HTC has reportedly axed plans for a Windows Phone-running smartphone with a 5-plus-inch display.
The reason? Well it is apparently because Microsoft’s mobile operating system can’t support a resolution high enough to enable the device to effectively compete in an incredibly competitive market.
Google’s Android operating system can support a resolution of 1080 horizontal pixels, while Microsoft’s newly released Windows Phone 8 supports only 720 – a considerable difference in a market where display sizes and clarity are highly touted selling points.
Citing a person familiar with the project, Bloomberg reported 17 December that HTC planned to introduce the phone next year. The phone’s cancellation delivers a blow to Microsoft, which is scrambling to win market share from Google and Apple. During the third quarter, Microsoft controlled a 2.4 percent share of global device sales, compared with iOS’s 14 percent and Android’s 72.4 percent share, according to Gartner.
An HTC spokesperson, when asked for comment, called the report a rumour and said that HTC had no comment. Microsoft likewise declined to comment on “rumours or speculation.”
The Galaxy S III also paved the way for Samsung to revisit the “phablet” – part phone, part tablet – form factor, which it did to great success with the 5.3-inch Galaxy Note and then to even greater success with the 5.5-inch Galaxy Note II. The latter feature displays with resolutions of 800 by 1280p and 720 by 1280p, respectively.
That HTC might back away from a 720p resolution device is understandable as it would be a considerable step backward from its most recently launched hero device, the HTC Droid DNA. The DNA features a 1080-by-1920p 5-inch display that’s the first with a true 1080p full HD super LCD 3.
The DNA is astonishingly crisp and attention-grabbing in a way that a 720p display has no hope of being. And in a market where brands – as HTC can attest – live and die by their ability to intrigue buyers, HTC can’t afford anything short of a head-turner.
In September, HTC and Microsoft introduced the Windows Phone 8X, a smartphone with a 4.3-inch display and a resolution of 720 by 1280p, and Nokia introduced the Lumia 920, which features a 4.5-inch display that seems to push the boundaries of what’s possible with the OS, advertising a 768-by-1280p display.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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