Battery Life

Battery life is still one of the most important aspects of any mobile device, and as a result our testing of a mobile device needs to properly emphasize this aspect. As a result, it’s important that every device is tested in the same manner to avoid bias in one way or another. In order to achieve this, all devices have all possible background services disabled, as well as sync and automatic app updates. In order to try and make an even comparison we also set the display to 200 nits brightness on a 100% average picture level display, also known as a blank white screen. However, one area that we aren’t necessarily able to control for 100% of the time is ambient temperature, device orientation, or material contact. While tests that don’t reach TDP limits won’t see any effects, TDP-limited tests will see a delta here, but it’s hard to estimate just how much of an impact exists here. While we might be able to do some power characterization, in most cases review units are not allowed to be torn down and with a general decrease in the number of devices with removable batteries power characterization has to be done through the fuel gauge which is often unreliable. With the HTC 10, this fuel gauge is only updated every minute so there’s realistically no way to actually test power outside of full rundown tests.

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (WiFi)

In our first test we can see that the Galaxy S7 is actually slightly down on power efficiency relative to the HTC 10. I went back and ran the HTC 10 on our basically display-bound battery life test and the Galaxy S7 gets around 12.34 hours while the HTC 10 gets 11.63 hours. That’s about a 5-6% delta which is almost entirely down to display efficiency, so I suspect that the difference here is actually due to optimizations in DVFS and other optimizations that would probably fall under the “PowerBiotics” branding that HTC seems to be using here.

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (LTE)

Moving on to the LTE version of this test we can see that HTC has really done an amazing job of implementing their cellular solution as battery life is basically identical to what it is on WiFi. It’s likely that poor reception conditions will tilt the scales back towards WiFi but in areas of good reception the HTC 10 has relatively good battery life on LTE. This is probably compounded by the fact that the HTC 10’s LTE reception is actually significantly above anything else I’ve used in recent memory including the LG G5 and Galaxy S7.

In the interest of trying to see whether this sort of pattern holds across the board, PCMark is another test that emphasizes power consumption but rather than just web browsing it attempts to have a mix of CPU and GPU usage in general purpose tasks as well as some general purpose IP blocks like video decode. While a relatively small part of overall power consumption, storage power consumption is also a part of the test as things like the photo editing subtest will involve reading and writing to non-volatile storage.

PCMark - Work Battery Life

Interestingly enough, the HTC 10 ends up being slightly behind the Galaxy S7 here. Again, it’s likely that we’re looking at the difference in display power here as the Galaxy S7’s 1440p AMOLED display has a lower subpixel density and in a few tests the average picture level is relatively low. HTC is also using an ever so slightly larger display which would tilt the scales as well. Of course, none of this really changes the fact that display-bound workloads are going to see the HTC 10 performing worse than the Galaxy S7, but from an academic perspective it’s interesting to keep tabs on how AMOLED and LCD compare in terms of efficiency. It goes without saying that the Galaxy S7 edge with its huge battery easily pulls away from the HTC 10 and pretty much anything on the market but if you want a phone usable with one hand I would argue that the Galaxy S7 edge isn’t really a one-handed phone.

Moving on to the sustained rundown tests we can take a look at how an OEM has chosen to optimize their thermal management strategies, which often vary from device to device despite similar SoC and design. While we used to run Basemark OS II and GFXBench for this part of the test due to the arguably misleading results that Basemark OS II provides we’ve dropped it entirely to improve the signal to noise ratio of our reviews.

GFXBench Manhattan ES 3.1 / Metal Battery Life

GFXBench Manhattan ES 3.1 / Metal Final Frame Rate

In GFXBench’s Manhattan ES 3.1 infinite rundown again we’re seeing the differences that come from display efficiency deltas but the difference is so small because SoC is pretty much the dominating factor when a display of this size will consume about a watt and the TDP-limited power consumption of the SoC is about two watts. What is noteworthy here is that HTC tends to do a better job of throttling the SoC such that the degradation is graceful. Samsung and LG both seem to favor maximizing short term performance which results in underdamped behavior which actually has a pretty appreciable impact on things like VR performance although given that no OEM is shipping Daydream-ready devices yet it isn’t necessarily critical for an OEM to be getting throttling right.

Overall, HTC does manages to pull in fairly respectable battery life despite being down on display efficiency. Our new tests manage to highlight the surprising level of optimization that HTC has put into the 10, but in use cases where you can’t really optimize things like cellular connectivity or governor behavior the HTC 10 slightly trails the Galaxy S7. When compared against something like the Galaxy S7 Exynos 8890 variants the HTC 10 is going to trail in anything CPU-bound as Kryo is just not as efficient as Exynos M1 for whatever reason. I don’t really think it’s a fair comparison but the Galaxy S7 edge is undoubtedly a big step up in battery life relative to the HTC 10, but this comparison only makes sense if you are willing to deal with the larger 5.5 inch display.

While I hate using screen-on time as a metric for battery life, generally speaking where the One M7 got about 3-4 hours of constant use when new the HTC 10 seems to achieve about 6 hours of use or so which is much more than what the 30% bump in battery capacity would suggest, especially once you factor in the half inch difference in display size, so the efficiency benefits of newer SoCs like the Snapdragon 820 are absolutely noticeable.

Charge Time

While battery life is probably the single most important metric of a mobile device, it’s important to not forget that these devices still need to spend at least some time wired up, whether directly in the form of an AC adapter or indirectly by swapping batteries. As a result it’s important to see how quickly the device’s battery will charge as generally speaking end users don’t hotswap batteries and charging the phone’s battery with an AC adapter is the dominant use case where charge time matters. To test this we use a number of methods, but for this review we will rely on measurements from the wall and using the time it takes for the device to drop to a certain level of power draw from the wall to indicate a full charge state, which is generally quite close to the time it takes for the device itself to indicate 100% but may take longer depending upon how an OEM adjusts battery state of charge determination and presentation.

Charge Time

It turns out that the HTC 10 charges fairly quickly, but it’s not necessarily as fast as what something with QC 2.0. This might seem counter-intuitive but realistically it’s not supposed to be faster than QC 2.0, but to reduce battery and device heating to better preserve the battery over time. Regardless, pretty much anything that charges in under 2 hours is going to be fairly comparable here. The Galaxy S7 does charge faster, but at the cost of overall battery lifetime. The LG G5 is actually slightly slower to charge here, so all things considered the HTC 10 is doing pretty well here. The one notable winner here is the OnePlus 3, which seems to charge quickly with relatively low battery heat due to its proprietary Dash Charge system.

System Performance Cont'd and NAND Performance Camera Architecture and UX
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  • eek2121 - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    That's actually not true. Quite a few people wait for their contract to be up (STILL). I was able to snag an HTC One M8 several months after it's release for FREE. Note that I pay $62.99/mo on Verizon for 2 gb of data (unlimited T&T). It would cost me more to NOT do contract pricing, so I keep doing the 2 year contract thing.
  • rabidkevin - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    I bought an HTC 10, I pick up a new phone every 2 to 2.5 years. I'm not part of your statistic nor is my brother.
  • djc208 - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    Maybe, but then again I got a One M9 for free basically, and while I knew the M9 wasn't really an update it's still a great phone other than the camera, and honestly HTC has been really good about supporting software updates. Even now the One M9 is supposed to get Android N, and they were pretty quick with marshmallow even with the carrier in the middle.

    At this point if you can keep me in software updates for more than a few months it means more than most of this hardware gimmickry. Lost of fast, quality phones out there now as this shows, question is who will still be supporting it a year from now. It's why I didn't want another LG phone.
  • philehidiot - Tuesday, September 20, 2016 - link

    I've just had an M9 update. Whilst there are camera issues and it takes a lot of time and effort to get the shot you want sometimes, the results can be damned good and the updates for a good two years make a HTC phone a worthwhile investment. With some manufacturers the initial review is what you'll get even if you get the phone a few months down the line. HTC addresses problems throughout the lifecycle of the product which is one reason I prefer them. As stated in this review, the camera section is more representative of what you'll get compared to initial reviews based on early software.
  • TheMysteryMan11 - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    Also there is OnePlus 3. Excellent phone even if Pixel fails to impress.
  • goatfajitas - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    "if your only measure of a quality of device is how many units its marketing is capable of selling, then you're reading reviews on the wrong site."
    That might have been true many years ago, but this site "sold it's soul" in recent years. It's kind of an "Apple rah rah" site now. Not that the volume of articles are all about Apple, but Apple products don't get the same critical analysis that competing products get. That was true a few years before Anand went to work for Apple, and still true today.
  • Meteor2 - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    Oh shut up.
  • JKJK - Monday, September 19, 2016 - link

    What? Anand works for apple?
  • goatfajitas - Tuesday, September 20, 2016 - link

    Not sure if you are baiting or not, but in case not yes, Anand went to work for Apple a few years ago.
  • Sand6man - Wednesday, October 5, 2016 - link

    Just cause you hate Apple products you want to discredit this site, get a life. They are just stating the numbers and results.

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