Saturday 23 November 2013

HTC One X Smartphones

HTC's One X is a collection of firsts. It is the first HTC handset with Android 4.0 Frozen treats Sandwich, the first with a 720x1,280-pixel screen, and also the first with a quad-core processor; its Nvidia Tegra 3 chipset even features a GeForce graphics core and a "companion core" - a fifth processor core that can take over essential functions once the phone is idle to save power.

The real difference is in the hardware. There’s now twice as much storage because of its 64GB of internal space for storage, which is great news as there's no sd card slot. It also has a faster 1.7GHz quad-core Nvidia Tegra 3 chip, and 1GB of RAM.

HTC One X+ - Screen

The screen around the One X+ is absolutely top notch. It's very large, measuring 4.7inches over the diagonal, but crucially it is also got a high pixel count because of its resolution of 720x1280 pixels, passing on a pixel density of 312ppi. It utilizes a Super LCD2 panel, rather than the AMOLED technology that but while its black levels aren’t quite as deep as that display, its shirt is arguably more natural and accurate looking.

Operating-system

The One X+ is running Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, that is an almost unnoticeable upgrade from Android 4.0. What you should notice, if you’re a geek like us, would be that the phone runs smoother than the One X. Jelly Bean smooths out a number of Android’s roughness.

Design 

The 4.7-inch Gorilla Glass screen is both durable and scratch-resistant. And also the minimalist design includes curved glass, a piano gloss sidewall, as well as an iconic camera ring on the back.

Camera

Never miss a go. A speedy one second start-up, rapid-fire continuous shooting, simultaneous 1080HD video and imaging, as well as an 8MP camera. And with HTC ImageChip get great shots no matter lighting and movement.

Sound 

The HTC One series all include Beats Audio™ so everything you hear in your phone-from music and videos to games and YouTube-is rich and authentic.

Voice and knowledge

Voice calls are pretty standard on AT&T’s network. We'd no trouble hearing or being heard. As always, voice calls sound crappy. No change there.

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