MWC 2013 preview: what we can expect

MWC 2013 preview what we can expect

We here at Engadget are awfully fond of those hunks of metal, motherboards and magic we call smartphones and tablets, and Mobile World Congress is determined to gather as many as possible on an annual basis. Indeed, this year’s show, held in beautiful Barcelona at the Fira Gran Via, is not just a weeklong event — in fact, it’s already started. A handful of companies have announced their key products in an attempt to gather some crucial pre-show buzz, but does that mean there’s nothing left for us to hunt for? Absolutely not. Gather with us beyond the break and we’ll tell you about everything that’s already been announced, as well as what we can expect from the rest of the mobile extravaganza.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

HTC releases IR API, looking for a few good devs

DNP HTC releases IR API, looking for a few good devs

In an effort to usher its newest flagship‘s infrared capabilities to the masses, HTC is adding an IR API to its OpenSense SDK. Starting today, developers interested in creating applications that use the One’s IR blaster can request the software kit directly from the company. By making this API available to the masses, HTC hopes to build a stable of apps unique to its new hardware, kicking things off with Sense 5’s integrated universal TV remote control software. Devs looking to ease the pain of Logitech’s plans to kill off the Harmony — or those interested in more details — can find just that via the source link below.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: HTC

OtterBox HTC One cases “coming soon”

OtterBox is well known for their robust cases for a handful of devices. They offer a bit of insurance in case you ever drop your phone, or even throw your phone at a wall in a fit of anger. After the official HTC One announcement earlier this week, it looks like OtterBox is taking no time to introduce cases for the new smartphone.

Screen Shot 2013-02-21 at 4.34.39 PM

OtterBox has made three cases for the HTC On using their popular line of Commuter and Defender series of cases. The regular Defender HTC One case will cost $50 and will come in a bevy of different colors that you can choose from, including black, glacier (grey/white mix), blushed (grey/pink mix), and punked (black/green mix).

The company is also offering a RealTree Defender case, which will give your phone a nice camouflage look, just in case you need to be completely hidden while hunting out in the woods, smartphone and all. This case will cost you $60. As for the Commuter series, an HTC One case will cost you $35 and it will come in a mixture of colors as well, including black, glacier, steel blue (black/teal mix), lilac, black/purple mix), and punked.

There’s no word on availability yet, but the company allows you to submit your email address to be notified when the new cases eventually become available, which should be sometime in March (the same time that the actual phone is releasing). These cases may not be as tough as the Armor series of cases that we checked out at CES last month, but you’ll be guaranteed that your brand new HTC One will be well protected using any OtterBox offering.


OtterBox HTC One cases “coming soon” is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

SlashGear 101: HTC UltraPixel Camera Technology

This week we’re seeing HTC come into the light with a massively important new device by the name of HTC One, and with it, a new collection of features included under the “HTC UltraPixel Camera” umbrella. With the features we’re working with here on the HTC One hero phone’s implementation of HTC UltraPixel Camera, you’ll find that image quality is, first and foremost, not solely dependent on the amount of megapixels a camera has. HTC UltraPixel Camera technology is here demonstrated with an UltraPixel Sensor, HTC ImageChip, f/2.0 Aperture, and Optical Image Stabilization.

ultrapixel

UltraPixel Sensor

HTC is bringing what it calls its first UltraPixel sensor to the market with the HTC One, showing off the full setup in the image you see below. This image shows the HTC ImageChip architecture (not unlike what we saw with each of the HTC One models in the past), the UltraPixel Sensor itself, an f/2.0 Aperture, and the HTC One’s lens. With the UltraPixel sensor, you’ll now be working with larger pixels than the average camera.

ultrapixel

With the UltraPixel Sensor collecting UltraPixel-sized pixels, you’ll be getting the ability to capture “300% more light than many of the 13 megapixel cameras on the market.” Each pixel contains more light and more data than ever before, all this with a sensor whose size is equivalent to that of a standard 8MP or 13MP smartphone camera. This UltraPixel Sensor is a CMOS BSI and is classified as having a 1/3′ sensor size.

rain

Each photo you’re going to be taking will be 2688 x 1520 pixels in size on the HTC One at a 16:9 aspect ratio, and you’ve got a 5 piece lens element setup with a focal length of 3.82mm. Each one of the pixels you’re picking up here is a 2.0 micrometer UltraPixel. These pixels have “effectively” twice the surface area of the standard pixels you’re working with on 8MP and 13MP setups, those being generally 1.4 micrometers and 1.1 micrometers respectively.

pixelsize

In effect, you’ve got the same size photo, but instead of creating smaller pixels to fill the area as larger megapixel cameras are doing, HTC is creating larger pixels to fill the area. This results in the HTC One’s camera being 4MP strong, but creating photos that are the same size – and better quality – than the larger megapixel solutions. File sizes are smaller for the HTC-taken photos here as well.

HTC ImageChip

With the newest edition of HTC’s own ISP (Image Signal Processor), you’ll find that the HTC ImageChip feature collection has expanded since the HTC One X arrived on the scene right around a year ago with ImageSense. The first big innovation is a rather speedy 200ms full distance scan for use with Continuous Auto Focus. That’s quicker than a human blink – you’ll have a harder time being out of focus than you will getting instant focus.

28080290_8KGMRX-17-580x435

Next you’ll find Real-Time Video HDR – with a dynamic range that can be cranked up to a lovely -92dB, you’ll be able to “match the human eye capability” as you capture interlaced frames at 60fps. You’ve what HTC notes is “always on” HDR here for video, even at HD 1080p. Due to the nature of the curved lens, darker spots appear near the edge of your photos almost no matter what – HTC has compensated for this with an algorithm designed specifically for the HTC One’s hardware.

28080290_8KGMRX-15

This newest HTC ImageChip also works with de-noise processing on both the front and the back-facing camera on the HTC One. With this simple concentration of effort, HTC says noise is cleanly removed at all times.

f/2.0 Aperture

HTC shows quite simply how the HTC One uses the largest of three apertures available in some of the best selling smartphones on the market today, with the Galaxy S III working with an f/2.6 and the iPhone 5 utilizing an f/2.4. With the HTC One’s f/2.0 size, one whole heck of a lot more light is able to be let in, this resulting in better results in low-light photo conditions.

aperture

Optical Image Stabilization

The HTC One’s camera setup allows its camera to capture a full sized photo as fast as 1/48 of a second. This compares with the current market standard of 1/30 of a second, that speed also the best the HTC One X can do currently. Along with this you’ve now got a real-deal physical optical image stabilizer (OIS) on the HTC One working with the smartphone’s dedicated imaging gyroscope.

ois_go

With its own OIS, the HTC One’s lens physically moves according to what the dedicated imaging gyroscope tells it, this countering the inevitable shake that happens when someone takes a photo without a tripod. This OIS is different from the more common digital stabilization used on many competitor model solutions, those solutions opting to cut out shaking bits of the photo, reducing the resolution of the photo in the process.

ois3

The HTC One’s OIS works at an “unprecedented” frequency of 2000Hz and has been made small enough to fit inside the HTC One’s relatively thin chassis. Working on two axis, this OIS detects pitch and yaw movements and counters them at 2000 times a second. Video quality is also significantly improved over past solutions as the OIS effectively removes background shakes and mimics smooth panning, top to bottom.

supterlowlight
specs
chart

More on the HTC One

Below you’ll find a timeline of HTC One hands-on or otherwise in-depth explorations from SlashGear. We’ll also have a full review of the HTC One up sooner than later, so be sure to stick around for the big drop! Seeya then!


SlashGear 101: HTC UltraPixel Camera Technology is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

HTC posts video of its One unveiling event, get your UltraPixels here

HTC posts video of its One unveiling event, get your UltraPixels here

HTC fans who couldn’t get into the company’s launch events for the One (which is most of them, if we’re honest) don’t have to just imagine what it was like. The company has posted both a full-length stream of its main event in London as well as an abridged, 4.5-minute version that includes slices of the New York City gathering. Either way, viewers will receive more than their fair share of BoomSound, UltraPixels and other SuperlativeNouns. Head past the break for the full presentation, and hit the source for the snack-sized version.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: HTC (YouTube)

Missed HTC’s One launch? You can watch it here…

HTC’s One launch yesterday saw the company’s new Android flagship make its simultaneous debut in NYC and London, but if you weren’t able to score tickets then HTC has uploaded the video of the event for your review. The 37 minute long clip is actually the UK launch, where HTC CEO Peter Chou was in attendance to reveal the all-metal One along with the new BlinkFeed social and news integration, and Zoe photography system.

htc_one_launch

That took some explaining, too, as HTC has made some tough decisions with the One’s hardware. Rather than follow the megapixel race up to 13MP, HTC opted to go with a lower resolution camera that uses its space to fit in bigger pixels. The company calls that “UltraPixel” and argues that it’s the best way to get sufficient light into the camera to make indoor and low-light shots come out right.

As for BlinkFeed, that takes over as the default HTC Sense 5 homescreen, and pulls in online news, Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and other information into a constantly updating stream. Designed to put “snackable” information at your fingertips, it’s part of a redesigned Sense experience that also includes Zoe, a mashup of burst photos and short video clips which the One can instantly cook up into sharable highlight reels.

If all that sounds confusing, don’t fret. We spent some serious hands-on time with the HTC One recently, and have run down the whole Zoe and UltraPixel system to explain what’s what. Meanwhile, we’ve also covered the One’s hardware and design, together with all the changes in Sense 5 and BlinkFeed.

Is the HTC One good enough to secure the company a spot at the top table in 2013. If HTC can get the marketing message right, then the hardware certainly lives up to expectations, but with Samsung and Apple weighing in with their huge advertising budgets, HTC will have to be clever in how it spends its cash in order to raise the One’s profile.

[Thanks Stefan!]


Missed HTC’s One launch? You can watch it here… is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed

HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks RevealedIt was just yesterday that the HTC One was officially announced, and not only does the phone look pretty impressive in person in terms of design, but under the hood the HTC One appears to boast some pretty serious hardware. However with all that hardware, does the HTC One actually live up to its claims of performance? Well the folks at XDA-Developers have managed to run some preliminary benchmarks of HTC’s new smartphone which you can take a look at in the images below. What do you guys make of it? Does it live up to your expectations, or has it exceeded it by far? We will definitely conducting our own review once we get our hands on the device, but in the meantime for those seeking for additional information, hopefully the images below will be able to help you out with that.

As a quick recap for those who missed our coverage yesterday, the HTC One will feature a 1.7GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor with 2GB of RAM, 32/64GB storage options, a 4.7” Full HD 1920×1080 display which a pixel density of 468ppi, a 4MP “Ultrapixel” camera with a rather wide f/2.0 lens, along with a 2,300mAh battery with Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean running the show.



HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed


By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Acer Liquid Z2 Smartphone For The Budget-Minded, Red HTC One Disappears,

HTC announces HTC One

There is a new flagship smartphone in the Android side of town, and it will bear the HTC name this time around. Simply known as the HTC One, do not mistake this for its previous HTC One series that came with suffixes of alphabets such as the HTC One S, the HTC One X, and the HTC One X+. This is simply called the HTC One, where it was specially crafted with a distinct zero-gap aluminum unibody, and will also introduce new features such as HTC BlinkFeed, HTC Zoe and HTC BoomSound, which we will talk about in greater detail.

First of all, there is the HTC BlinkFeed, which functions as a personal live stream on your home screen itself, ensuring that you will be able to check out all relevant and important information such as social network updates, entertainment and lifestyle updates, news, and photos without having to fire up an app. Talk about being on top of things with but a glance! The HTC BlinkFeed offers local as well as global content from over 1,400 media sources with more than 10,000 articles per day.

As for the touted HTC UltraPixel Camera with HTC Zoe, the former will change the way you shoot photos and videos with your smartphone. HTC Zoe lets one shoot high-resolution photos which come to life in three-second snippets, sort of like a 50% discounted version of Twitter’s Vine. Having said that, Zoes will be displayed in a special manner that brings the gallery to life, while turning the once stoic photo gallery of still images into a motion gallery of memories.

HTC’s UltraPixel camera will feature a best-in-class f/2.0 aperture lens and a breakthrough sensor with UltraPixels that gather 300% additional light compared to the traditional smartphone camera sensors. It claims to offer astounding low-light performance, and has an ultrawide-angle, front-facing camera that also does 1080p video capture.

As for HTC BoomSound, it offers front-facing stereo speakers with a dedicated amplifier on a smartphone for the first time, complementing the Full HD display. HTC Sense TV is a must-have for couch potatoes, as it turns the new HTC One into an interactive program guide and remote control for compatible TVs, set-top boxes and receivers.

Press Release
[ HTC announces HTC One copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

HTC One Photos Not The Coolest On The Block

HTC One Photos Not The Coolest On The BlockThe good folks over at MobileSyrup have managed to capture some photos using the HTC One, the recently introduced flagship smartphone earlier this morning, and I guess some folks figure out that HTC can very well keep their “Ultrapixel” battle cry. Sure, HTC has more or less managed to reduce the megapixel count all the way to just four, while sporting optical image stabilization and extra-large pixels that have been advertised to guarantee decent low-light performance and low noise.

HTC claims that such technology is supposed to be so far advanced that it is more or less impossible to port it over to the Windows Phone platform. Well, the sample image above does not really reflect the amount of advertising put into the HTC One. What do you think of it? Is it far too noisy, and do you think that the sample photo is over-exposed on the whites? Someone should actually perform a photo shoot out competition, and see just which high end model comes out tops, and I am quite sure that our Finnish friends over at Nokia will have plenty to say about the situation.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: LG Optimus F7, Optimus F5 Leaks Before MWC Announcement, iOS 6.1.2 Jailbreak Possible With Updated Evasi0n Tool,

T-Mobile HTC One S Gets Tiny Security Enhancement Update

T Mobile HTC One S Gets Tiny Security Enhancement UpdateThe HTC One S from T-Mobile is not exactly a smartphone that will light up the faces of those around you whenever you pull it out from the pocket. Basically, the HTC One S will be a functional workhorse of a smartphone, and it is nice to see that carrier T-Mobile is not quite through with this device just yet, having announced a minor update that will introduce more security enhancements to the device. Hooray for added security, considering the spate of compromises that we have seen so far.

The update for the HTC One S from T-Mobile will require you to adhere to the standard issue requirements, namely having a stock version of the Android operating system that is unrooted, a minimum amount of 50% battery life and of course, we would recommend you having performed a backup on the HTC One S prior just in case Murphy decides to drop in on the update process. The entire update will weigh in at approximately 49MB, and this OTA (Over The Air) download will be available from now onwards, with the rolling out process completing by February 28th, so fret not if your HTC One S has yet to receive it.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: iPhone 5 Is Best Selling Smartphone In The world, HTC One Preliminary Benchmarks Revealed,