We asked, you told us: The new HTC U12 Plus is hot, but not

We asked about the HTC U12 Plus this week, and the fact that what we had to ask tells you part of the story with the once-behemoth Taiwanese smartphone maker. 

HTC has its long history with Android, but there’s been a long slow slide from an important brand to an alternative, and the problem that HTC doesn’t have the cut-through it once did.

Hence our simple poll question: Is the HTC U12 Plus hot, or not?

We could’ve thrown arguments at you from both sides, we could’ve fed you information, we could’ve guided the debated. But, we didn’t. We just wanted to hear your thoughts: hot, or not.

What’s immediately clear from the poll is that HTC doesn’t invoke as much interest as it deserves. The U12 Plus looks like a strong device, but our poll numbers fell off a cliff this week. We know that this kind of poll about a particular device or brand tends not to gain as many votes on broader trends or concepts that are more debateable, no matter what your budget or your brand of choice.

So, a lower vote makes some sense: if you haven’t seen the device you might not yet have an opinion, or you’re simply just invested in another brand and ecosystem so you hold off from contributing.

But our poll numbers from last week’s 65,000 plus in total fell down to around 25,000. YouTube poll numbers alone fell from 44,000 to 10,000. Ouch!

It’s not exactly rigorous hard science to present this as truly significant, but there’s only one theory that makes sene here: the HTC U12 Plus couldn’t even get a reaction. Even asking questions about being able to remap the LG G7’s Google Assistant button, another fringe sort of poll, did at least double those numbers.

Onto the results though, and for those that did vote, it’s actually a divergent set of results.

Here’s how you voted on the website, on our YouTube poll, and on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

The first result from our website poll shows a great win for HTC – nearly 80 percent think its hot! That’s a solid result. We’ve always been inclined to believe those that are voting on the website are a little more on the enthusiast side and very deeply interested in new phones and flagships. So that’s our theory on this positive result – the enthusiasts have found something they like. Will they buy it though?

Here’s what website voters said:

  • Definitely hot, HTC always makes great phones and it only lacks a headphone jack.
  • A great alternative for those of us who want an excellent quality phone with a heritage but which isn’t a Samsung or Apple. Sure, the initial cost will be prohibitive but all phones drop in $ after a couple of months.
  • HTC’s problem isn’t with their phones it is with their management.

From there though, only Instagram voters were in clear agreement. 63 percent said it was hot. The YouTubers delivered a slight win at 53 percent, Twitter users were line-ball at 51 percent hot, while the Facebook poll handed HTC an outright loss, with 55 percent voting not hot.

Here’s a sample of the comments these results:

  • U12 Plus carries a lot of nice features, but HTC prices themselves out of competition.
  • [The HTC] name alone doesn’t sell phones like Samsung and Apple do. People are loyal to names as much as they are to quality. HTC doesn’t command the power that it used to.
  • HTC doesn’t have the clout it used to. Need to target their pricing at the higher end of “mid-range” instead of Samsung/Apple price range.

And the usual comment if there’s a phone without a headphone jack, even if HTC bundle in wireless headphones, BoomSound, Hi-Fi Quad DAC… the list goes on:

  • No 3.5mm headphone jack so no buy.

HTC fighting FUD

One other interesting feature of the comments was that a number of comments weren’t actually sure of what HTC did offer, or voted based on misinformation.

Some people said HTC UI looked ugly and had too much bloatware. But for at least several generations, the HTC experience has been close to stock Android, with ever reducing bloatware, which could mean the phones aren’t being seen enough. Others argued about the phone being buttonless and a risk, although that too is a slight misnomer: the phone has buttons, but the buttons don’t click, they’re pressure-sensitive. That adds more modes to each button, and we’ll discuss exactly how that feels in our coming extended review.

But the takeaway is that HTC isn’t getting its message across clearly. And that people aren’t picking up the new phones – or maybe they can’t, considering the lack of retail or carrier relationships that HTC has in its pocket. And their price tag – some $270 more than the OnePlus 6 at RRP, and fighting with the Samsung Galaxy S9 and iPhones at the highest-of-high prices.

It’s easy for us to be on the outside, and many comments said they’d actually love nothing more than to see the company return to the top. But all we’re hearing is that HTC aren’t making it easy for themselves with their pricing a massive problem. Let us know down below your insights or thoughts on the results, and thanks for your votes and comments. See you next week!

Source: Android Zone

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Rumor: Mid-range Pixel could launch with Snapdragon 710 in 2019

A concept render of the Pixel 3 by Phone Designer

A concept render of the Pixel 3 by Phone Designer

Phone Designer

Google looks set to add some mid-range phones to the Pixel family.

Following rumors from earlier this year about a mid-range Pixel targeting India, a tweet from serial leaker Roland Quandt gives us a little insight into what to expect for next year.

According to Quandt, who has many verified leaks under his belt, Google is working on a “mobile” device that runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 710 chip.

The device would be released in the first half of next year, and Google has just started work on it.

While Quandt speculates that this device could be a Pixel phone, he doesn’t claim to have any specific info on what this device is, other than to say it’s “mobile”. That said, it seems unlikely that Google would put out a tablet, given it just (unceremoniously) yanked the tablet section from its Android website.

Presuming the device Roland Quandt heard about is indeed a new Pixel, it could be the second generation of the mid-range Pixel. The first generation could reportedly arrive in July or August of this year, specifically targeting India and other developing markets.

This early in the development cycle, everything is still in flux, so even if this rumor is spot on, the project could still change or even shut down in the future.

Snapdragon 710 is Qualcomm’s new chip for “upper mid-range” devices. It aims to offer high performance and a rich feature set to phones that sell in the $400-$500 range. The Xiaomi Mi 8 SE is the first phone that launched with Snapdragon 710 on board.

The predecessor to the Snapdragon 710 is the Snapdragon 660, found in the Vivo X21, Nokia 7 Plus, Xiaomi Mi Note 3, and HTC U12 Life.

Compared to the Snapdragon 660, the 710 will bring significant performance improvements, a 30 percent decrease in battery consumption, and support for advanced machine learning and other AI features.

Previous Pixel phones have all been high-end, with some variants of the Pixel 2 XL testing the $1000 limit. A Pixel device that sells for half of that could greatly expand Google’s hardware reach, at the cost of stacking up pressure on Android manufacturers.

Read next: Would a mid-range Pixel make sense?

What do you make of this rumor? Would you be interested in a mid-range Pixel?

Source: Android Zone

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