The rumors and speculation makes it sound like a Google Edition HTC One is
a sure thing, but I have to agree with ZDNet colleague Ben Woods when he writes
it is a Sense-less plan and don't think people really understand what they will
be missing. Let's take a deeper look at what you won't likely get on an HTC One
without Sense 5.
Looking at the HTC One and features we find related directly to Sense, here
is what you may lose with a Google Edition HTC One:
Video Highlights: I am still impressed by the way my HTC One creates
dynamic 30-second video highlights from images, video, and Zoes that I capture.
My family and friends enjoy these videos and this feature is one of the main
reasons I keep using the HTC One.
Zoe: A Zoe is a 3-second video with 20 still images also captured that lets
you capture more of the moment than just a single still image. They work well in
Video Highlights and are fun to share with people.
BlinkFeed: I honestly thought I would go to the standard Android home
screen and bypass using BlinkFeed on my own HTC One. However, I find it
extremely useful and my experiences validate HTC's studies that showed people do
like to snack on bits of information.
BoomSound: I have yet to find a smartphone with such great integrated
speakers and if you are a heavy sleeper you will always wake to a BoomSound
alarm. Thankfully, HTC gives you separate controls for the volume levels on
ringtones & notifications, alarms, and music.
HTC Car: I received a free HTC One Car Kit with my One purchased on
T-Mobile and it works with the HTC Car utility that is provided as part of the
HTC experience.
Mail and Notes: As an Exchange user, I always preferred HTC Sense devices
for a better email experience and the HTC One with Sense provides this compared
to the limited vanilla Google client. Notes integrates with Evernote and lets
you record audio in sync with text notes.
Sense TV and IR remote: HTC includes their Sense TV utility that works with
the top IR port to control devices and provide you with the ability to see your
favorites and upcoming shows right in your BlinkFeed.
Phone dialer: I previously wrote about some features on the HTC Onethat
remind me of Windows Phone and the phone dialer is one that goes beyond what
Google provides in Android. You can easily contact your favorite people, view
recent communications, view their recent photo galleris, and view their latest
status updates for a pretty amazing people-centric experience.
Sense Voice: There are advanced dual microphones in the HTC One that work
to manage in-call voice and I can confirm that my voice calls over th past month
have been excellent.
Now, with the loss of most, if not all, of those features what makes the
device compelling? The hardware is fantastic and every review I have read has
stated that, but is the hardware alone sufficient to justify the device? For
some, yes, but I still argue that the One is a much better device loaded with
Sense. I would personally like to see HTC focused on an HTC One Sense update
that includes more Highlight Video themes, Zoe storage management update, and
other fixes related to the One we already purchased.
I have had many pure Google Nexus devices and in the past I preferred that
experience for the speed, updates, and interface. Over the last year though, I
have been very satisfied with stock devices and haven't hacked my Galaxy Note II
or HTC One. Google vastly improved the operating system with Ice Cream Sandwich
and Jelly Bean and folks like Samsung, LG, and HTC have added value to Android
devices.
You can always buy a Nexus or even hack up your device to get an Android
experience. Samsung will be rolling out a TouchWiz-free S4, again losing many of
the software enhancements that set that device apart, and I have to imagine only
the serious die-hard Android user is going to pay the full $650 price for one.
Ben points out that the likely market for a full price HTC One that loses most
of the cool features will be small and I completely agree.
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