Despite
its widely-recognized brand name, HTC is, even today, a relatively
small player in the industry. Us geeks like to think that the best
products are the ones to eventually win the crowd, and HTC definitely
has a truly compelling portfolio, yet competing nowadays has been mostly
reduced to surviving, unless you're Apple or Samsung. The
Taiwanese company is fully aware of this, and is finally taking action
to rectify the increasingly gloomy situation, by adding new chipset
partners to its supply chain. This means that the company's
long-standing partner, Qualcomm, is now further feeling the heat from
ultra-cost manufacturers.
"From
the perspective of Qualcomm, MediaTek Inc. and other chipmakers, they
should be thinking about how to take advantage of the overall trend to
secure and expand their ground in the market. So there's likely to be a
restructuring," said Jack Tong, head of China and North Asia President at HTC .
"HTC will evaluate the situation," notes Tong. "If
most players in the industry are seeking high performance to cost, then
we would not be able to ignore such a trend despite good design and
applications."
The new HTC chip suppliers include Spreadtrum and Broadcom, and even the now dissolved ST Ericsson has a role to play. Much to our taste, this is not the usual 'announce now, do later' type deal, but instead these chips are already powering existing, commercially available products. We're talking about the slew of new Desire handsets that HTC unveiled yesterday, of course. The new HTC Desire 501, for example, has a 1.15GHz dual-core ST Ericsson U8520 processor powering it, while the Desire 601 relies on a 1.2GHz quad-core Broadcom Java SoC. The biggest of the new HTC entrants, the Desire 700, carries a 1.2GHz quad-core Spreadtrum Shark chip, leaving only the Desire 300 in the tested hands of Qualcomm's 1GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4.
What's a tad unfortunate, however, is the seemingly obvious fact that HTC is actually using this new opportunity not to offer lower price points, but rather to increase margins, a strategy that's far less sure-footed. Whether this works out for the manufacturer eventually, however, will only be seen a few months from now.
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