The HTC One M8 is finally here and
immediately, the inevitable comparisons ensue. The One M8 will go on to compete
with the Samsung Galaxy S5 and the Sony Xperia Z2 so far. LG has yet to unveil
the successor to the G2, which will be the fourth contender in the group. The
M8 is an evolutionary upgrade to HTC’s previous flagship and the focus seems to
be heavily centered around the design. But in doing so, HTC seems to have
neglected other key aspects of what makes flagship smartphone in today’s day
and age. Could this neglect cost them a spot amongst the top three smartphones
of 2014?
Roydon Cerejo
There’s no denying the fact that the
One M8 will go down in history as one of the most beautifully crafted
smartphones of all time. In fact, HTC has consistently churned out stunner
after stunner in their One series. Design is one of the pivotal aspects of the
phone and I don’t think the other flagships even come close to what HTC has
achieved. But that seems to be the whole and soul of the phone as there really
isn’t much else that’s substantial enough for you to sit up and take notice.
They’ve increased the screen a bit, dropped in a faster chipset and tweaked
around with the skin a bit. Yes, battery life has gotten better but that’s to
be expected when you use a more efficient CPU and a larger battery. The depth
sensing camera also sounds a bit gimmicky to be honest.
I’m all for a superbly designed phone,
I really am. But when I’m paying upwards of Rs 40,000 on a phone, I expect to
get the best of everything. One of the biggest drawbacks of the M8 in my eyes
is that HTC went ahead with the same Ultrapixel camera from last year’s model.
Behind the whole marketing spiel that is Ultrapixel, it does snap pictures at
just 4MP and that’s not good enough for a flagship device. Compare this to
Samsung’s 16MP and Sony’s 20.7MP sensor and suddenly the chinks give way to
deep gashes in the M8′s armor. The One M8 will definitely
sweep the title of the ‘best looking’ phone of 2014 but sadly, it already feels
like a tough sell when you consider the whole package.
Shruti Dhapola
HTC’s new smartphone, the HTC One M8
looks pretty much like its predecessor and the Taiwanese company seems to have
stuck with the same design and look. Dual speakers on the front, Snapdragon
quad-core processor, a slightly bigger screen (from 4.7-inches to 5-inches). As
far as its rivals go, it would be unfair to say that HTC hasn’t done enough.
New premium smartphones don’t have much to offer nowadays other than a bigger
screen, more megapixels in the camera and a better processor.
The only problem for HTC is that it has
stuck to the 4 megapixel camera, when in consumer perception, more megapixels
mean a better smartphone camera. A lot of users might not be comfortable paying
a high price for a premium smartphone with a 4 megapixel camera. HTC has
tried to stand out in the market by talking about Ultrapixels, but given the
response that the HTC One got in 2013, it should be clear, that this marketing
strategy hasn’t paid off and is unlikely to work in 2014 either.
Nikhil Subramaniam
Year after year, we wait for the next
HTC flagship to see how the Taiwanese manufacturer will finally challenge
Samsung’s monopoly on the Android smartphone market. Year after year, HTC
brings the fight right to Samsung’s doorstep, but loses steam just when it
needs to punch.
Sadly, that’s the case this year too.
The HTC One M8 looks great. The hardware is great, the design typically
stellar, surpassing even the iPhone 5s in my opinion, and there are a ton of
innovative software features too which should make it a pleasure to use.
Everything seems to be just perfect.
Everything but the camera. One would
have thought that HTC would have improved the one glaring disadvantage in the
2013 One after the underwhelming reviews. The Ultrapixel camera on the One was
its major pitfall and it’s making a reappearance, with tweaked imaging software,
to improve some of the picture quality. Nevertheless early reviews state that
it’s not that much of an improvement, if at all.
Yes, there’s the so-called Duo Camera,
but how many of us want to tinker with the focus of an image after it’s taken?
How many even venture into the picture editor to resharpen an image right now
or to make the colours pop more?
HTC should have instead built on the
Ultrapixel technology and blown our minds with an 8-megapixel camera or
thereabouts with larger pixel size, so that detail and colour reproduction are
at par with the competition. Some may say it’s just a camera, and it doesn’t
matter because phones are not supposed to be cameras. But at a time, when
point-and-shoots are becoming increasingly irrelevant in the light of superb
camera phones, HTC has missed a huge beat.
Instead what we have is an hamstrung
flagship, one which could have been a sellout; it could have been a blockbuster
and given Samsung real cause for concern. Instead it’s a 2014 smartphone with a
2013 camera, that wasn’t all that great in the first place. In conclusion, I
would say HTC has done a lot to make the M8 a worthy challenger, but it seems
to have fallen short again.
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