Our editors hand-pick related products using a variety of criteria: direct competitors targeting the same market segment, or devices that are similar in size, performance, or feature sets.
“Remixing” usually means to create something completely different from an original source. Most “mini” phones on the market have been “remixed.” They may share a name with the original flagship, but so many features have been scarified it's hardly the...
The HTC One remix is a midrange device with slightly above midrange performance, overall. The display is most certainly its strongest feature, and kudos to HTC for mitigating issues from overhead glare, and the speakers are also fairly strong, compared...
The HTC One Remix might not be cutting edge, but it delivers upscale design in a manageable size for a reasonable price, and that makes it a great midrange Android smartphone on...
Mini smartphones generally leave us wanting: yes they're relatively compact for those with smaller hands and pockets, but they sacrifice specs. You simply don't get the same high end CPU here, but HTC hasn't skimped on RAM or storage, and the cameras are...
Lisa Gade reviews the HTC One Remix, the Verizon Wireless version of the HTC One Mini 2. This is a slightly smaller and more affordable counterpart to the flagship HTC One M8 Android smartphone, and it has a 4.5”, 1280 x 720 Super LCD 2 display. It runs...
Since the launch of the original HTC One (M7) in 2013, HTC has been on a UltraPixel kick in an effort to improve the overall camera experience on its One series of handsets. While all of last year's One handsets had 4-megapixel sensors, HTC has chosen to...
Like most other mid-range phones, the spec sheet of the HTC One remix doesn't have much to brag about. The phone's equipped with a 1.4 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 400 processor that's paired with a measly 1GB of RAM. Yes, the KitKat version of Android...
For as many features as today phones have, battery power is typically the one spec that gets overlooked the most. We all love our megapixels, quad-core processors and massive displays, but none of those things matter much if the battery used to power...
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