The HTC One has a 4.7 - inch 1080p display, Snapdragon 600 processor, 2 GB of RAM, 32 GB of internal storage, 2300 mAh battery and
the HTC UltraPixel camera.
The M9 comes packed with a 20MP AF camera with BSI / Sapphire cover lens f / 2.2 placed on the rear with LED flash and there is a front
HTC UltraPixel camera with BSI sensor.
12MP (
HTC UltraPixel 2, 1.55 μm pixels) rear camera, laser autofocus, Optical Image Stabilization (OIS), f / 1.8 aperture, Pro mode, Auto - HDR, Zoe Capture, Hyperlapse, 12X Slow motion mode, 4K video recording with Hi - Res Audio
HTC has announced the HTC One an android handset powered by quad core processor with 4.7 inch full HD display and
HTC UltraPixel Camera with smart flash.
The camera does not integrate
any HTC UltraPixel technology and doesn't appear to have any special features or software.
The rear camera has third - generation
HTC UltraPixel and supports UltraSpeed and OIS functions.
A bigger battery at nearly 4,000 mAh 12MP camera,
HTC UltraPixel ™ 3 with 1.4 μm pixel, OIS, UltraSpeed Autofocus HTC USonic with Active Noise Cancellation and Hi - Res earphones included as standard.
Lastly, talking about the cameras, there is
an HTC UltraPixel 3 12MP rear sensor with the 1.4 μm pixel, f / 1.7 aperture, and OIS.
4K video recording with Hi - Res audio, Burst mode, Continuous shot,
HTC UltraPixel Camera 2, HTC Zoe, HYPERLAPSE, Optical Image Stabilizer (OIS), Panorama, Pro mode, RAW mode, Slow motion video, Video Pic, face detection, video recording
HTC U Ultra features a 12 megapixel rear camera with
HTC UltraPixel technology with f / 1.8 aperture, PDAF, OIS, Dual - tone LED flash, and a BSI sensor.
Both have 12MP
HTC UltraPixel 2 camera with a 5MP front - facing camera and OIS on each.
Moreover, the Android phone sports a unique duo
HTC UltraPixel camera with BSI sensor, f / 2.0 aperture and 28 mm lens.
Not exact matches
HTC went back to the 4MP
UltraPixel camera for the front - facing camera (FFC) for selfies and video chatting.
HTC took its old 4MP
UltraPixel camera and moved it around to the front, which should provide great selfies and video chatting while allowing you to take good low - light pictures.
The new
HTC One features a 4.7 - inch 1080p display, 1.7 GHz quad - core Snapdragon 600,
UltraPixel camera, Android 4.1.2 with Sense 5, 2,300 mAh Li - polymer battery, radios for WiFi a / ac / b / g / n, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC and 32 GB or 64 GB of storage but not micro sd card slot.
HTC's all new One M9 device has some decent improvements with the hardware over the
HTC One M8 from 2014, most notably the cameras, which are now a 20MP rear - facing camera and the 4MP
UltraPixel camera on the front, and the latest CPU from Qualcomm, the 64 - bit Snapdragon 810 octa - core CPU.
The
HTC U11 Specs include 16MP front camera with
UltraPixel light sensitivity.
HTC One mini comes with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 1.4 GHz dual - core processor with Adreno 305 GPU, 1 GB DDR2 RAM, 16 GB internal storage, 4.3 - inch display with 1280 x 720 pixels resolution, 1.6 - megapixel front - facing camera, and rear
UltraPixel camera.
HTC's ImageChip offers fast shooting with its cameras, while the
UltraPixel camera in the One offers very good low - light performance.
HTC one Mini 2 misses the duo camera setup and
UltraPixel camera.
One of the highlights of the
HTC One is its 4MP
UltraPixel camera, which is certainly wroth talking about, It takes great low - light shots.
Remember
HTC's
UltraPixel camera with depth - sensing technology, which let you adjust images to give them a sense of depth?
HTC has opted for a 4 - megapixel shooter this time around, although to compensate it's been branded an «
UltraPixel» camera (again, a pretty terrible marketing term).
The rear - facing camera sports 4 «
Ultrapixels,» which
HTC claims are like megapixels, but bigger.
On the rear, there is a 12MP camera with
HTC's
UltraPixel 3 technology, UltraSpeed AutoFocus, BSI sensor, OIS, f / 1.7 aperture and 4K video support.
The
HTC One's main camera is a rear - facing, large format 4 - megapixel sensor — the same «
UltraPixel» sensor found in the original
HTC One.
A larger version of the popular and award winning,
HTC One, the
HTC One max has a 5.9» full HD1080p display,
UltraPixel camera, large 3300mAh embedded battery and quad - core Qualcomm ® Snapdragon ™ 600 processor featuring a 1.7 GHz CPU enabling jaw - dropping performance, ultra vivid videos and booming sound.
HTC is calling it
UltraPixel 3, and you get 12 - megapixel resolution — with each light - loving pixel measuring 1.4 microns — and an f / 1.7 lens.
The
HTC One Max is expected to come with a 5.9 - inch 1080p display, 1.5 Ghz quad - core Snapdragon S4 Pro SoC, 2 GB RAM, 16 GB internal storage,
UltraPixel camera, dual - front speakers and 3300 mAh battery and a fingerprint sensor.
I didn't pick up the new
HTC One M8 and immediately think I must go out and buy it now, likely because of the additional height with an insignificant increase in usable display area and the use of the same resolution
UltraPixel camera that now disappoints me.
The
HTC U11 Plus sports a 12 MP
UltraPixel camera on the rear with features like f / 1.7 aperture, BSI sensor, autofocus, OIS and dual LED flash.
While the
HTC Camera app turns these pixels into «
ultrapixels» resulting in more vibrant colors, the Google Play Edition runs stock Android and doesn't have any of these features.
It seems to have the
ultrapixel effect that comes with the
HTC One M8 but without the disadvantage that comes with 4 MP resolution.
Rather than getting rid of the
UltraPixel camera altogether,
HTC moved the 4MP
UltraPixel camera to the front for great selfies and video chatting.
With
HTC's «
ultrapixel» technology back at the helm, and with optical image stabilization (in the front camera, too!)
HTC finally has all of the right pieces in place and now takes great photos — a 12MP sensor with its
UltraPixel 2 that captures more light and image for better low - light shots.
On the camera front,
HTC U11 sports a 12 - MP
UltraPixel sensor and five - axis OIS on the back, while the front camera is 16MP.
The rear camera is 12MP with laser autofocus and OIS, while there's a 16MP front camera with
HTC's
UltraPixel mode.
The
UltraPixels are back, but instead of trying to pawn off only 4MP,
HTC is now using a respectable 12MP sensor for their primary camera to capture more light and image.
HTC took the old 4MP
UltraPixel camera and moved it around to the front, which should provide great selfies and video chatting while allowing you to take good low - light pictures.
This year,
HTC has moved the 4MP
UltraPixel camera to the front.
HTC has played around with its camera area for the past four designs —
UltraPixels, duo cameras, a large MP camera — and finally, they got things right with the
HTC 10.
The new
HTC U11 uses a 12MP with
HTC's
UltraPixel 3, an aperture of f / 1.7, OIS, UltraSpeed AF, and a dual - tone LED Flash.
This feature combines four photodetector sites on the sensor into one, making for larger «pixels» that capture more light — the same thinking behind
HTC's
UltraPixel system.
HTC moved the 4MP
UltraPixel camera to the front, which should give you great selfies or video chatting, compared to the only 1.2 MP FFC in the iPhone 6.
The rear cameras on these two devices are tricky one to compare as
HTC opt for its
UltraPixel technology with the
HTC One M8 while the Samsung Galaxy Alpha has a 12 - megapixel rear snapper.
The iPhone still only uses a 1.2 MP front - facing camera (FFC), while the
HTC One M9 uses a 4MP
UltraPixel affair — I can not believe Apple does not put a better FFC for video chatting and selfies.
HTC revamped their camera areas by getting rid of the 4MP
UltraPixel main camera and Duo Camera and replacing it with a 20MP sensor with autofocus, dual - tone LED flash, still no OIS, but stacks up quite nicely with the 8MP camera on iPhone 6, also with no OIS.
HTC also leads in the selfie arena, with the U11's 16 - megapixel front - facer producing high - res pics in daylight, backed up by a lower - res
UltraPixel mode for use in darker settings.
Remember
HTC's
UltraPixel camera with depth - sensing technology, which let you adjust images to give them a sense of depth?