HTC One With A Bike
Reminder: don't text and ride.
Dan Nosowitz
But that's changing. The HTC One, and especially the contract-free version of the One released this month with stock Android, like Google intended, is good. It might be the best phone I've ever used. The tide is turning, and that means one thing.
It's time for rich people to gentrify Android.
HTC One on the Stoop: Dan Nosowitz
But even bad neighborhoods have strengths. Android has flexibility iOS doesn't; there's only one iPhone, but there are dozens of Android phones at any given point. You have space to stretch out, if you want it. And slowly, Google and the Android hardware makers are realizing what landlords and shop owners in up-and-coming neighborhoods realize: your profit margins are an awful lot bigger when you sell to rich folks.
The HTC One, with its big, gorgeous aluminum body, its vivid and spacious screen, its wildly superior versions of GMail, Google Maps, and the Chrome browser, its voice control that crushes Siri in every way possible, and its genuinely futuristic and exciting Google Now, is a perfect trigger for Android gentrification. It's a badass, affordable loft in a neighborhood you'd been eyeing but couldn't quite bring yourself to move to. That makes it different from the other top-tier Android phones on the market, like the Samsung Galaxy S IV, a more-of-the-same sequel to a phone we didn't much like last year. iPhone users might look at a Galaxy S and think, "Why ditch my comfortable, luxurious iPhone ecosystem for a chintzy plastic Samsung phone with desperately overstuffed featuresets?" It'd be like moving from a comfortable old brownstone to a brand-new, spacious apartment in an up-and-coming neighborhood...that's made with paper-thin drywall and the cheapest possible kitchen appliances. And a clothes dryer that singes your underwear. But the HTC One changes all that: it's something new and perhaps even better.
HTC One in the Inner City: Dan Nosowitz
What happens to the lower-income types when Android starts marketing more heavily to the wealthy? I'm not sure. Maybe nothing! Just because there's previously un-accessed profit to be made on the high end of things doesn't mean manufacturers will stop catering to the (also profitable) lower end. There are hardware manufacturers who have shown no interest at all in the more premium side of the business, like ZTE, Kyocera, and Haier. Or maybe another platform, like Windows Phone or BlackBerry, will start marketing more heavily to the lower-income segment.
But assuming the HTC One sells well, this could be the first major step towards Android gentrification. Some day, the rich kids who've grown up with Android will look back at the HTC One. "That was when my parents knew that Android was safe," they'll say.
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