We're currently in the process of putting the HTC One Mini through our rigorous and in-depth testing process - you know this takes a little time! But in the meantime we've put together a little gallery of the our hands on pictures with the new phone - see below for some highlights or check the next page for the full run down of all our snaps!
The HTC One Mini follows in the footsteps of its outlandishly
successful bigger brother, slicing off some components but managing to
maintain a real sense of class.
When it comes to the HTC One,
there was a big call from fans to follow it up with something a little
more affordable, in the same manner as Samsung has done with the Galaxy S4 Mini.
However,
while coming in at a similar price (well, unconfirmed but likely) and a
slightly lower set of specs than its Samsung competitor, there's no
doubt that the HTC One Mini is a more impressive device (and it has a
higher-resolution screen to boot). For
a start, it takes on that unibody design from the larger One, only
adding in a plastic band around the edge but maintaining the aluminium
back and front speakers. It still feels very premium in the hand, and at
122g feels very well balanced. Those
that love specs will baulk at this device, so we'll get the downgrades
out of the way early doors: there's no NFC chip, the CPU is a Snapdragon
400 dual core option clocked at 1.4GHz, and the screen has been shrunk
to 4.3-inches and a 720p resolution. However,
HTC has managed to keep in the main things we're fans of with the One:
namely BoomSound and the UltraPixel sensor. BlinkFeed is there as well
(and enhanced thanks to the One Mini running Android 4.2.2 right out of
the box) but that's something that many users are finding they only use
sporadically. We've
said before: spend some time setting Blinkfeed up and it will reward
you, but we understand how this is a hassle for some people. However,
it's impressive that it's made it in a full-fledged format for the One
Mini, making it really feel like this is just a shrunken version of the
larger option. There
are other compromises too: the battery is down to 1800mAh, and that
could play havoc with some users if the battery life isn't up to snuff,
which has been a problem for HTC over the years. However, the One
managed to tame its power demons after a refresh, so we're hopeful HTC
Has managed the same thing here.
In the hand, as we mentioned, the HTC One Mini is a really
premium-feeling device. It almost annoys us how little the plastic band,
manufactured in the same way as the HTC One X+, doesn't interfere with your general use, as this just shows that Nokia got it totally the wrong way round with the Lumia 925.
The
plastic band also makes the phone a little easier to grip, which we're
big fans of, as the One did have a slight kamikaze habit in normal use,
so overall the tweaks in design don't seem to have hurt the little tyke. With
the lower-speed processor, you'd be forgiven for worrying that the One
Mini would have real problems keeping up with all the things that life
might throw it at - in reality, we noticed not one issue when flipping
through the apps and screens.
Firing up the HTC One Mini camera
app was no problem, and it's great to see the HTC Zoe functionality (and
the exact same camera interface) staring straight back at us when we
did so. The
burst mode and 3-second Zoe clips all performed precisely as we'd hoped
they would, and even uploading was speedy too (which is also possible
over 4G as the One Mini supports that too). The 1GB of RAM might be a
concern for those that recognise the weight of certain parts of the
Sense UI, which HTC runs over the top of native Android, but we
encountered no issues in our fairly lengthy hands on time with the
phone.
In fact we can only see one glaring issue with the HTC One
Mini: only 16GB of storage on board. The company told us that it didn't
anticipate that the target demographic would want to fill it up with
more than that, but that seems to preclude anyone that wants to pop a
movie or two, a large game and a year's worth of HTC Zoe video
highlights in there. Sure,
there will be those that only use 1GB of photo over the course of the
device, and they'd be the same people that take pictures of their kids,
animals and food, but there are many other tech-savvy users out there
that don't think twice about downloading a couple of movies and Grand
Theft Auto, yet don't want to pay top whack for a smartphone. However,
beyond that we can see that this is a really quality phone, and one
that packs all the treats that HTC is quickly becoming famous for: a
great camera in low light, a swift shot latency, great audio (with the
same internal amplifier and Beats Audio on board) and Sense 5.0 with the
latest version of Android on board.
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