It's not exactly a cyclops, but this phone's 13-megapixel front-facing camera aims to see all
HTC's not been shy about trying things when it comes to mobile
imagery. We've spent the last couple years in the world of the
UltraPixel. But we're starting to see a bit of a shift back to more
traditional sensors. That continues today with the new HTC Desire Eye. As the name implies — and any picture of the phone makes perfectly obvious — this cyclops is all about the selfie.
But beyond that front-facing 13-megapixel camera, the phone lends
itself to a bit of a taxonomy conundrum. Typically the Desire line has
been a bit below the One line. But on paper, the Desire Eye (like the One E8 before it) isn't far off from the HTC One M8 — it's the design that really diverges.
So there's a lot to talk about here. Let's take a dive into our hands-on with the HTC Desire Eye.
The HTC Desire Eye
Let's just get this out of the way. Whereas most phones have a
high-resolution camera out back, with something more modest on the front
for the all-important (not really, but whatever) selfie, HTC's doubled
things up in the Desire Eye. It's got nearly the same lens on the front
of the phone as is on that back. And that's behind a 13-megapixel
sensor. The size and aperture vary slightly (f/2.0, 28mm on the back,
and f/2.2, 22 mm on the front), but chances are that's not really
something you'll notice.
Both are capable of shooting in HDR and 1080p
video, and both have a dual-LED flash.
So there are going to be a lot of selfies going on here. More on that in a bit.
The phone itself has a decidedly different look and feel than the HTC One E8, Butterfly 2
or the HTC One M8. It's flat, with rounded corners, and it's actually
just a tad taller than the M8. It's not a bad-looking phone by any
means, it just maybe doesn't have the same sex appeal as the M8. That's
because it's not crafted from aluminum, but HTC's excellent
polycarbonate makeup — with a sort of racing stripe down the middle of
the sides (or for you grown-ups who've had to buy countertops, think
solid surface with an inlay in the edging).
The basic specs include a 5.2-inch display at 1080p resolution, Qualcomm
Snapdragon 801 quad-core processor at 2.3 GHz, 2GB of RAM and 16GB of
storage (with SD card expansion). You can't see them all that well, but
HTC's still managed to cram some front-facing speakers into this thing.
They're maybe not quite as deep as on the M8, but they're still better
than most other phones, and the fact that HTC's managed to put them in a
nearly-invisible footprint is in and of itself pretty significant.
The power and volume buttons are on the right side, with the SIM card
and microSD card slots on the left. Those two actually are rather
interesting. You open them up using only a fingernail, prying them out
from the phone. You'll find that they have a sort of hinged gasket that
keeps things in place, and that's also what keeps dust and water out and
allows for the Desire Eye's IPX7 rating.
So what do we have here? Basically phone that's damned near as powerful
as the M8, though it skimps on internal storage space. But it's in a
different design, giving some option to those who want an M8-like
experience without all that metal. (And, ya know, provided you want to
use AT&T, which has exclusivity in the U.S.) Plus all this selfie
stuff we're promising to get to.
Software-wise, we're looking at Android 4.4.4 KitKat and Sense 6.0.
Nothing there, really, that we haven't seen before — it looks and acts
just like the same Sense and Android we've been using for months now.
New, however, are some new options in the camera app, including a Photo
Booth mode, Split Capture for when you want to show off what you're
looking at as well as show your smiling face, and Crop Me In, which
attempts to photoshop your head into whatever the scene the rear-facing
camera is seeing. (We've had pretty limited success with that in our
brief use. Certainly nothing as good as the demo pics you'll see.)
Those new camera options are just part of what's being called the
"Eye Experience." You also get things like updated face tracking, which
will zoom in our your mug, then follow it around when you're making
video calls. You'll also get some of the features that debuted
previously on the HTC Desire 820, including "Live Makeup" for some skin
smoothing action, as well as "Face Fusion" for 'shopping your head onto
someone else's body. Use responsibly, folks.
In our limited use we found the Desire Eye to be a fun phone. It
definitely feels different than the M8 — plastic vs. metal and all — but
that's not a bad thing. The camera features are fun, though the quality
of what we got out of the new "Eye" might have been high resolution,
but the quality (albeit in prerelease form) just wasn't nearly as good
as what we saw from folks who had the iPhone 6 alongside it. There's
clearly still some work to be done on that front. If you're a big
selfie-taker, you'll appreciate the updated quality of the pictures of
you're face. If you're less narcissistic, the prospect of a
high-resolution front-facing camera might not mean all that much to you,
then. To each his or her own.
The Desire Eye is coming to the U.S. on AT&T exclusively, Asia, Europe and the Middle East starting in late October.
source: androidcentral
The Desire Eye is coming to the U.S. on AT&T exclusively, Asia, Europe and the Middle East starting in late October.
source: androidcentral
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