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I used to have A Samsung phone, it was the Samsung Galaxy, also known as the Captivate, the one that started it off for Samsung. After owning that piece of Crap(tivate) I never picked up A Samsung phone again. I think HTC Phones are tops but the best software on A phone right now IMO is Moto X. I am tempted to pick up the M8 this week, but I am hearing these rumors of A newer version called the HTC One Prime. May have to wait and see what that phone is about.....
Pros:
-amazing build quality AND design, still amazed to this day
-amazing stereo speaker sound, again amazed
-narrow width makes it easier to use (Phone is quite tall as a result, has huge bezels on the top and bottom, and screen is disproportionately placed on the device (top bezel smaller than the bottom bezel, which does affect usability/ergonomics).
-16 extra gigs of internal memory for no extra cost
-does not look like a toy phone you'd give to your child (That's not a Pro, that's an opinion)
-very few gimmick features (See above IRT what's a gimmick or not)
-BlinkFeed (use daily) (My Magazine - Use Daily)
-LCD screen (Personal Preference, the GS5 Screen has been reviewed favorably compared to practically everything else)
-UI: very clean, quick, and does not look cartoony which makes it appear on the S5 doesn't to be a child's toy again (TW on the S5 doesn't look cartoony, but MY opinion. I actually do think Sense looks a bit better especially the Calendar and Email App, but TW is not cartoony and really I don't even know what people mean when they say that... most are just on the bandwagon - when HTC was popular, Sense was "bloated" and all that other mess...)
-5mp front camera, looks great on Skype (the MP on the camera has nothing to do with how good it looks on Skype. I doubt the S5 looks much worse on Skype than the One's Camera, since every phone released by these OEMs since the S3/One X has been at least 720p capable form the Front Camera. Those Extra MP are for taking massive high quality Selfies, not to look better on Skype. You only need a 2MP sensor for 1080p video).
-not the same phone everyone else has (That doesn't make a phone worse than another, so it cannot be a Pro or a Con. Look at the iPhone. It's still one of the best on the market and it's hugely popular. If anything, that makes the Samsung devices better because the features they've built for their device ecosystem become more useful the more their devices proliferate through a population).
-dual flash works great, pictures in pitch black do not look over brightened by the flash (From what I've seen the Faux "True Tone" doesn't hold a candle to Apple's. The point of that Dual LED Flash (White + Amber) is to give better skin tones and color accuracy, which the M8 still fails to do quite often even with it)
-swipe launch gestures
-better pictures indoors/low light settings (Untrue, unless it's almost dark the S5 will almost always outperform it even if the picture is a tad darker)
-free 6 month screen warrantee (that's a service provided by the OEM. It has nothing to do with the quality of the device or device software)
-free 50 gigs of cloud storage (I don't think many people out there care much about this, cause the amount of average consumers that would require more than the 15GB given by Google with any Google Account is pretty small - also has nothing to do with the Device or Device Software)
Cons:
-back camera is sensative to bright light
-back camera captures slightly unrealistic color tones in some instances
-s5's camera had better resolution and better in daylight
-slightly too heavy (what can you expect from 90% metal) (also larger than an S5 with a smaller screen and ON SCREEN buttons)
-not certified dust proof and waterproof (there are videos of the M8 lasting under water for well over half an hour) (and they didn't open the phone up to check if it tripped an indicator, which means if their screen breaks and they send it in that free replacement is going to turn into "sorry your warranty is void cause you water damaged the phone")
-does not have a fingerprint scanner (pro for me but a con for most) (if you haven't used Touch ID or anything similar, where you can finally lock your phone because it isn't a hassle to constantly put in a PIN Code 100x a day then you really don't know what you're missing when it comes to these biometrics in phones).
-non removable battery
-on-screen buttons cuts down the amount of usable screen real estate you have in many instances
-don't think you know what happens to metal phones when they get too hot or too cold... iPhone users here find out the hard way, and this device is no exception (the M7 suffered the same issues as the iPhone). Plastics have a huge advantage when it comes to that.
-M8 is more fragile than an S5 due to the metal (no replaceable back, dents, scuffs, scratches, higher chance to crack the screen on a fall, etc.)
Maybe I just missed it, but so far I haven't seen anyone mention the #1 reason I went with the M8 over the S5: The ability to root, unlock the bootloader, and install a custom recovery. After finding an easy way to buy an upgraded phone without losing my Verizon unlimited data plan, I had no interest in switching carriers. But there's no way I'd want to live with any phone that doesn't give me the flexibility of rooting, and both AT&T and Verizon have the S5 locked down tighter than a drum.
I held off replacing my dying Galaxy Nexus as long as I could, figuring that someone always finds an exploit to enable rooting -- but so far, it looks like the S5 may just be the first big exception. The bounty over at XDA is up to almost $18k for the first person who successfully roots both varieties; it's about $10k for the Verizon version alone. But despite the clear motivation for devs, nothing has yet been found.
Verizon tried to pull the same stunt locking down the M8 -- and although it's a little harder to unlock than other variants, it didn't take long for an alternative root/unlock for the Verizon version to be discovered. Took me about an hour to complete the entire process, and I couldn't be happier with the M8 now.
I probably would have gone with the M8 anyway, for many of the same reasons already given in this thread, but inability to root the S5 was a dealbreaker that made the final decision easy for me.
Maybe I just missed it, but so far I haven't seen anyone mention the #1 reason I went with the M8 over the S5: The ability to root, unlock the bootloader, and install a custom recovery. After finding an easy way to buy an upgraded phone without losing my Verizon unlimited data plan, I had no interest in switching carriers. But there's no way I'd want to live with any phone that doesn't give me the flexibility of rooting, and both AT&T and Verizon have the S5 locked down tighter than a drum.
I held off replacing my dying Galaxy Nexus as long as I could, figuring that someone always finds an exploit to enable rooting -- but so far, it looks like the S5 may just be the first big exception. The bounty over at XDA is up to almost $18k for the first person who successfully roots both varieties; it's about $10k for the Verizon version alone. But despite the clear motivation for devs, nothing has yet been found.
Verizon tried to pull the same stunt locking down the M8 -- and although it's a little harder to unlock than other variants, it didn't take long for an alternative root/unlock for the Verizon version to be discovered. Took me about an hour to complete the entire process, and I couldn't be happier with the M8 now.
I probably would have gone with the M8 anyway, for many of the same reasons already given in this thread, but inability to root the S5 was a dealbreaker that made the final decision easy for me.
I currently have the M7 when it first came out.
M8: I didnt like no real physical button. Battery cannot be replaced. Love the 2 front speaker
S5: Hate the back speaker. Lover the removable battery.
Compromise: Will get the Note 4. I hope no back speaker but side speaker is fair.
Nowadays it's difficult to choose between phones. All phones have amazing features, being it in their hardware or software, they are all distinct to each other in their own ways. I think at the end it's based on personal preference.
For me, well I'm an HTC lover. My last phone before my first HTC was the Blackberry Curve, because my Blackberry Javelin got broken and didn't want to get a pricey phone before doing a good research. I started looking at different manufacturers and the kind of phones they made. One day a friend of my got the Sony Xperia and I liked the whole "Android" concept, so based my search on android; never actually liked Apple. Anyhow, started doing my research, ended up getting the HTC One X. I fell in love instantly with it, there's no reason not to. It has been with me for two and a half years, and it's still alive, and it has been so resistant. It's like a war tank. Spilled drinks, falls, everything. And I haven't taken it to repair not even once. That's how I got interested in HTC.
M8 or S5? Well, for me, they are two different products, one is made to be sold to the masses just for the sake of profits, and the other is actually made to make users fall in love. HTC phones look like they were made with love and dedication, Samsungs just look like phones made out of a production line.
I honestly can't think of a person who has tried both phones and preferred a Samsung. I never would, just seems so fake compared to the HTC.
My opinion is definitely biased. But, with a base.
Hope this helps.