HTC U Ultra Rant: Skip this One! By Marques Brownlee

By Marques Brownlee
Aug 15, 2021
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HTC U Ultra Rant: Skip this One!

Hey, what's up guys I'm cabby HD here, and this is the brand-new HTC? U ultra, and it is definitely the shiniest phone of all time and the tablets also be HTC's first big smartphone of 2017 and coming to the US with a price tag of $749. So this is definitely a high-end supply, ship, smartphone and people who buy seven hundred dollar Android smartphones. These are the pickiest of the bunch that is the biggest enthusiast people who want the biggest baddest phone they can possibly get. So this seems to be what HTC is setting the tone with those people with, so it's rocking, pretty high-end specs, the Snapdragon 820 won three Juno 530 GPU, four gigs of RAM and quality materials. All around I mean you haven't seen. Many phones like this.

That are basically a mirror finish on the back: it's glass and metal. It's got the HTC skin over Android 7.0, some sweet colors are available, and the cherry on top is, of course, how great this thing looks. So this thing might be a sleeper of a great phone, but the more I look into it. The more I use. This thing, the more I understand the: u ultra, the more I realize this seems to be a really poor use of space.

This is a big phone. I mean you look at its footprint compared to things like the iPhone 7, plus the Galaxy Note 7, and even the pixel XL, which stands for extra large, and it's bigger than all of those, and even others with even smaller displays it's bigger than all of them, and it's still eight millimeters thick. So it's also definitely not trying to be a super thin phone in any way either. So it seems like there should be all the room in the world to throw in every possible flagship feature and perk right. We've probably already realized this, even if it's in your head, without me, saying it, the back of this phone definitely resembles another certain rivals, flagship, not the Galaxy S7, the Galaxy S6 back when there is a big of hump on the back for the camera on the Galaxy S6.

That's when it looked the most likely you ultra, but of course the next year Samsung made the phone a little thicker, with all its new upgrades and bigger battery, etc. and ended up with a much smaller camera hump on the back. There should be no need for such a big hump on an even bigger phone of the U ultra, so the bump, in an already huge phone to me, seems like a poor use of space and for the record, just having a camera bump, isn't always a big deal, but on the ultra it is, and then there's a headphone jack or the lack of a headphone jack ya, know headphone jack at all. In this huge phone now I understand, USB type-c is great, and it's the future and everything but Apple's main reason for getting rid of the headphone jack in the iPhone. Besides, courage was to save precious space in such a compact interior of a phone.

Other manufacturers have sense continued putting headphone jacks on their phones because they don't need that space and the Portland quite here yet an HTC you definitely could have also, but you didn't, for some reason, seems like a poor user space and then the battery the HTC. U ultra has a 3000 William hour battery, which doesn't seem that bad, but for context yes, something's a little off here. You would think that a phone this huge and this thick with this much internal space would have all the room in the world for maybe a two-day battery life, maybe the biggest non-removable battery, they could possibly sit. But that was a missed opportunity here, and this phone is stuck with average battery life at best seems like a poor use of space and even if I get a little picky these buttons down here at the bottom of the phone, have some pretty small touch. Targets and I can't help, but think that something just looks a little off about them.

A bit out of place to the point where it took me a little of time to actually get used to pressing in the right spot with a screen and a phone. This huge HTC could have easily gone with on-screen customizable software buttons, or at least given that option somewhere in the menu is 2017, but they didn't. Instead, they went with the small permanent capacitive buttons way down at the bottom. Now they could, if they wanted to drop that in a software update. So I won't rag too hard on that if they want to enable it, but maybe they just wanted to have buttons on the side flanking a fingerprint reader, because they just really wanted a fingerprint reader, which is cool.

You can put one there, but they managed to put one of the smaller ones on any flagship phone. Even on one of the biggest phones out, there seems like a poor use of space. This $750 phone is also not water-resistant and with a body and all the internal spaces big, you would think they would be able to find the space to put the seams and the seals to make sure that it's water-resistant, just like a lot of smaller fly ships out there, but they didn't seem like a poor use of space and if you look in the sides and the corners of this display, especially up in the top-left corner right underneath the webcam, you get some serious light, bleed I, hardly ever notice actual light bleed in any flagship. Smartphone I, don't know if it's, because in this phone the backlighting is too close to the display panel or if the insides are too clumped up there. Next to the webcam to get that space evenly lit I, don't know what the problem is, but it is actually noticeable and that rarely is a problem for me on smartphones, so seems like a poor use of space.

Again, it's also a huge phone with tiny speakers at the bottom sure it's a stereo pair, but it's definitely not the loudest, and it's definitely tinny at high volumes. For we have space, you see what I'm getting at also most glass back. Phones like this have wireless charging. That's why they do it. If you have a metal phone, you can't do while I was charging, because wireless charging doesn't work through metal.

But if you have this sort of big glass back and a huge amount of internal space, you would think you could at least have wireless charging, but it doesn't pour you space now. Even all that isn't the end of the world. I mean there are phones that are also lacking. All of those things I just talked about, but they're also less than this price, so I think at $750 in the U. S.

it's pretty hard sell, I mean people who are buying phones at that price are looking for something really special and I, don't think you're getting that here. I mean there are definitely some good promising things about this phone that have me psyched for HTC's next phone. The camera in this guy is perfect. It's a 12, megapixel ultra pixel camera and has phase detection autofocus. That's really fast and photos look very good.

They can almost go toe-to-toe with the Google Pixel, so I'm really impressed with that. It also has expandable storage, which is definitely rare in most smartphones and appreciated a high-end flagship and the second display up at the top. While it is a shameless rip of the LG v 20, it's also kind of useful, sometimes like the one in the LAB 20. You get some app shortcuts up there. If you want I kind of like it when the display is off, and I raise to wake, and I just get that little of notifications and the time and the date, that's my favorite feature of the second display.

But you know if you don't want to use it, you can turn it off as well. So there is good stuff here, but aside from new HTC software, there's almost nothing for 750 bucks that this phone does, that you can't get somewhere else better or cheaper. So with that I'll say skip this one, and you can pretty easily wait for the HTC 11 to come out pretty soon or just grab a Galaxy S8 when that comes out or an LG g6 or pretty much any other $700 smartphone, which will be a better use of space than this one. So Bennett hope you enjoyed configured with a comment if you agree, or if you have some other stuff to share thanks for watching talk to you guys, the next one peace.


Source : Marques Brownlee

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