BlinkFeed replaces the standard Android homescreen, and shows you news feeds and social networks in chronological order

It looks like the BlinkFeed needs to be specifically supported by the corresponding news outlet or website, so it remains to be seen whether overstretched publishers will be keen to support yet another platform. We found BlinkFeed more useful for keeping an eye on our Twitter and Facebook feeds, though, and often used Twitter links to find news stories anyway.

BlinkFeed is a clever idea which is in tune with how many people actually use their smartphones; to keep an eye on what’s happening in the world and among people they know. Of course, if you prefer to use your Android smartphone to check your calendar widget at a glance on your homescreen before opening your email, you will most likely hate it.

HTC One

The app tray is a smooth-scrolling lovely bit of design

The standard Android homescreen isn’t completely dead and gone, though. Swiping right from the BlinkFeed takes you to a standard Android homescreen with space for the usual apps and widgets, and you can add up to three more screens if you need more room.

Most importantly, you can set a standard Android home screen as your default screen (the one that appears when you unlock the handset). BlinkFeed is still there, sitting to the left of the default screen, while your other home screens are off to the right.

Meanwhile, pressing the icon in the middle of the shortcut bar at the bottom of the screen takes you to the app tray, which is rather lovingly designed; we like the way it scrolls smoothly through pages of icons rather than continuously, as this makes it easier to keep track of where you are.

Although the HTC One shipped with Android 4.1, the company has announced that it is updating the OS to Android 4.4 and Sense 6.0. The update is ongoing and HTC has also confirmed that the original HTC One will get Android L 5.0 when it launches later thsi year.

HTC has made a big deal about music playback ever since it first stuck a Beats by Dr. Dre logo on one of its phones, and the One is no exception. It has what HTC calls BoomSound – a pair of stereo speakers at the top and bottom of the phone – or left and right when watching video in landscape orientation.

Amazingly, these speakers sound reasonably good. It’s the best sound quality we’ve ever heard from a phone, but the bar is set pretty low. The speakers are loud and produce audio with some definition, but the sound is certainly harsh with a definite high-end emphasis, but that’s to be expected from speakers this size. We’re also not convinced that putting loud speakers in a phone is a great idea, as most bus journeys we take are hellish enough as it is.

The One also has built-in twin microphones, which HTC says are designed for recording gigs. We didn’t have any upcoming gigs during our time with the phone, so we decided to simulate one instead. We played back a Crowded House gig from YouTube on our PC with our speakers turned up high, and recorded the result on the HTC One.

When we played back the recording and compared it to the original, the concert sounded clear with little distortion, but there was a marked lack of bass compared to the original. You can compare the original video clip and the version recorded on the HTC One in the two YouTube clips below.

The original Crowded House recording…

And the same clip recorded with the HTC One’s video camera

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Details

Price£504
Rating*****
AwardUltimate

Hardware

Main display size4.7in
Native resolution1,920×1,080
CCD effective megapixels4.1-megapixel
GPSyes
Internal memory32768MB
Memory card supportnone
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 850/900/1800/1900, 3G 850/900/1900/2100, LTE 800/1800/2600
Wireless dataLTE
Size137x68x9mm
Weight143g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.1 (JellyBean)
Microsoft Office compatibilityWord, Excel, PowerPoint
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadphones, data cable, charger
Talk timeN/A
Standby timeN/A

Buying Information

SIM-free price£504
Price on contract69
SIM-free supplierwww.handtec.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierwww.three.co.uk
Detailswww.htc.com

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