The All New HTC One and Original HTC One Compared in New VIdeo
HTC’s worse kept secret stars in a new video today, but this time we get a comparison to the original HTC One. It is a very well done video, and goes over every nook and cranny of the All New HTC One, and you get a good idea just how much different the new flagship is compared to its predecessor. Not that it is drastically different, but I didn’t realize how much taller the New One is. Guess that took a page out of Apple’s book when they made the iPhone 5s long instead of wider. So check out the video, and let us know how excited you are about tomorrow’s event.
HTC resume Android 4.4 KitKat update rollout in UK
Following the halt HTC put on the rollout of Android 4.4.2 KitKat for its devices in the UK after many users began experiencing difficulties following the update, HTC have resumed the rollout.
Customers on all the major UK carriers should begin to see the update trickle down to their devices following the lift of the hiatus.
HTC took to their Facebook page to issue a statement:
“We can confirm that the 4.4 KitKat update has now been re-released in the UK”.
The update comes with build number 4.19.401.11 and is around 308MB in size. The update is being rolled out to Vodafone, O2, and Three, as well as unlocked devices, but those devices locked to EE will have to wait since HTC state the update is still in the integration phase.
Go ahead and hit that update button in the Settings app to see if the KitKat goodness has been readied on your device.
The post HTC resume Android 4.4 KitKat update rollout in UK appeared first on AndroidGuys.
We’re liveblogging HTC’s ‘all new One’ event tomorrow at 11AM ET!
Given the extensive number of leaks we’ve seen of HTC’s next-generation flagship smartphone, we wouldn’t blame you if you thought that the latest and greatest out of Taiwan was already official and being sold in stores. Truth is, it’s not — but it’s going to be announced in a little over 24 hours. The company is unveiling the all new HTC One in a big way: a livestreamed event taking place in both New York City and London at the same time. We’ll be liveblogging the launch on the US side, and hope that you can join us as CEO Peter Chou finally reveals everything we want to know about the device codenamed the M8!
Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless, Mobile, HTC
An HTC Nexus 8?! Oppo Find 7 Official! – The ManDroid Show
The ManDroid Show is here my friends. It has been a crazy week for me this week, and some changes are going to happen when it comes to video content. An HTC Nexus 8 might be on the horizon which is something to be excited about. Oppo launches the Find 7, and in two versions. Pretty stuff I must say, some of you were probably drooling like we are. Enjoy the show!
News Topics
Android Wear becomes official
Nexus 8 rumors suggest July or August production
Oppo Find 7 official
Countdown to the HTC event
Nexus 8 May Hit Production in July or August [Rumor]
Rumors about a Nexus 8 tablet have been circulating around for a few months now, and now it looks like we might actually see this new tablet this Summer. According to IHS Technology, the 8.9 tablet is set for production this July or August. Here is the real kicker: HTC might be making this Nexus 8 tablet. How long have I been begging for an HTC Nexus device to come back to us? They even stated that this tablet will not be budget friendly, because they are shooting for the stars in specs. Who strives for great hardware? HTC. I am really liking that idea, and I am hoping this is not a bunch of silly rumors.
There was also mention about another Nexus 7 tablet being produced this year, but no details about who is making it were talked about. What do you guys think about an HTC Nexus 8 tablet? Let us know down below.
Source: CNET
Countdown to the All New HTC One Begins! Watch it Here!
The event is almost here. Not like it really matters anymore, considering the All New HTC has leaked out more times than the Pam and Tommy Lee sex tape. Hopefully HTC has some other tricks (products) up their sleeves, and if you plan on watching the event, we have the link for you.
If you click the link provided below, you will find yourself at the very site where you can watch the HTC event live stream. They have a countdown clock currently running in the video window at the moment, so I suggest you guys keep it in your bookmarks so you will be ready on Tuesday. Let us know how excited you are to see the All New HTC One and anything else HTC has. Smartwatch running Android wear?
Android Wear: Zen and the art of smartwatch design

Are you ready for a smartwatch that knows where you are, what information is important to you and, above all, wants you to forget that you’re even wearing it? That seems to be the basic idea behind Google’s Android Wear platform, which promises to deliver contextual, relevant information to you whenever you need it, while fading into the background when you don’t.
With today’s announcement of the Android Wear platform for wearables, much of the discussion has revolved around how Google is following the Android smartphone playbook and focusing on creating an ecosystem that can accommodate multiple manufacturers, with a range of products with different price points and feature sets. And Google has lined up an impressive list of partners, including smartphone makers HTC, LG and Motorola; chipmaker and smartwatch-wannabe Qualcomm; and watchmaker Fossil. Even Samsung, which just last month held a splashy launch for its latest round of Gear smartwatches, is in on the game.
… Google doesn’t see wearable devices as full-fledged computers or smartphone replacements.
Those partnerships instantly make Android Wear a major platform in this nascent category. However, what’s most interesting about Google’s approach isn’t the business model, which isn’t that different from Microsoft’s SPOT platform of a decade ago. What matters most about Android Wear is Google’s approach to the category. Unlike, say, Samsung, which initially marketed Galaxy Gear as the real-life successor to Dick Tracy’s wrist communicator, Google doesn’t see wearable devices as full-fledged computers or smartphone replacements. They’re designed to help you get snippets of crucial information — like the weather, your flight status or whether there’s a jellyfish warning in effect for your beach — when you need them most, and then allow you to get on with the rest of your life.
The philosophy is consistent with Google’s approach to its first wearable, Glass. The media may obsess about how Glass can be used to pirate movies and play games. But the device, first and foremost, is designed to make it easier to focus on the here and now, while still being able to check to see if your boss sent you that important email you were waiting for. As Glass Senior Developer Advocate Timothy Jordan said at Engadget Expand last year, the best apps for Glass “help technology get out of the user’s way, but [are] there whenever they want [them].”
The philosophy is consistent with Google’s approach to its first wearable, Glass.
The first Android Wear watches extend that idea further, bringing Glass’ location awareness and voice control to a more socially acceptable design. Nobody is likely to ask if you’re recording them, and cops probably won’t pull you over, just for wearing a Moto 360. In today’s Android Wear announcement, Google SVP Sundar Pichai called watches “the most familiar wearable,” and said that devices based on the company’s new platform “understand the context of the world around you, and you can interact with them simply and efficiently, with just a glance or a spoken word.”

Google isn’t the first to treat the smartwatch as a simple way to access actionable information without interrupting the flow of your life. Pebble, for one, takes a similar approach. CEO Eric Migicovsky says developers are encouraged to look for a “subsegment” of their smartphone apps that can work effectively on a small screen. Unlike Pebble, however, Google’s ambitions are to give you access to just about all of the information you can get on your smartphone — but to allow you to do so unobtrusively and with minimal effort. Android Wear apps, according to Google, should “provide the maximum payload of information with a minimum of fuss, optimized to provide tiny snippets of relevant information throughout the day.” User input, according to Google, should take place only “when absolutely necessary.”
In 1991, computer scientist Mark Weiser declared that “the most profound technologies are those that disappear. They weave themselves into the fabric of everyday life until they are indistinguishable from it.” Weiser envisioned a future dominated by “ubiquitous computing,” with invisible technology that is always there. Android Wear, with its Zen-like approach to “allowing you to be connected to the virtual world and present in the real world,” and with a developers’ guide that lists being “unobtrusive” as a key design principle, seems to be an attempt to deliver on Weiser’s promise. The question is, in a world where it’s become socially acceptable to pull out a smartphone in the middle of a meeting, and where the most exciting developments on the gaming front all involve immersive virtual reality environments, is there still a market for technology that just gets out of your way?
The new HTC One M8 will go on sale minutes after being announced
The general trend when releasing a new phone is that it doesn’t necessarily hit retail stores until it a few weeks or months after being announced. It seems that HTC are looking to break that trend in the UK at least as Carphone Warehouse have announed that the next-generation HTC One will be available for immediate purchase just minutes after it is officially announced on March 25th.
Carphone Warehouse confirms that you’ll be able to pick up the brand new HTC One M8 from around 4pm from their retail stores, and shortly after from their online store.
As soon as the announcement is made at the HTC events in London and New York City next week, handsets will be transported from the venue to six retail locations around London.
“We know how keen customers are to get hold of the latest tech as soon as possible and that is why we are so excited to be able to offer the new HTC One so quickly after it is unveiled.”
The selected stores are Westfield Stratford, Westfield White City, Oxford Circus, Centrepoint, Tottenham Court Road, and Selfridges. It’s definitely a welcome move from both HTC and the Carphone Warehouse to get the handsets into consumers hands as soon as possible, and hopefully something more manufacturers will adopt in future.
Will you be picking up a new HTC One M8?
The post The new HTC One M8 will go on sale minutes after being announced appeared first on AndroidGuys.
HTC’s new One smartphone to go on sale ‘just minutes after it is officially announced’
At this point, we have a pretty clear idea of what HTC’s upcoming flagship smartphone will look like. Everything from its unique duo rear camera, to its refreshed version of Sense to its familiar One-like aluminum body has been leaked in the lead up to the company’s March 25th event. And now, thanks to the UK retailer Carphone Warehouse jumping the gun, we know the handset, dubbed the “new HTC One (M8),” will be available to purchase “just minutes after it is officially announced” at six locations in London. How’s that for spoiling the surprise? It’s clear from this release that HTC intends to waste no time directing attention from its headline-dominating launch into direct retail sales. Whether or not that gamble pays off is another matter. But we’ll know soon enough if that market opportunism can successfully channel fanboy enthusiasm into dollars and pounds. You can check out the full release after the break.
[Image credit: TD Beta]
All new HTC One available from Carphone Warehouse from 25th March announcement day
London, 18.03.14: In a retail first, Carphone Warehouse has revealed that the new HTC One (M8) handset will be available from selected stores from around 4pm on Tuesday 25th March – just minutes after it is officially announced.
The new HTC flagship device will be officially unveiled by the manufacturer at special events in London and New York earlier that afternoon. Shortly after, the new HTC One (M8) handsets will be transported directly from the venue of the launch announcement to six Carphone Warehouse stores in London. Westfield Stratford, Westfield White City, Oxford Circus, Centrepoint and Tottenham Court Road stores will all be hosting special events celebrating the HTC launch with entertainment and giveaways as well as the first chance for customers to get their hands on the new device. Carphone Warehouse at Selfridges will also be stocking the handset from the same time.
Full information including videos of the new handset will be shared on www.carphonewarehouse.com and customers will be able to order the HTC One (M8) over the phone from the same afternoon, before it is available from all 770 Carphone Warehouse stores and to order online shortly afterwards.
A Carphone Warehouse spokesperson comments, “The HTC One is an award winning handset that set the bar for design during 2013 and made many sit up and take notice – the new HTC One M8 is likely to continue that trend and will cement HTC’s future as a heavy-hitting smartphone manufacturer. We know how keen customers are to get hold of the latest tech as soon as possible and that is why we are so excited to be able to offer the new HTC One so quickly after it is unveiled.”
Customers can pre-register their interest in the new HTC One (M8) now at http://www.carphonewarehouse.com/help-support/advice-and-news/news/launchpad-rumours/htc-rumours
Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless, Mobile, HTC
Samsung Galaxy S5 ISOCELL camera is suffering some production issues; delay Imminent?
The story of early 2013 was the titanic battle between the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the HTC One for the Android smartphone crown, however, the conflict was marred by debilitating supply issues that befell HTC. The issues stemmed from a lack of HTC One camera modules which would eventually go on to severely impact HTC’s bottom line in the weeks after its release. While Samsung won that battle in terms of handsets sold, the tables have turned on Samsung in 2014 as the Samsung Galaxy S5 ISOCELL camera that was shown off earlier this week is apparently suffering from production issues.
This time, it’s not the camera sensor itself which is the problem; it’s Samsung’s new six-element lens which is constructed in an extremely complex and intricate process in which “even the slightest flaw results in a considerable optical distortion”. While the results of a successfully assembled lens are likely phenomenal, the current production yield of these lens is approximately 20-30%, even with Samsung outsourcing the assembly to a third party lens supplier. That’s definitely not a good sign, particularly with the April launch date looming, but hopefully some breakthroughs will happen in the near future to help Samsung meet its supply targets instead of delaying the Galaxy S5′s release in some regions.
What do you think about these new reports of delays for the Samsung Galaxy S5? Has Samsung bitten off more than it can chew with this new ISOCELL camera, and opened the door for HTC? Let us know your opinion in the comments.
Source: ETNews via Phone Arena









