HTC angers users with Fantastic Four push notification ad
Users on Reddit are quite upset at HTC for pushing a Fantastic Four movie ad into their notifications. Ads are something everyone hates, but are sometimes required to cut upfront cost. That is why you would never expect to see them in a device you just paid over $500 for.
HTC has not had a good year and is clearly hurting for cash. We have already seen them roll out BlinkFeed ads and now it looks like they may be adding push notification ads as well. Some of you may remember a few years ago apps in the Google Play Store could push ads to your notifications, but they got so annoying Google eventually banned them entirely. Why HTC would think users wouldn’t mind these types of ads is beyond me.
The reports are users with HTC One M7, M8, or M9’s are receiving the ad. Many of the Reddit comments are talking about never buying an HTC device again or getting rid of their current HTC phone because of the recent ad changes.
Now to clear some things up the ad does say “Fantastic Four Theme”, implying HTC is marketing a new theme they have available to download similar to what Samsung did with the Avengers themes. They aren’t directly saying go see the movie and that is all like a regular ad would do.
How ever you feel about the ad it’s easy to turn off. If you have one of the listed HTC devices head to the settings app > sound & notification > app notifications > sense home and turn off notifications. You will no longer be notified for these types of ads ever again.
Source: Reddit
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HTC spams One M8 and M9 owners through push notifications
Users on Reddit are reporting that HTC, one of the biggest Android OEMs in the world, is spamming them with notifications for the newest Fantastic Four movie. The rub comes from a push notification that has shown up in the notification tray for a new theme that users can download. The theme is directly tied to the new Fantastic Four reboot and even though it’s a theme, its a pretty blatant advertisement with the release date easily seen in two places, even in the thumbnail.
Owners of the One smartphone are obviously not too happy about this. Reddit user impersonaljesus, who first reported the issue, posted in the comments that “I paid for my phone and deserve an ad-free experience. HTC has officially lost me as a customer.” Many others chimed in with similar feelings of displeasure with some going as far as rooting their phone and installing a custom ROM to avoid the possibility of this happening in the future.
The ad appears to come from “HTC Sense Home” which is the launcher included on HTC’s phones. Even though people are using third party launchers like Nova Launcher the ad will still show up. Like most applications in Android you can go into your app settings and turn off notifications from this app but you may miss out on other, actually important, notifications about your phone in the future.
Recently HTC has been struggling financially. The HTC One M9 has not done well, as many users see the improvements made in the phone, not worthy of an upgrade. These advertisements are obviously a way to raise cash but you have to wonder if it’s going to cost HTC in the long run by losing customers.
Source: Reddit
The post HTC spams One M8 and M9 owners through push notifications appeared first on AndroidGuys.
HTC pushes Fantastic Four notification ads to its One handsets

We have all probably accepted the need for advertisements to help pay for our favourite free services, but HTC seems to have upset a number of its customers by recently using push notifications for advertising purposes. A number of HTC One M9, M8 and M7 owners are reporting a notification advertisement for the Fantastic Four movie.
Poorly disguised as a new recommended theme for the handset, the advertisement is also plastered with the release date for the film, along with a couple of company logos. What is perhaps most jarring about the advertisement is that it’s up front and center on the display, on a phone that retails with a $600+ price tag already.
The advertisement seems to be tied in with HTC’s Sense Home and Blinkfeed technology. Customers using other third party launchers don’t appear to have seen the same notification.
A couple of months ago, HTC already openly announced that it would be bringing advertisements to its software in select countries, but these were supposed to appear alongside regular news feed pieces. This is the first that we have heard of notification based HTC ads.
The US, UK, Germany, Taiwan and China were listed as taking place in the pilot program. At the time, HTC stated that it would be implementation a way for customers to opt out, but there doesn’t appear to be a setting implemented directly to address HTC specific advertisements yet. Some affected users have simply been disabling Sense Home notifications and that seems to do the trick, but it’s far from ideal.
See also: HTC will soon bring advertisements to BlinkFeed in select markets
HTC has been struggling to keep its mobile business in the black over the past few years, so the company may see advertising as a way to help boost its disappointing revenue. However, judging by the responses, this may end up putting off existing customers and might hurt the company’s reputation in the longer run.
Have you spotted the ad on your HTC One? Do you think this ad is intrusive or did you just swipe it away and forget about it?
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HTC One M9 receiving Android 5.1 in select regions tomorrow
Many have been waiting for the release of Android 5.1 Lollipop for the HTC One M9 and it looks like for some of you the wait is over. Starting tomorrow the 5.1 update will be rolling out to the EMEA.
For those of you unaware, EMEA stands for “Europe, Middle East and Africa”. This news comes directly from HTC Product and Service Director at HTC EMEA Graham Wheeler’s Twitter.
Android 5.1 coming to EMEA HTC One m9 devices tomorrow…enjoy😃
— graham wheeler (@wheelergd) August 3, 2015
Source: Graham Wheeler (Twitter)
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HTC One M9 receiving Android 5.1 update in EMEA starting tomorrow

Waiting patiently for your HTC One M9 to get Android 5.1 Lollipop? We know it’s hard to be patient, but many of you will soon be blessed with the OTA update. HTC Product and Service Director at HTC EMEA Graham Wheeler just tweeted the upgrade would be coming tomorrow for EMEA HTC One M9 devices. Just in case you are out of the loop on this one, EMEA stands for “Europe, Middle East and Africa”, so get ready if you are an HTC One M9 user in any of the included markets.
This comes as great news to many of you, as the update is arriving a little late for you. I mean, the Developer Edition got Android 5.1 last month. Even US carrier versions got it before the EMEA editions, with AT&T, T-Moble and Sprint iterations all up to date!
Android 5.1 coming to EMEA HTC One m9 devices tomorrow…enjoy
— graham wheeler (@wheelergd) August 3, 2015
The Android 5.1 update will grant you a healthy list of improvements. Among them are Quick Settings improvements, upgrades to the Contacts app, new animations, system volume tweaks and more. Of course, many of the new features will change depending on your device, but you should all at least see most changes Google baked into Android 5.1 Lollipop.
As it goes with any update, we will likely see this one rolling out periodically. Sit tight if you don’t see your notification right away. And try not to destroy your screen by checking for updates every few seconds! And don’t forget to hit the comments when you get the update – let us know how it’s treating you!

Awesome HTC videos!
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Get a brand new Nexus 9 for just $350

While the HTC Nexus 9 has garnered some mixed reviews in its life, there’s still a lot of positives to be said about the tablet and it is easily one of the best Android tablets on there on the market today. For those looking to pick one up without paying full price, right now it is being offered from Ebay seller Gravitybuys for just $349.99, a pretty significant discount over the list price of $479 (27% off).
With the exception of HTC’s previous Hot Deals sale price, this is one of the cheapest prices we’ve ever seen the Nexus 9 listed for. And yes, this is in brand new condition in original packing and not a refurbished unit.
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As a refresher, the Nexus 9 is powered by a dual-core Nvidia Tegra K1 processor clocked at 2.3GHz with 2GB RAM, and boasts an 8.9-inch display with a 2048 x 1536 resolution. Other specs include an 8MP rear camera, a 1.2MP front facing camera, 32GB storage, Bluetooth v4.1 with apt-X, NFC, dual-band WI-Fi and a non-removable 6700 mAh battery. Android Lollipop will also come pre-installed out of the box, though you can expect the Android M upgrade to roll out sometime shortly after its final release.
If you are all interested in picking up the Nexus 9 for just $350, you better act quickly, as the seller says supplies are limited. What do you think, anyone picking this one up?
Mid-range HTC Desire 728 leaks in photos, shows off dual front facing speakers
HTC’s upcoming budget-friendly Desire 728 has leaked in photos showing pretty much every look and angle of the device. It’s fairly in line with HTC’s mid-range lineup, including the plastic body and dual front facing speakers. The bezels on the device are a little smaller than what we’re used to seeing, though, even though it does have those signature BoomSound speakers, so maybe HTC is trying to figure out a way to include great sound without making a device too tall and unwieldy. Other than that, though, the Desire 728 looks like a solid phone, just without anything particularly exciting about the design.
Specs are likely to include a 1.3 GHz MediaTek processor, 2 GB of RAM, 16 GB of internal storage plus a microSD card slot, a 13 megapixel camera, and a 2,800 mAh battery. The screen looks like a 720p 5.5-inch display, so despite the smaller bezels this definitely won’t be a small phone by any stretch.
We probably won’t ever see this one outside of China, but it should give us a glimpse at where HTC is going with their newer iterations of Desire phones.
source: Anzhuo
via: Phone Arena
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The biggest 3 challenges facing major Android OEM’s
There’s a fair bit of doom and gloom in the smartphone market right now. Samsung just announced its fifth quarterly drop in profits in a row as mobile division profits fell 37.6% compared to last year. HTC is posting a net loss of more $250 million. Sony’s mobile division lost $184 million. Even an apparent success like LG only managed a 1% sales increase in mobile.
You may imagine the difference is being swallowed up by the big Chinese players, but Lenovo’s net profit fell, even as revenue rose. It says that Motorola, acquired from Google last year, is on course to be profitable again by the end of the year or early 2016. Huawei and Xiaomi have increased market share, but it’s not clear how profitable they actually are. We know that Xiaomi’s margins are tight.
What’s the problem here? We just saw a report stating that worldwide smartphone shipments are up 12% year-on-year for Q2 of 2015. Why isn’t everyone making money? There are three major hurdles that are tripping everyone up right now.
Falling prices
This is the statistic that’s hurting everyone the most. We talked about the race to the bottom before, but the fall in prices is extreme. The average selling price (ASP) of an Android smartphone has been dropping every year and it’s lower than ever now. It was $441 back in 2010, and it was just $254 last year. This year it will be lower.
Margins are being squeezed. It’s impossible for manufacturers to make the same profit as before when the ASP is dropping, unless they can find some other way to cut costs. What has actually been happening is that costs have increased, but we’ll get to that in a minute.
How to differentiate
What makes one smartphone stand out over the others? Commoditization has led to a smartphone market where devices are broadly very similar, if not identical. Innovation has slowed to crawl, it may even be sliding backwards. What’s the last major feature that was added to a flagship smartphone that you had never seen before? Biometric security, waterproofing, a heart rate sensor? What we’re mostly seeing now is an incremental improvement on the last model, but in terms of feature set, we’re actually seeing some movement back the way – to reduce features.

The other way that OEMs can get noticed is to spend on marketing, but it’s hugely expensive and it’s difficult to accurately measure the return. It’s also ridiculously easy to get it wrong and blow a chunk of cash on an ineffective campaign. It’s hard not to mention HTC here. A double whammy of terrible advertising and releasing almost the same exact flagship phone as the previous year seems to have hit the company hard.
Most of the major Android OEMs have also been guilty of releasing loads of different models that aren’t all that different. It’s confusing. It may also hurt the brand for someone like Samsung, trying to sell at the high end, if a customer’s first experience is of a budget, entry-level device that’s less than perfect. When they renew and want a better phone, they probably won’t choose Samsung. Is it worth the small profit on a budget device if you lose the customer when they trade up?
Rising costs
The falling ASP would be okay if the cost of making smartphones also kept dropping, but it isn’t. OEMs have been adding features to try and differentiate and it has increased the cost of every handset made. Samsung is the best example here because it kept trying to pack in more and more features. The Galaxy S5 cost $256 to produce. The Galaxy S4 cost $236 to produce. Yet they were sold at the same price.
A few manufacturers have moved to cut costs, or they’ve been forced to ignore certain new features in order to keep costs down. The move to make smartphones tougher, for example, by adding waterproofing, has been reversed by Samsung and ignored by others. Is it possible to make a superphone that’s feature-packed and still turn a healthy profit?
While Samsung has been able to charge a premium for the S6 Edge, OnePlus had to cut features to meet a tight price envelope
The pace must be impacting here too. Samsung’s Galaxy S3 was able to keep selling for years after release. As the numbers ramped up Samsung will surely have managed to cut the cost of production. If new phones never achieve the numbers then those costs won’t fall, but discounting still has to kick in as a phone ages or nobody will buy it – they’ll just buy one of the latest releases instead.
Why is Apple different?
The WSJ reported on the latest research report from Canaccord Genuity which suggested that Apple took 92% of the total smartphone industry profits last quarter, which is actually down from 93% the quarter before. Samsung took 15% of the profits, and that fact they don’t add up is because many others made a loss. Samsung sold 20 million more smartphones than Apple, and yet made a fraction of the profit.

How is Apple doing it? If you look at our three major challenges, you can see how Apple is bucking every one of them. The ASP of an iPhone right now is $687. It’s heading towards three times the Android ASP. Apple stands out because it has a tiny all-premium range, runs its own exclusive platform, and has a strong brand. The cost of producing an iPhone 6, according to IHS, is around $200, just like the iPhone 5S and the iPhone 5 before it.
Not bad for us
There’s something else important that’s worth remembering in all this. What’s good for OEMs isn’t necessarily what’s good for us. We want the best smartphones we can get at the lowest prices we can get them and that’s exactly where Android has been going. But it might not be able to go much further down that road.
There’s still room for premium brands and niche markets with special feature sets. There are still profits being made. But the days of flagships hurtling towards ever more impressive specs and features without a jump in cost are surely numbered.
HTC Desire 828w passes through TENAA

HTC’s Desire range continues to expand at a pretty rapid rate, as a new Desire 828w handset has appeared passing through China’s TENAA certification center.
The Desire 828w appears to be a very familiar mid-range design. The certification states that the smartphone will come with a 5.5-inch 1080p display backed up by a familiar Qualcomm Snapdragon 615 processor and 2GB of RAM. The phone is also listed with 16GB of internal storage, a microSD card slot for 128GB of extra space, a 13 megapixel rear camera, 4 “Ultrapixel” front facing camera and Android 5.1 Lollipop on board with HTC’s Sense 6.0 software.
Hardware wise, the phone appears virtually identical to the Desire 826, which HTC launched earlier in the year. However, the pictures from TENAA suggest that the phone has undergone a bit of a redesign. The phone has adopted much rounder edges and dual speaker/microphone grills, although it’s not clear if the phone features two front facing speakers underneath. The smartphone measures 157.7×78.8×7.9mm and weighs 150g.
HTC’s Desire Range:
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The phone comes in black, blue, gold, grey, orange, red and white color options but we don’t have any pricing information yet. We will have to wait and see if the Desire 828w will appear outside of the Chinese market.
HTC Desire 828w gets TENAA certification in China
A device from HTC belonging to the Desire line received certification from TENAA in China. The new Desire handset will reportedly have model number 828w. The handset looks to be a revision of the HTC Desire 826 which was released just a year ago. This variant, called the Desire 828w, comes with Android 5.1.1 out of the box and includes HTC’s signature BoomSound front-facing speakers. The handset will be offered in both single and dual SIM versions.
The TENAA certification shows it will be 7.9mm thin and weigh only 150 grams. HTC will most likely release the handset in a variety of colors like its predecessor. Beginning with black and white and adding additional color options such as Red, Orange, Deep Blue, Gray and Gold to select markets at a later date.
As of now, there is no word on pricing or availability
Source: TENAA
Via: TechGadgetsz
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