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HTC Losing Ground Faster Than RIM or Nokia

zacharye writes "How bad is HTC's current tailspin? So bad it makes Nokia look like a growth company. HTC's handset volume declined by -43% in the autumn quarter vs. Nokia's -23% volume decline. This is very interesting because HTC is using Android, the world's most popular smartphone OS, that is powering 40% annualized growth among its vendors. Nokia is limping along with an unholy mix of the obsolete Symbian platform, the moribund S40 feature phone platform and a niche OS called Windows Phone."

8 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why is that "interesting"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Except for also LG, Huawai, ZTE, Sony, and many others. The only one i know that doesn't make any money for anyone is Windows Phone

  2. European-style negative percentages by MrEricSir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For some reason in Europe, you tend to see a lot of stores advertising "-50% off!" sales and such.

    Apparently double negative percentages have the opposite meaning in parts of the world.

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    1. Re:European-style negative percentages by epSos-de · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is an old way to stop hacks of the pen or the pencil. Most of the people do not even know why it is still used and what it means. One evil fellow might add a number in front or at the end of an existing number. So, the old European book-keepers wrote a dot or a dash before and after the numbers that were final. The minus (-) is a dash in this case, so that no one can make 150% out of ----50% Just history and a lesson for you to add dashes at the end of important numbers on paper. Good German teachers still teach this practice to their students.

  3. Re:Why is that "interesting"? by compro01 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They were doing fine selling Android last year.

    Then they got the brilliant idea that people don't want replaceable batteries or expandable storage and created the One line around that.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  4. Re:Android is the most popular mobile OS? by Bill+Dimm · · Score: 5, Informative
  5. Re:Why is that "interesting"? by aoteoroa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While shopping for a new phone during the summer nearly every store tried to talk me out of HTC

    I had researched extensively and found the HTC One V had the best camera on the market for a phone under $200 (with no contract), and was small in size (contrary to the current trend I prefer small phones) and had Android 4 out of the box.

    I walked out of one store because the pushed samsung so hard, and out of another store since they no longer carried HTC. Only at the third store did I find the phone.

    Incidentally this phone's camera is amazing if you're a photographer and like to tinker. It gives you true autofocus. Exposure control to plus or minus two stops, and a mode that brackets exposure (-1, 0, +1) and puts the three images together to give high contrast scenes beautifully smooth detail.

  6. Re:Why is that "interesting"? by Emetophobe · · Score: 5, Informative

    Releasing 11 different models between April 2012 and July 2012 probably has something to do with it aswell: Source. That's what really killed HTC, releasing too many phones and not supporting any of them.

    Two of my friends bought HTC phones a year ago, one bought the original HTC Evo, the other bought an HTC Evo 3D. Now both of them say they'll never purchase another HTC phone again. I was lucky, I almost bought the original HTC Evo when it came out but I ended up waiting and getting a Nexus S instead. Now I'm running official Jelly Bean while my buddies are forced to use custom firmware to get updates.

    HTC did this to themselves.

  7. Re:Why is that "interesting"? by stephanruby · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's also interesting to note that this guy implies that HTC is only an Android platform, when in fact, if you just take look at HTCs' actual home page.

    What comes front and center of that main page is their failed HTC Windows phones and their failed 'Beats Audio' music platform, with their Android phones being relegated to the right-side menu, and completely stripped out of all Android branding, or markings (as if it had been purposefully done that way).

    So if you ask me, what's dragging down HTC is not the fact that they've stopped having replaceable battery covers, and stopped having sdcard slots, in one of their lines, it's more the fact that they've repeatedly launched and relaunched Windows Phones and 'Beats Audio' -- wasting all their efforts and money on these ventures, when in fact, they should just have focused on promoting their Android offerings with one or two focused messages (that people actually cared about).