HTC U11 review
For the past four iterations, HTC has been touting an all-metal unibody design in its flagships. This year, HTC's arrives with a fresh, new, and more fragile look. Tuned with the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 CPU, top-notch audio experience, and a water-resistant glass sandwich design, will the new HTC U11 be able to swoon loyal Samsung or Apple customers to HTC?
The "U" in the phone's name stands for the company's new design language, while the "11" follows the numbering of the HTC One M9, and then last year's HTC 10. The reason for the "U" is thanks in part to the super-reflective surface on the back glass which HTC says "is a reflection of you".Sappy puns aside, the U11's new 'Liquid surface" design symbolizes (both literally and figuratively) a new image for HTC. Glass is more appealing and stands out better than a metal-clad phone, all without being overly flashy. HTC didn't take a risk with a taller display as LG and Samsung have done, and that's okay. After all, we don't know that non-traditional aspect ratios will stick around for very long.
HTC U11 key features
Body: HTC's design uses Gorilla Glass 5 on the front and back. The "Liquid Surface" design on the rear is curved glass and changes hues under the light. It's IP67 water-resistant.
Display: 5.5-inch Super LCD 5 panel, 1440x 2560 resolution, 16:9 aspect ratio, ~534ppi
Rear camera: 12MP f/1.7, dual pixel autofocus, OIS, dual-LED flash, 1.4 micron pixel size, HDR Boost, 3D audio recording, Acoustic Focus, 4K @ 30fps
Front Camera: 16MP fixed-focus, HDR Boost, 1080p @ 30fps.
OS/Software: Android 7.1.1 with HTC Sense - HTC Sense Companion app, Alexa available in UK, US, and Germany
Chipsets: Qualcomm Snapdragon 835: Octa-core (4x2.45 GHz Kryo & 4x1.9 GHz Kryo), Adreno 540
Memory: 4GB RAM/64GB storage in base model (6GB/128GB in select markets), expandable via microSD slot (or SIM2 slot for dual-SIM model).
Battery: 3,000 mAh battery with Quick Charge 3.0
Connectivity: Single or Dual SIM; LTE-A Cat 16: 1024/75 Mbps, USB Type-C 3.1, 3.5mm to USB-C adapter included
Audio: Boom Sound speakers, noise-cancelling U Sonic earbuds (via USB-C) included, four onboard mics for 3D audio and always listening for assistant hotword
Misc: Squeeze actions via sensors embedded into frame, front fingerprint scanner; dual speakers (Boom Sound)
Main shortcomings
No analog headphone jack (an adapter is provided but you can't charge it and listen to the music at the same time)
Battery capacity is not stellar
Questionable durability
Yes, HTC is a little late to the party this year. The Taiwanese company pushed the launch of its 2017 flagship back a couple of months, partly because the U Ultra's release put HTC behind schedule for its flagship phone of the year.
Although the U11 isn't the first smartphone with a Snapdragon 835, HTC is the first company to launch a smartphone with Qualcomm's latest chipset on a global scale. While that won't win HTC any awards or new fans, it has to rely on the phone itself to deliver a product experience worth writing home about.
While the HTC 10 was a great phone with an overly robust exterior design, its presence wasn't enough to stand out amongst Samsung or Apple in the mobile space. HTC hopes that the U11 closes the gap that Samsung and Apple have between the other smartphone makers.
HTC heavily emphasized the U11's squeeze features and noise-canceling USonic headphones at its launch event in Taipei. Could these new features and its shiny new design be enough to sway customers back? Perhaps, but HTC likely needs a bigger presence to compete with Samsung and Apple's multi-million dollar marketing campaigns.
The "U" in the phone's name stands for the company's new design language, while the "11" follows the numbering of the HTC One M9, and then last year's HTC 10. The reason for the "U" is thanks in part to the super-reflective surface on the back glass which HTC says "is a reflection of you".Sappy puns aside, the U11's new 'Liquid surface" design symbolizes (both literally and figuratively) a new image for HTC. Glass is more appealing and stands out better than a metal-clad phone, all without being overly flashy. HTC didn't take a risk with a taller display as LG and Samsung have done, and that's okay. After all, we don't know that non-traditional aspect ratios will stick around for very long.
HTC U11 key features
Body: HTC's design uses Gorilla Glass 5 on the front and back. The "Liquid Surface" design on the rear is curved glass and changes hues under the light. It's IP67 water-resistant.
Display: 5.5-inch Super LCD 5 panel, 1440x 2560 resolution, 16:9 aspect ratio, ~534ppi
Rear camera: 12MP f/1.7, dual pixel autofocus, OIS, dual-LED flash, 1.4 micron pixel size, HDR Boost, 3D audio recording, Acoustic Focus, 4K @ 30fps
Front Camera: 16MP fixed-focus, HDR Boost, 1080p @ 30fps.
OS/Software: Android 7.1.1 with HTC Sense - HTC Sense Companion app, Alexa available in UK, US, and Germany
Chipsets: Qualcomm Snapdragon 835: Octa-core (4x2.45 GHz Kryo & 4x1.9 GHz Kryo), Adreno 540
Memory: 4GB RAM/64GB storage in base model (6GB/128GB in select markets), expandable via microSD slot (or SIM2 slot for dual-SIM model).
Battery: 3,000 mAh battery with Quick Charge 3.0
Connectivity: Single or Dual SIM; LTE-A Cat 16: 1024/75 Mbps, USB Type-C 3.1, 3.5mm to USB-C adapter included
Audio: Boom Sound speakers, noise-cancelling U Sonic earbuds (via USB-C) included, four onboard mics for 3D audio and always listening for assistant hotword
Misc: Squeeze actions via sensors embedded into frame, front fingerprint scanner; dual speakers (Boom Sound)
Main shortcomings
No analog headphone jack (an adapter is provided but you can't charge it and listen to the music at the same time)
Battery capacity is not stellar
Questionable durability
Yes, HTC is a little late to the party this year. The Taiwanese company pushed the launch of its 2017 flagship back a couple of months, partly because the U Ultra's release put HTC behind schedule for its flagship phone of the year.
Although the U11 isn't the first smartphone with a Snapdragon 835, HTC is the first company to launch a smartphone with Qualcomm's latest chipset on a global scale. While that won't win HTC any awards or new fans, it has to rely on the phone itself to deliver a product experience worth writing home about.
While the HTC 10 was a great phone with an overly robust exterior design, its presence wasn't enough to stand out amongst Samsung or Apple in the mobile space. HTC hopes that the U11 closes the gap that Samsung and Apple have between the other smartphone makers.
HTC heavily emphasized the U11's squeeze features and noise-canceling USonic headphones at its launch event in Taipei. Could these new features and its shiny new design be enough to sway customers back? Perhaps, but HTC likely needs a bigger presence to compete with Samsung and Apple's multi-million dollar marketing campaigns.




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