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HTC One is a digital multi-tool | Scoop TechLab

HTC One is a digital multi-tool, it’s a virtual Swiss Army Knife


A review by Peter Kerr for Scoop Techlab
Original post: Scoop TechLab | HTC One is a digital multi-tool, it’s a virtual Swiss Army Knife

My younger boy made the comment that "you don't deserve this phone." (The HTC One).

That is, because I don't yet know how to drive it, I shouldn't be allowed to use it. But he's wrong.

For a start, this screen helps my ageing eyes read more easily. It's higher definition than most of the competition, and it helps. The quality of Youtube videos is limited only by the original's quality. It is one of those times that the specs of this screen make you go, ‘right, good, yes’. It is 120mm (diagonal, = 4.7 inches), and is 1920 x 1080 pixels. So, given its BoomSound front-facing speakers (and nope, the name hasn’t grown on me), it makes watching something more than bearable – it makes it doable if required or desired.

My son’s other grizzle was I haven’t learned to use all its shortcuts and the like.

So, it was with great delight to me that he showed that holding the home button down immediately brings up Google search. A double-tap brings up recent things you’ve had open. Fantastic.

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The other neat surprise was; while learning how to drive the camera, it sent me a wee message asking if I’d like to share these through Google+. Why yes, thanks – not that I’ve set up my groups, or friends or acquaintances to any particular level that I’ll send pictures out like this. I’m still dipping my toes in this whole social media immersion thing and suspect I’ll always be an immigrant to its shores.

But, being able to send a pix copy, immediately to someone – that’s a cool feature.

In fact, this phone’s close to the ‘one place for everything’ that the whole morphing of the phone/computer/screen/contacts/notes the industry has pointed to over the past 15 years. For me, I’ll continue to keep an actual notebook beside my wallet – the comfort of analogue we’ll call it, and a quicker thing in which to scribble an idea or comment.

However, the HTC One is a digital multi-tool. It’s a virtual Leatherman or Swiss Army Knife to disassemble and reassemble bits and bytes in whatever configuration you need.

Which for me means learning new skills – video, saving (which is a whole new thing in a Google universe), sharing – and the last one in particular will be an interesting one.

Knowing what is of value to share is the trick I believe, and originality’s novel.

For all that though, the HTC One does allow the possibility of engaging more, with others, with repositories of information. I’m aware that I’m only just scratching the surface of its potential.

And even though I had what is a smartphone in the Ideos X5, this HTC One is big leap on that.

Hence, the digital tool analogy, the learning how to drive it comment.

And the ‘one place for everything’ thinking.

Content Note: This post has been enabled by Telecom NZ , but the thoughts are the blogger's own. Find out more about the HTC One here you can find out more about Android on the Telecom Network here. Scoop TechLab is a project of Scoop Independent Media www.scoop.co.nz. It is edited by Scoop Editor Alastair Thompson.

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