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Technology Stocks : HTC Corporation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)5/30/2012 11:37:02 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
HTC One XL vs Samsung Galaxy Note - Comparison - Know Your Mobile

Bottom line:

HTC has come straight out of left-field with something truly phenomenal and there aren't many phones on the market right now which we'd rather have in our pockets.

HTC One XL Product Overview - HTC Smartphones



To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)6/7/2012 10:55:40 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
HTC Gets Hulk-Smashed By Apple-Samsung Dominance, European Woes, Microsoft's Shunning, And Yet Another Patent Fight | Stocks | Minyanville.com

By Michael Comeau Jun 07, 2012 10:30 am

Former smartphone highflyer HTC was just hit with a mountain of bad news.

Think you're having a bad day?

Well, check out what's going on at Taiwanese gadget-maker HTC, which just got hit by one of the biggest streams of simultaneous bad news I've ever seen.

To start, HTC, once a major player in Google ( GOOG) Android smartphones, significantly lowered guidance.

For the second quarter, the company now expects to report revenues of NT $91 billion, which is 13% lower than the NT $105 billion forecast issued on April 24. [Editor's Note: The New Taiwan Dollar (or NT) is worth US 3.35 cents.]

HTC cited lower-than-expected sales to Europe, and delayed shipments and product launches in the US.

However, investors should keep in mind that HTC had already been seeing declining sales at the hands of the category-killing Apple ( AAPL) iPhone and Samsung Galaxy product lines. (See: Samsung and Apple Are Set to Continue Their Domination of the Global Smartphone Market.)

In the first quarter of 2012, Gartner reported that HTC's unit sales dropped by a whopping 17%, while Apple and Samsung saw 96% and 26% gains, respectively, as you can see in this chart:



HTC's sales are slowing nearly as quickly as Nokia's ( NOK) and Research In Motion's ( RIMM)!

So should we really be surprised by this latest guidance reduction?

I think not.

However, the bad news for HTC didn't end there.

Our friends at Bloomberg reported yesterday that Microsoft ( MSFT) will not allow HTC to produce Windows tablets, according to "people with knowledge of the matter."

Why?

Because "HTC doesn’t sell enough devices or have ample experience making tablets."

That seems unfair, given Microsoft's zero historical success in the tablet market. Oh well, that might not matter since there isn't really a tablet market. If you look at the numbers, you'll see it's more of an iPad market. (See: Amazon's Kindle Fire Gets Smashed as Apple's iPad Regains Tablet Market Share.)

As if all this wasn't enough, on Wednesday, Apple filed an enforcement action with the International Trade Commission in an attempt to block US sales of key HTC products like the One X smartphones.

So yes, kids, in VH1 parlance, HTC is having the worst week ever.

Here's a video metaphor for the whole mess:




To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)6/11/2012 5:55:47 PM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
FOSS Patents: ITC doesn't allow HTC to assert Google's patents against Apple -- Rent-a-Patent model fails



To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)6/12/2012 7:29:31 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
HTC One X suffering Wi-Fi connectivity issues | Electronista

updated 12:15 am EDT, Tue June 12, 2012

Quick battery drain, bad Wi-Fi reception among symptoms

A design flaw is interfering with users' ability to connect the HTC One X with a Wi-Fi source. The One X seemingly has several Wi-Fi-related problems that either drain the battery rapidly or render it completely unable to connect to a Wi-Fi network. HTC is reportedly aware of the issue, and is asking for feedback to help the engineering team resolve the problem.

Users can test their devices by gently squeezing the back of the phone between the camera lens and voume buttons. If the Wi-Fi signal strength improves, only to drop when releasing the grip, then the the device is affected by the connectivity bug. The suggested primary fix is returning the phone to the supplier as a "dead on arrival" phone, but laws and policies vary by country and retail chain.

The fault seems to lie in a poorly-connected common antenna, servicing both Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. A device teardown along with a dangerous and complicated user fix is possible for the fault, but not recommended for users to attempt. Following disassembly of the phone, the antenna can be delicately re-soldered, and the phone reassembled. The developer of the hacked repair himself chose to not perform the repair, citing its difficulty and risk of danger to the phone. Regardless of danger, the soldering of the antenna connection by the end user violates the terms of service and likely the phone hardware warranty as well.

The HTC One X was held at customs by order of the ITC to ensure that the installed software complied with import ban restrictions involving an Apple-help patent. The phones were released on May 21 and were generally available at retail by May 25.




To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)6/12/2012 7:35:14 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
New Evo 4G phone far from perfect - Boston.com

HTC Evo 4G LTE smartphone

$199.99 at Sprint.com;$149.99 at Amazon.com

The original Evo 4G phone from Taiwan’s HTC Corp. was one of the first serious challengers to Apple Inc.’s iPhone. Now comes the latest version, and while it’s an impressive sliver of hardware, there are reasons to be wary.

The new Evo runs Google Inc.’s Android operating system. It sports the same thin form factor as the gorgeous HTC One X currently offered by AT&T Inc. But its black plastic casing has a slightly flimsier feel. There’s been no skimping on the electronics, though. There’s a dual-core processor, 16 gigabytes of memory, a 4.7-inch screen, and a superb 8-megapixel camera that takes much better pictures than the iPhone 4S.

So why hesitate? Well, there are multiple reports of uneven reception. The phone’s exclusive carrier Sprint Nextel Corp. is investigating whether there’s a serious problem here.

Beyond that, there’s the little detail that the phone’s vaunted 4G LTE data service doesn’t work in Boston, or most other places. That’s because Sprint has only just started deploying an LTE network. So this superfast data technology will be useless to you, probably for months to come.

The same thing happened with the original Evo, which used an older 4G network that wasn’t available in many cities at launch. But it was such a good phone, most consumers didn’t care. After a few minutes with this sleek, sophisticated phone, you might feel the same.



To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)6/12/2012 7:37:30 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
HTC Woes Set to Worsen on Exclusion From Microsoft Tablet - Bloomberg

HTC Corp. (2498) is being shut out of the introduction of Microsoft Corp.’s next Windows software, people with knowledge of the matter said, cutting off another source of revenue after HTC reduced its second-quarter sales forecast by 13 percent.

Microsoft locked out HTC from the development of products using the newest version of its operating system on concern that HTC doesn’t sell enough devices or have ample experience making tablets, said the people, who asked not to be named because negotiations between HTC and other companies are private.

Microsoft’s decision will keep HTC, maker of the first Google Inc.-branded smartphone, from participating in the electronics industry’s latest attempt to erode Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s lead in tablets. The Taiwanese company, whose stock has dropped 67 percent in the past year, is also facing shortages from chipmaker Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM), highlighting the challenge of competing with Apple and Samsung Electronics Co. -- two companies whose dominance in manufacturing and software are increasingly marginalizing smaller rivals like HTC.

“Every consumer knows about Samsung’s Galaxy platform and the iPhone, and you are starting to see consumers coalesce around them,” said Matthew Thornton, an analyst at Avian Securities LLC, who yesterday cut his rating on HTC to negative. “Things just get worse from here. It’s a very bleak outlook.”

Windows RT

Microsoft plans to release its next Windows operating system, the first to run on chips with technology from ARM Holdings Plc, in time for the holiday shopping season. The ARM version of the new software, designed for tablets that compete with the iPad, is called Windows RT. Other tablets and computers will be made using chips based on Intel Corp.’s technology. The software, also called Windows 8, will appear in devices from companies like Toshiba Corp. and Asustek Computer Inc. later this year.

HTC is a strong partner now and for the future, said Frank Shaw, a spokesman for Microsoft, in an e-mailed statement. He declined to discuss specifics. HTC intends to support future versions of Windows and isn’t commenting on the details of its product plans, said Sally Julien, a U.S.-based spokeswoman at HTC, in an e-mailed statement.

HTC has been unable to either develop its own software or hardware or sell enough devices to make it the first in line for its suppliers, said Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC.

“Controlling the supply chain or influencing the supply chain is one of the things that takes you to success,” said Llamas. “It can very quickly turn on you if you’re not controlling everything in-house.”

Product Delays

HTC said yesterday that second-quarter sales would be NT$91 billion ($3.05 billion), below a previous forecast of NT$105 billion because of product delays in the U.S. and lower-than- anticipated sales in Europe. Besides smartphones, HTC also makes tablets with Google’s Android operating system.

Microsoft, which has tightly controlled the number of ARM- based devices it is supporting at first to ensure quality, opted not to work with HTC after initial discussions with the company, said the two people familiar with the matter. The world’s largest software maker decided to work with other vendors that had greater sales volume and more tablet experience for the first round of devices, the people said.

HTC engineers wanted to build a Windows device with a customized home screen that would be distinctive to its devices, as manufacturers are allowed to do with Android. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft (MSFT) refused, said the people, and HTC was left off the list of companies the software maker provided with early versions of the software.

Sales Decline

HTC may release a Windows device later, in a second round of products to come next year, one of the people said.

After surging 90 percent in 2010 and 65 percent last year, HTC’s sales will decline 12 percent this year, according to the average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

In the first quarter, HTC’s smartphone shipments dropped 23 percent as Samsung’s more than tripled and Apple’s increased 89 percent, according to IDC. Samsung and Apple account for 53 percent of the market. HTC has a 4.8 percent share, according to the market researcher, placing it fifth behind Nokia Oyj and Research In Motion Ltd.

Participating in the introduction of Windows RT tablets would be unlikely to solve all that ails HTC. The machines will be starting from a zero-market-share position, without the advantage of popular, older Windows applications that won’t run on ARM hardware.

Relationship Shift

The situation underlines the shift in the relationship between Microsoft and HTC, which once relied on each other to prop up early efforts in the mobile-phone market. The two companies started working together on Microsoft’s mobile phones early in the last decade and the first Windows-based phone was manufactured by HTC. At the time, Microsoft had virtually no experience in the area, and HTC was a maker of unbranded generic phones for other companies.

HTC recently has placed more emphasis on its better-selling Android phones, and Microsoft has forged a closer relationship with HTC competitor Nokia.

Still, HTC has seven Windows Phone models on sale globally. The operating system has about 2 percent share of the market, according to IDC.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ian King in San Francisco at ianking@bloomberg.net; Tim Culpan in Taipei at tculpan1@bloomberg.net; Dina Bass in Seattle at dbass2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net



To: sylvester80 who wrote (228)6/14/2012 7:46:27 AM
From: Lahcim Leinad  Respond to of 273
 
FOSS Patents: HTC withdraws Federal Circuit appeal against ITC dismissal of complaint against Apple