Sunday, February 26, 2012
HTC’s Answer To iCloud: A New Deal With Dropbox

Slotted in the middle of HTC’s Android phone announcements  tonight in Barcelona, the CEO of HTC, Peter Chou, revealed a new  development that is the handset maker’s answer to Apple’s iCloud: a deal  with Dropbox, currently the name to watch in cloud storage.
HTC says that those who buy an HTC One, the company’s new flagship  device, will get 25 gigabytes of storage free for two years –  a big  deal, considering that currently it costs $9.99 per month for 50  gigabytes of storage (two gigabytes is the only free service offered).
The storage, Chou said, would be enough to store 10,000 high quality  photos, and much more besides: the news was unveiled at the same time  that HTC announced a series of content and service enhancements for its  new line of Android devices, including improved cameras; a new music  service that included an extension of its Beats audio service from last  year; enhanced video services; and enhanced integration to use the  device in-car.
This is all part of HTC’s big fightback strategy, after last year  seeing a decline in its momentum in smartphone sales against Samsung and  Apple.
It long ago realized that in order to compete against Apple it needs  to have compelling devices but also compelling services — and that is  what it is trying to aim for with Dropbox and the rest of the content  announcements it made today.
We’re interviewing HTC execs later and getting a hands on with the devices and will update more as we learn it.














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