drexappeal
Extreme Android User
That would be fabulous - but - where do you stand on the idea that HTC will be protecting the ThunderBolt roll-out on Verizon?
If the Evo 3D release is somehow far superior to the Bolt, and then the older Evo goes Gingerbread, that would create a lot of stir for Verizon customers.
Would HTC do that?
I can't tell and could see it going both ways...
From a HTC perspective, as far as strategic marketing is concerned, it would be advantageous for them to keep all their newest phones up to date as far as OS is concerned...simply to keep sales up due to product support and reliability. The hard part, if I were to look at it from HTC's view, would be to determine "priorities" as far as what product would increase sales more effectively, without losing their overall customer fan base on other providers (when a choice is made). HTC phones that are being released on both AT&T and Verizon will always have to compete with the iPhone. The question at that point, for HTC, would be if prioritizing upgrades to their phones on AT&T and Verizon would cause customers to choose their Android phones over the iPhone. Now, if you throw Sprint into the mix...Sprint doesn't have an iPhone available for their customers to potentially choose over the HTC Android phones. To a certain extent, HTC can corner the market as far as Sprint customers are concerned and truly benefit with regards to sales on that front. Currently, there aren't any Motorola Android phones on Sprint that can compete and Samsung's track record for product support (e.g. The Epic) has not proven to be as dedicated. Now, if the trend on Verizon and AT&T proves that people are more and more choosing HTC Android phones over the iPhone, that would change things dramatically, but I can't imagine that HTC doesn't take the iPhone sales, on those two providers, into consideration.
Can you imagine how much boost in sales there would be for both Sprint and HTC, if the EVO 3D is somehow better than the Thunderbolt and the original EVO is updated to Gingerbread? Even though it would probably cause a hit to Thunderbolt sales, HTC can always make a pretty good argument that Sprint can move a lot more units than Verizon, simply because Sprint doesn't have the iPhone to compete with.
Again, I'm really just speaking from a sales and marketing standpoint and this is purely my opinion, but if I were involved in HTC's sales & marketing team, I would surely point out that with Sprint (although many would view it as the lesser network to AT&T and Verizon) HTC wouldn't have any big time competition to deal with as compared to AT&T and Verizon. I think Samsung dropped the ball as far as the Epic is concerned with regards to support and HTC proved to be on top of things as far as providing support for the EVO. I just can't see HTC ignoring how many units they moved with the EVO (which was pretty much an "unknown" as far as how much it would live up to the hype) on a network that was supposed to be "inferior" to AT&T and Verizon.