HTC Evo 4G LTE review: Ticking all boxes
Ticking all boxes
8MP camera does well
The HTC Evo 4G LTE packs an 8MP camera that does stills of up to 3264x2448 pixels and records 1080p video @ 30fps. There's an LED flash / video light and a dedicated camera button.
The camera interface is the same for both the still camera and the video camera - no they don't "look alike", the camera just has the UI shared between both functions.
The right-hand side features the Effects button, shutter key, camcorder record key and a shortcut to the gallery that shows the last photo taken. On the left is the flash setting toggle, general settings and shot mode (we'll get back to that in a moment).
HTC Evo 4G LTE camera interface
To snap a photo, you tap the shutter key or press the dedicated hardware one. To record video you tap the button below - and you can still tap the shutter key to snap a full-res photo, even while recording video. Another cool option is the burst mode, which we mentioned in the gallery - you press and hold on the shutter key and it will snap multiple photos and let you pick which one to keep, or select it for you (you can keep all of them of course).
The effects button brings out a tab on the left with the usual set of color effects (sepia, solarize and so on). There's also some other cool effects such as shallow depth of field , which lets you blur parts of a photo that fall outside a predefined circular area. It's like having Instagram built right into the camera app UI.
Additional options and effects
All this is pretty cool, but we had one problem with this combined interface - if you want full 8MP resolution still shots, you have to disable the Widescreen option. But then it becomes hard to frame a 16:9 video in the 4:3 view finder. That's made even worse when shooting 720p video. The field of view in that mode is narrower than what the viewfinder shows and framing involves a lot of guesswork.
The Evo has touch focus and face detection; geotagging and smile shutter are also enabled.
The shot mode button offers some more cool stuff - HDR photos, Panorama (with a gyro horizon), portrait, group portrait, landscape, whiteboard, close-up and finally, low light.
Group portrait is quite cool - we've seen something like it before in the Scalado Rewind. It snaps multiple photos and for each face (and the Evo can track many faces), the phone automatically picks the one where that person is smiling and didn't blink and then combines them all on one single photo.
HTC didn't take any chances with the camera this time - an f/2.0 aperture and a dedicated image processing chip clearly show they mean business.
The HTC Evo 4G LTE takes photos with a decent level of fine detail. The noise amount is relatively average, but it pattern is not particularly attractive. Colors are slightly oversaturated, so some of the images do not come out perfectly realistic.
We've prepared a bunch of samples for you guys below, check them out.
HTC are bragging about the instant photo capture during video recording and we decided to give it a spin. The photos are taken in 16:9 aspect ratio and are in 3264 x 1840 resolution. The idea is that you can snap fast-paced pics while you're recording a video.
Video recording
The Evo records 1080p or 720p videos at 30fps and it can snap photos while at it. You can also use touch focus and even toggle the video light - that's during recording!
The videos from the Evo are nicely smooth with an above average amount of detail. Compression is a bit on the strong side, which leads to the occasional smearing of fine detail or artifact.
Here goes an untouched sample 1080p@30fps video clip.
And here's a video uploaded to YouTube for convenience. Don't forget to click 1080p on the FullHD video sample and open the video on full screen.
We've also prepped a 720p video sample taken with the HTC Evo 4G LTE.
Worry-free connectivity
The HTC Evo 4G LTE packs EV-DO CDMA/LTE network support. Sadly, the smartphone cannot be used with a carrier, other than Sprint Wireless in the United States.
LTE is undoubtedly the most important connectivity feature of the Evo. However, we didn't get a chance to put the 4G through its paces, as it is not available in NYC yet. We did however, find the CDMA flavored 3G to work just fine.
The local wireless connectivity has Wi-Fi b/g/n and full DLNA support (both client and server, for images, videos and music) and Bluetooth 4.0.
NFC connectivity is on board as well. The HTC Evo 4G LTE also comes with Google Wallet preinstalled.
As we already said the death grip problem haunting HTC devices of old is now taken care of and there's nothing to worry about. Wi-Fi reception is strong, as is the cell signal.
HTC has conveniently designed a special options screen, when you connect the One X with a PC. The long list of options includes PC Charge only, Disk drive (mass storage), HTC Sync, USB tethering (the phone becomes a modem) and Internet pass-through (the phone uses the computer's Internet connection). The Charge only and Disk Drive have large, easy-to-press icons, which comes in handy since they are used most often.
Selecting a USB connection type • Starting the personal Wi-Fi hotspot
Last but not least is the HTC Portable Hotspot. It can support up to 8 devices, you can WEP, WPA or WPA2 encrypt the hotspot and you can enable "allowed users" only to connect or leave it open for all (unsecure, but the quickest setup).
The app can be set to power off automatically after 5 or 10 minutes of inactivity, saving your battery in case you forget to switch it off when you are done with it.
The HTC Evo 4G LTE comes with an MHL port, so if you plug a MHL dongle in, you can output HD video over a standard HDMI connection. The phone's UI is mirrored on the TV and with the HD resolution of the display, watching on an HDTV is a joyful experience.
Reader comments
- Ngiri
- 08 Feb 2017
- 7ke
Htcsprintph441004g ????? support jio4g volte/lte network by Reliance jio-----mobile have operating options for CDMA/ GSM as well 3G. & 4G GlobalRoaming!!!
- Bigdude0444
- 25 Jul 2012
- jBu
How do I use subtitles on the video player for my EVO LTE?
- mika
- 29 May 2012
- KiV
Give me the gsm version of this :(