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Tuesday, November 13, 2012
HTC One X, to Rule Them All!
In this year’s spring, HTC released a beast in the smartphone world, made for scaring the daylights out of its competitors, but also make a lot of nerds happy. I’m talking about HTC’s champion from that period, the One X, an excellent device that still makes a lot of its enemies kneel and is respected by the ones who resist it. Searching for an extremely capable phone and just cannot make a decision? Well, maybe HTC will help you and win your heart and mind after reading the following review.
Key features
• Quad-band GSM and dual-band 3G support
• 21 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA
• 4.7" 16M-color Super LCD 2 capacitive touchscreen of HD resolution (720 x 1280 pixels); Gorilla glass
• Android 4.0.3 Ice Cream Sandwich with latest HTC Sense 4.0
• 1.5 GHz quad-core Cortex-A9 CPUs, low-power companion core, ULP GeForce 2 GPU, Nvidia Tegra 3 chipset
• 1 GB of RAM and 32 GB of storage
• 8 MP autofocus camera with LED flash; face detection and geotagging
• 1080p and 720p video recording @ 24fps with stereo sound
• 720p front-facing camera for video-chat
• Wi-Fi b/g/n and DLNA
• GPS with A-GPS
• Stereo FM radio with RDS
• Accelerometer, proximity sensor and auto-brightness sensor
• Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
• microUSB port (charging) and stereo Bluetooth v4.0
• MHL TV-out (requires MHL-to-HDMI adapter)
• Smart dialing, voice dialing
• DivX/XviD video support
• HTC Locations app
• HTCSense.com integration
• HTC Portable Hotspot
• Office document editor
• Beats audio enhancements
For full specs, please visit here.
http://www.mobilephonedeals.com
The phone comes in a good looking box which carries the charger, micro USB cable used for both data connections and charging your device, a headset, a little tool for ejecting the SIM card and the user manuals.
The One X owns a polycarbonate body with rounded edges, it measures 134.4 x 69.9 x 8.9 mm and has a weight of 130 g. Its design is very well put together and solid and handling it will be easy, as it’s light and slim, so your hand won’t get tired after holding it for a few minutes.
The frontal part of that hot body is dominated by an amazing 4.7 inches Super IPS LCD2 capacitive touchscreen that has a resolution of 720 x 1280 pixels and a 312 ppi pixel density. Do I have to mention that the display is top notch and it has very few LCD competitors out there? Well, I’ve said it. The colors are very bright and the contrast is great, offering some wonderful viewing angles and sunlight legibility.
Above the display are the earpiece, ambient light and proximity sensors, a status LED and a front facing 720p camera for video calling. Below the screen are three haptic enabled capacitive keys for Back, Home and a Task switcher.
On the left side is a lonely micro USB port which serves multiple purposes: charging, data connections and TV-out. The right side features only the volume rocker.
The top is home for a microphone pinhole, the Power/Lock button, a 3.5 mm audio jack and the micro SIM card slot.
Only the mouthpiece lives at the bottom.
The One X comes with Android 4.0.3 Ice Cream Sandwich and is upgradeable to v 4.1. Sense 4.0 is also here for improving the user experience. The phone allows you to customize it according to your personal tastes and that’s an important aspect if you ask me. Your device is powered by an Nvidia Tegra 3 chipset, holding a 1.5 GHz quad-core processor, 1 GB of RAM, 32 GB of internal storage and ULP GeForce GPU. This phone is among the smartest ones around and I really don’t know which one I would choose to be the number 1 in my list when it comes to skills.
Let move along to the telephony department. The HTC One X holds a nice phonebook (the People app) which syncs with your social networks and offers some special features that you’ll find out for yourself if the phone falls in your hands or you decide to get it. The phone offers a brilliant in-call quality, as the voices were loud and clear for both ends of the line thanks to the secondary microphone for active noise cancellation. The reception was also free of any issues.
The messaging department also comes packed with lots of goodies. Your messages are organized into threads and displayed as conversations between you and your contacts and for typing, you get a very friendly on screen QWERTY keyboard which is very easy to use in both portrait and landscape modes, as the large screen offers a good placing for the keys, so accidental presses are pretty rare when using it.
Gmail and HTC Mail handle your emails and for social networking, you have some dedicated apps, including Google Talk, which supports multiple popular networks.
When it comes to connectivity, the One X is equipped with support for NFC, quad-band GSM, GPRS, EDGE, quad-band 3G with 21 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n, DLNA, Hotspot, Wi-Fi Direct, Bluetooth 4.0 with A2DP and 2.0 with MHL support.
For surfing the web, you get the standard Ice Cream Sandwich browser, which is very capable and easily gets the job done. It comes with a simple user interface and features support for Flash, the Quick controls functionality, text reflow, double tap and pinch zooming, Incognito tabs and others. The overall browsing experience is very pleasant, as the pages are loaded fast and look nice on the One X’s big screen.
The device comes equipped with an 8 megapixel snapper that is capable of producing photos at a maximum resolution of 3264 x 2448 pixels and has a LED flash companion for helping in low light situations. Some other features worth mentioning are geotagging, face and smile detection, effects, modes, continuous autofocus, you can take HDR photos and so on. The image quality is great and I’ve really appreciated that the camera takes photos very fast.
The video camera is also very capable and shoots 1080p videos at 24 fps. You have the possibility of snapping photos during your recording, touch focus and toggling the video light.
For audio playback, you get a cool Music app which comes with a Cover-Flow like interface when playing and offers a lot of useful stuff, like SoundHound for song recognition, TuneIn Radio, 7digital, it looks for track information on Google or searches its video on YouTube. Also here, among others, is the Beats Audio enhancement. The audio quality is very good and clear.
An FM Radio is also on board and comes with RDS support.
The HTC One X’s video player is capable of playing AVI, MP4, MKV and WMV files and offers subtitle support. Watching movies will be a nice experience on the phone’s big and nice screen.
When it comes to handy applications, the phone comes with the Polaris app for viewing and editing Word, Excel and PowerPoint files and there’s also a PDF viewer on board. Cloud storage integration is here too, through Dropbox and SkyDrive, you have a Calendar which is compatible with other online calendars (Facebook and Google, for example), a World Clock, Alarms clock, which manages multiple alarms and holds a stopwatch and timer, a voice recorder and so on. For more, feel free to browse the Google Play Store or HTC’s Hub.
A built-in GPS receiver is on board and comes with A-GPS support. For navigation, you have Google Maps and HTC Locations.
The One X comes with a 1800 mAh battery, which sounds pretty good, but the phone’s hardware skills are hungry for power and your phone will eventually pass away if you don’t feed it every day.
My final words? If you’re the demanding type and seek perfection, here it is. The HTC One X is godlike. Period.
For a mobile phone deal on a HTC One X, please visit us here.
http://www.mobilephonedeals.com
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