Which then brings us to hardware which there is quite a bit more to talk about, we will start up with the fingerprint reader found in the capacitive home button now this one is a lot like the HTC One M9's fingerprint reader from a while back, and it can sense the fingerprint when in standby and unlock the device straight to the home screens. It is easy to set up but just like in the One M9 it poses a little bit of a difficulty.
The motion gestures sensors are still a thing in the HTC 10 where the phone knows that it's been brought up by the hand and then we'll react to a number of different commands, the newest of these is a double swipe downward in order to open up the camera which is nice but when you have to use your finger prints to unlock the device even when swiping in any of those other directions it just feels like these two features are a little bit disjointed.
Once opened up an unlocked the phone pretty much has everything you would expect including NFC and call quality has been very good thus far, using that full speaker of top as the phone girl has been useful for example but of course you can go to speaker phone and take advantage of the boom sound setup.
The only real thing missing here is an IR blaster which we know some of you guys really enjoying the smartphone, but HTC did mention that it's not a widely used feature anymore.
Audio remains one of the cornerstones of the HTC experience and boom sound is still here even though it's been changed a bit now, the top phone speaker is backed by a bottom mounted sub woofer unit that helps provide richer lower tones, it's not going to be as loud as typical front-facing stereo speakers even from previous HTC devices but we will admit that the sound stage has been improved because of a better lower end.
Just don't expect to be easily sharing the sound with everyone around you, but plug in a good pair of headphones and that's where the magic really begins, a good pair of cans or even the bundled highres ear bud headphones will make you hear the difference that the HTC 10 really makes.
HTC put a 24 bit DAC and a headphone amplifier in here it's really make the boom sound goal boom, this is also due in part to the Dolby enhancements which come in the form of user controllable audio profiles in which a number of questions may be asked of you in order for it to figure out what best listening profile to give you. You can also change the equaliser bit by bit if you so wish to, but ultimately it really amped up the sound while providing a much more wider sound stage depending on what you answer to those questions.
The bottom line is that the HTC 10 has a lot of power to drive headphones and it's very fun to get lost in the sound especially with good headphones there's no need for a separate DAC or AMP anymore, but overall listening on headphones result in some of the loudest yet best audio that we've ever got from a smartphone.