By Karl Tisbe, | December 27, 2016
The HTC X10, which is expected to be unveiled at the CES 2017, would be priced at around $300. (Kārlis Dambrāns/CC BY 2.0)
HTC Corporation has a new smartphone called the HTC X10, which is the successor of the HTC One X9.
There has been still no official announcement from HTC about the release date of the new smartphone, but it is expected to hit the market by 2017.
Like Us on Facebook
The HTC X10 smartphone will feature a 5.5-inch full HD 1080p display with a Super LCD capacitive touchscreen and a 401ppi pixel density. The device will run on MediaTek's MT6755 Helio P10 chipset and Mali-T860MP2 graphics processing unit.
The HTC X10 will sport a 13 megapixels camera with Optical Image Stabilization and will run on the Android 7.0 Nougat operating system out of the box. The device will have 32GB of internal storage which is expandable up to 256GB and will have 3GB of RAM. It will not come with a fingerprint scanner.
There are rumors that the HTC X10 will sport the same appearance as the HTC One X9. HTC is expected to unveil this flagship device and a variety of mid-range smartphones at the Consumer Electronics Show 2017 CES 2017 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is an annual trade show organized by the Consumer Technology Association where various presentations of new products and technologies are hosted.
The HTC X10, which is expected to be unveiled at the CES 2017, would be priced at around $300.
-
Use of Coronavirus Pandemic Drones Raises Privacy Concerns: Drones Spread Fear, Local Officials Say
-
Coronavirus Hampers The Delivery Of Lockheed Martin F-35 Stealth Fighters For 2020
-
Instagram Speeds Up Plans to Add Account Memorialization Feature Due to COVID-19 Deaths
-
NASA: Perseverance Plans to Bring 'Mars Rock' to Earth in 2031
-
600 Dead And 3,000 In The Hospital as Iranians Believed Drinking High-Concentrations of Alcohol Can Cure The Coronavirus
-
600 Dead And 3,000 In The Hospital as Iranians Believed Drinking High-Concentrations of Alcohol Can Cure The Coronavirus
-
COVID-19: Doctors, Nurses Use Virtual Reality to Learn New Skills in Treating Coronavirus Patients