Higher - spec models get additional
flashes of aluminium detailing, but if it's radical design you're looking for, you're better off elsewhere.
Not exact matches
To create this exotic state
of matter, researchers at the
FLASH facility in Hamburg, Germany, took a thin piece
of aluminium foil and blasted it with an X-ray laser that generated about 10 million gigawatts
of power per square centimetre.
The F Sport model takes things further, with a different design
of front grille, a revised front bumper on the outside and
aluminium trim
flashes in the cabin.
As far as port, sensor, and button placement is concerned: on the back, we have our main camera sensor and a LED
flash, there's no heart - rate sensor on the A series; on the front, we have our proximity and ambient light sensors, a front - facing camera, earpiece, display, back and recent app capacitive keys, and a home button with an integrated touch - based fingerprint sensor (A5 and A7 only); on the bottom, there's a microphone, 3.5 mm headphone jack, MicroUSB port, and the speaker grille; on the top, we have nothing other than the secondary microphone, and, just like the new GS7, there's no IR blaster on board; and the volume buttons are located on the left side
of the
aluminium frame, while the power button is located on the right side — all three buttons are very tactile with excellent reachability and positioning.
The back sports a brushed
aluminium finish to match the company's Zenbook, and is again only broken by the inclusion
of an 8 - megapixel camera and
flash on the top edge.
It is carved from a single block
of aluminium, which makes it look and feel more premium than it is, the phone sports a good 16MP rear camera with dual - tone LED
flash, and delivers a decent all - round internal hardware spec that includes 3 GB
of RAM, Snapdragon 430 processor, and 32 GB
of internal storage space (expandable by microSD card).
Not only do we have the camera lens and Xenon
flash, but also a small external speaker (often mistaken for the micro-USB charging port), the Orange, HTC and Windows Phone logos, as well as HTC's stylistic elements — triangular rubberized top and bottom segments with the body
of the handset built from a piece
of brushed
aluminium.