Thank you HTC

U11 is my first HTC. Tons of praise! The standouts for me are:
  • Camera quality: compared to my old OP3T and Samsung S7, I prefer the photos and results I get from full auto on the U11.
  • Headset: I don't have a >$100 pair of earbuds or over the ear headphones, but the included set here blow all of mine out of the water. I've mostly moved onto Bluetooth so no 3.5 jack isn't a big deal for me. However, I'll use this wired headset over any of my current ones.
  • Battery life: I LOVE the fact that HTC sets my auto brightness pretty high AND I still get 6hr SOT. Every handset I had from Apple, Moto, OnePlus, Samsung would dim the display to way too dim on auto. I always had to manually adjust my brightness on them all. On the U11, it is bright and beautiful! It really shows off the display especially when I'm sharing something on my screen with others.
 
U11 is my first HTC. Tons of praise! The standouts for me are:
  • Camera quality: compared to my old OP3T and Samsung S7, I prefer the photos and results I get from full auto on the U11.
  • Headset: I don't have a >$100 pair of earbuds or over the ear headphones, but the included set here blow all of mine out of the water. I've mostly moved onto Bluetooth so no 3.5 jack isn't a big deal for me. However, I'll use this wired headset over any of my current ones.
  • Battery life: I LOVE the fact that HTC sets my auto brightness pretty high AND I still get 6hr SOT. Every handset I had from Apple, Moto, OnePlus, Samsung would dim the display to way too dim on auto. I always had to manually adjust my brightness on them all. On the U11, it is bright and beautiful! It really shows off the display especially when I'm sharing something on my screen with others.

Thank you so much for your review! So glad you are liking it! What colour did you get, and have you grabbed any accessories for it or are you planning on doing so?
 
Thank you so much for your review! So glad you are liking it! What colour did you get, and have you grabbed any accessories for it or are you planning on doing so?
Got the black, but was tempted by all other colors too.

Not planning on a screen protector, the glass ones always annoyed me with the halo/rainbow effect. However, on my old OPO, it had the same issues with polarized sunglasses and I bought a matte plastic screen protector which solved the issue. If one like that becomes available, I may try that.

This case is slim and works well enough for me: HTC U11 Case, DGtle Premium Slim Protective Cover for HTC U 11 - Matte Black https://www.amazon.com/dp/B071SJDBRL?tag=hawk-future-20&ascsubtag=UUacUvbUpU5874049
Yes, it covers up a headline feature of the U11, but I want some minimal protection for the back glass. As more cases become available, maybe I'll try them out.

I'll look into upgrading my chargers and battery packs to QC3.0 ones, but battery life is so good now that I can get by with the stock charger and my current battery packs.

No need for headphones. The included ones are awesome.
 
I'll look into upgrading my chargers and battery packs to QC3.0 ones, but battery life is so good now that I can get by with the stock charger and my current battery packs.
The stock charger that comes with it is QC 3.0.
 
I agree with the OP and wish to congratulate HTC for bringing the u11 out.

I'm impressed each time I wake it up and see how little my battery has drained, or at the end of the day with over 6 hours of screen on time and plenty of power left. I also am floored by how clear and precise the supplied high quality uSonic eatbuds sound everyday I listen to them.. Oh and I can't forget to say Thank you for building this amazing phone that has the best LCD display I have ever owned or used it has the most incredible blacks, most accurate and natural colors out of the box without needing to tweak the colors made.

Simply Brilliant

Mac
 
I agree with the OP and wish to congratulate HTC for bringing the u11 out.

I'm impressed each time I wake it up and see how little my battery has drained, or at the end of the day with over 6 hours of screen on time and plenty of power left. I also am floored by how clear and precise the supplied high quality uSonic eatbuds sound everyday I listen to them.. Oh and I can't forget to say Thank you for building this amazing phone that has the best LCD display I have ever owned or used it has the most incredible blacks, most accurate and natural colors out of the box without needing to tweak the colors made.

Simply Brilliant

Mac

Sounds like it has great battery life! Excellent!
 
Mine showed up early yesterday morning, and I'm loving it so far. Only hitch had nothing to do with the phone itself: Google did not have my HTC M8 listed when I went to restore. Turned out to be a good thing though, as several apps were no longer needed.

Battery, build quality, signal strength has been solid. I was surprised that the call quality was fuller and more natural sounding than my M8. Music through the speakers was more natural on the M8, but the U11 had less distortion at louder volumes. I don't know what purpose Theatre Mode is supposed to serve, but I don't like it.

My ONE area of concern on the U11 was the headphone jack. I'm a pro audio engineer out of motown records, and the M8 has been a darling for audio... the first phone I would feel comfortable handing to a client in a studio and having them review the last recording session. Incredibly, I kept being interrupted from testing the audio until late at night. Conference call that dragged on forever, kids needing rides, a trip to the AT&T store to replace someone else's phone, my daughter's car breaking down, and my son's car breaking down 15 minutes later. Arggh!

But I finally did get the testing done, and the results were a bit surprising. Test results on an oscilloscope and paper are not always an accurate representation of how good something sounds to human ears. An example is the HTC M9: Excellent on paper, but when I got mine, it sounded so bad compared to the M8 that I boxed it back up the same day. I tried to like it, but the grainy top end and forced sounding bass were a turn off. It should have been better. Then last night, the HTC U11 turned out to be another example of what's on paper not telling the whole story. I used two pairs of on-ear headphones for testing; one for enjoyment, and one for work which is more accurate but not as pleasing. I used an M8 for reference because it is still the golden child of headphone audiophiles, though the HTC 10 and LG V20 are close. When I compare lower end phones, the differences stand out. Plug in an iPhone and I can tell on the first note. Plug in an S7 Edge, and it takes about 15 seconds or more to pick out the differences. Compare the M8 and HTC 10, and it's just about impossible to tell any difference, though you might find one song that has two notes in the first measure after the bridge that sounded better to you ;)

I expected to be disappointed when I plugged into the adapter in the U11. I listened, then changed to the M8. I went back to the U11, went through a few different songs, went back and swapped back and forth, being careful to compare the same recording on the same player. The differences between the U11 with the 3.5mm headphone adapter, and an HTC M8? Very minimal. Most general songs were very difficult to tell what phone I was listening to. It was only with very intricate or complex recording that I was able to pick out differences. An example would be on the Jean-Michael Jarre's album Oxygene. On track four there is a synthesized finger snap that has light reverberation on the first snap, and reverberation plus echo on the second snap. It's a subtle detail that you have to listen to even pick out, but on the U11, there a touch less detail on the echo of the second snap. Yeah... not exactly a deal breaker. The funny thing is that I spend over an hour listening to headphones, then plugged in the uSonics which immediately made my other headphones sound like crap.

So your options on the U11 are:
A: Using uSonic headphones which are better than just about anything.
B: Using wireless headphones which will sound as good as the headphones allow.
C: A headphone adapter with it's own DAC which is difficult to tell apart from built-in headphone jacks.

So as an audio professional, you can color me relieved.
 
Mine showed up early yesterday morning, and I'm loving it so far. Only hitch had nothing to do with the phone itself: Google did not have my HTC M8 listed when I went to restore. Turned out to be a good thing though, as several apps were no longer needed.

Battery, build quality, signal strength has been solid. I was surprised that the call quality was fuller and more natural sounding than my M8. Music through the speakers was more natural on the M8, but the U11 had less distortion at louder volumes. I don't know what purpose Theatre Mode is supposed to serve, but I don't like it.

My ONE area of concern on the U11 was the headphone jack. I'm a pro audio engineer out of motown records, and the M8 has been a darling for audio... the first phone I would feel comfortable handing to a client in a studio and having them review the last recording session. Incredibly, I kept being interrupted from testing the audio until late at night. Conference call that dragged on forever, kids needing rides, a trip to the AT&T store to replace someone else's phone, my daughter's car breaking down, and my son's car breaking down 15 minutes later. Arggh!

But I finally did get the testing done, and the results were a bit surprising. Test results on an oscilloscope and paper are not always an accurate representation of how good something sounds to human ears. An example is the HTC M9: Excellent on paper, but when I got mine, it sounded so bad compared to the M8 that I boxed it back up the same day. I tried to like it, but the grainy top end and forced sounding bass were a turn off. It should have been better. Then last night, the HTC U11 turned out to be another example of what's on paper not telling the whole story. I used two pairs of on-ear headphones for testing; one for enjoyment, and one for work which is more accurate but not as pleasing. I used an M8 for reference because it is still the golden child of headphone audiophiles, though the HTC 10 and LG V20 are close. When I compare lower end phones, the differences stand out. Plug in an iPhone and I can tell on the first note. Plug in an S7 Edge, and it takes about 15 seconds or more to pick out the differences. Compare the M8 and HTC 10, and it's just about impossible to tell any difference, though you might find one song that has two notes in the first measure after the bridge that sounded better to you ;)

I expected to be disappointed when I plugged into the adapter in the U11. I listened, then changed to the M8. I went back to the U11, went through a few different songs, went back and swapped back and forth, being careful to compare the same recording on the same player. The differences between the U11 with the 3.5mm headphone adapter, and an HTC M8? Very minimal. Most general songs were very difficult to tell what phone I was listening to. It was only with very intricate or complex recording that I was able to pick out differences. An example would be on the Jean-Michael Jarre's album Oxygene. On track four there is a synthesized finger snap that has light reverberation on the first snap, and reverberation plus echo on the second snap. It's a subtle detail that you have to listen to even pick out, but on the U11, there a touch less detail on the echo of the second snap. Yeah... not exactly a deal breaker. The funny thing is that I spend over an hour listening to headphones, then plugged in the uSonics which immediately made my other headphones sound like crap.

So your options on the U11 are:
A: Using uSonic headphones which are better than just about anything.
B: Using wireless headphones which will sound as good as the headphones allow.
C: A headphone adapter with it's own DAC which is difficult to tell apart from built-in headphone jacks.

So as an audio professional, you can color me relieved.

Thank you for this breakdown on the audio. While I am not a audio engineer I am a somewhat audiophile when it comes to my music, sometimes being quite annal about it.

I fully agree that there's perceived quality what we can actually hear and then what can be shown on a scope which does not always jive with what we can see...

I've been telling folks this for a long time now and it's refreshing to see that I am not alone in my feelings.

One thing that I have found is that the sound actually gets better after a few days of use. The soundstage opens up significantly and the clarity and detail improves as well. This also is quite noticeable with the on board speakers.

While this phone is not a stand alone kit, it still offers the user with the best sounding phone on the market and has become my favorite phone for music even over my much heralded LG v20.

Thanks again for your great post

Mac
 
What are your thoughts?
Funny you asked. I really gave the U11 a chance and took it on vacation. I was torn between an S8+ and the U11 and I found I wanted wifi calling, wireless charging, Samsung Pay, and less bezels so I returned the U11 and went with the S8+, which I really love.
 
Funny you asked. I really gave the U11 a chance and took it on vacation. I was torn between an S8+ and the U11 and I found I wanted wifi calling, wireless charging, Samsung Pay, and less bezels so I returned the U11 and went with the S8+, which I really love.

I understand. I'm on the iOS/Android fence so I was more or less wondering your thoughts between those two.
 
Funny you asked. I really gave the U11 a chance and took it on vacation. I was torn between an S8+ and the U11 and I found I wanted wifi calling, wireless charging, Samsung Pay, and less bezels so I returned the U11 and went with the S8+, which I really love.

Glad you now have a phone that you're enjoying! :)
 
I understand. I'm on the iOS/Android fence so I was more or less wondering your thoughts between those two.
I think they both have their advantages/disadvantages. I like the customizing with Android, the better displays and the extra large screens of the S8+ particularly in a smaller form factor. I love ios iMessage, fluidity and system management, but I'm really bored with it too. I like switching it up and I think Android phones, particularly the flagships from LG, HTC and Samsung are leading edge right now.
 

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