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@htc-one-x-blog
We thought we’d share some information on our testing process.
My name is David Blooman, I am the principal tester for responsive news, all questions and queries can be sent to me at [email protected]. Twitter @davey_blooman
When testing the devices, there are 4 main areas to...
THIS. The HTC One X.
This phone represents one of the biggest changes to how Android will continue on existing and it has nothing to do with Google.
(First off, take the time to check out The Verge’s review. The phone is NICE.)
Now, hundreds of Android phones have flown out from HTC, Samsung, Motorola, etc. since the launch of Android. This is both a good and bad thing for Android. The marketshare exploded, however the quality of phones really dragged down the quality of Android. Even on the nicer phones, lack of updates due to supporting so many phones made phones obsolete days after release.
I’m a huge fan of Android, but frankly I’ve viewed my Android interest as solely the latest Nexus phone. Google is doing it right in competing against the iPhone. One phone a year and it should represent your best.
The HTC One series really gives me a glimmer of hope for other companies competing for my dollar. Honestly, I don’t care if HTC keeps shoveling out other crappy Android phones, as long as they realize that this is how you try to win over the same people who went to the iPhone. Each company should try to compete with iPhone not with their monthly releases because they slightly bumped up the processor, but with one solid (as close to perfect as possible) phone. Promise to keep the OS up to date. Promise that it will be their flagship for at least a year without some “HTC One X MAXXXXX Plus+ 4G 3D” coming out 3 months from now.
Make one phone that represents the company. Apple doesn’t make a hundred different iPhones a year, they sell the old ones for less. If HTC keeps the One brand strong enough, they can find themselves in the same position. This would mean less phones for them to have to worry about software updates for and Android fragmentation would decrease by a huge amount.
As for the Sense skin, I’m glad they toned it down. I’m still a vanilla guy myself (why can’t companies just offer a way to revert to stock?) but this is at least much, much better than what Sense used to be. Companies argue how there are a lot of factors that slow down updates, but skins certainly play a part. This phone’s release (HTC’s first ICS) is closer to Google announcing the next version of Android at I/O than it is to Ice Cream Sandwich’s release in November. Skins suck.
Also, why real buttons? What happens if Jelly Bean reintroduces the Search button or changes how the back button functions? I always saw the change to buttons being on the screen for the Galaxy Nexus as being a stepping stone for more contextually aware buttons.
There are clearly some things HTC needs to fix, but frankly the phone looks beautiful and this is a HUGE step in the right direction for how companies should be handling Android.
HTC has problems. The company is not selling enough Android phones and gets buried among the vast amount of Android phones on offer from different vendors. As I’ve stated earlier, I like HTC phones (most of them), I even like the Sense Android skin. The Sense originates from the Windows...
Brian X Chen:
The iPhone with a two-year contract on AT&T, for example, costs $200 for the handset and then upward of $90 a month for the plan; over two years, including the cost of the phone, customers pay at least $2,360. With a prepaid plan on Virgin Mobile, which is owned by Sprint, the iPhone costs $650 for the handset, and then $30 a month, including unlimited data (the type of data plan that people are happier with, according to J.D. Power). Over two years, that would cost about $1,370.
It’s a tactic that has worked for decades: trick people up-front and screw them in the rear. Short-term gain, long-term pain. Etc. The carriers thrive on this.
But it’s still pretty jarring to see it laid out in such simple terms: if you’re willing to pay $450 more upfront, you’ll save about $1,000 over the next couple years.
htc one x update
[VIDEO] HTC One X Review Part 1
HTC One X review
HTC reboots its image, and we’re putting the new look to the test
Hot damn I’m tempted to get one of these