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HTC president Jason Mackenzie shows the new HTC One during a launch event in New York, February 19, 2013. HTC hopes the new BlinkFeed feature in the new phone will differentiate it from other Android phones in the market. Image Credit: REUTERS

London/Taipei: Taiwan’s HTC Corp has unveiled the new smartphone that it hopes will set it apart from the crowd of Google Android devices on the market and help it make up ground lost to Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Apple Inc.

It has distinguished the phone, the HTC One, from rival Android devices by using new software — the BlinkFeed feature — to replace icons on the home screen with a personalised stream of news articles, social networking updates, photos and video.

HTC is also billing it as the first smartphone with a built-in remote control function, opening a window into a potential new business model for phone vendors and cable TV operators.

HTC is in discussions with cable operators in different countries, and hopes to offer a more interactive package for consumers by transforming the phone into a remote control for TVs, set-top boxes and receivers, according to analysts who attended a conference with HTC on Tuesday. The company declined to comment on whether it was in talks.

“The new TV connectivity feature inspires new imagination regarding how the smartphone and TV space may evolve,” said CK Lu, an analyst for Gartner based in Taipei. “It allows for deep collaboration,” he said.

Possibilities include co-developing apps and bundle-selling by smartphone makers and cable operators, Lu said, which would expand sales channels.

HTC was an early, and successful, maker of smartphones based on Android, but it has been eclipsed by the increasing dominance of Samsung, which Gartner said made more than 42 per cent of Android smartphones in the fourth quarter.

Disappointing

Android is widening its lead in smartphone operating systems, with devices running the software capturing nearly 70 per cent of the market last quarter, Gartner said last week.

Apple is in second place with 21 per cent, while Blackberry and Windows Phone, which Nokia is pinning its hopes on, trailed with 3.5 per cent and 3 per cent, respectively.

HTC, however, has failed to capitalise on Android’s dominance. Its share of mobile phone sales fell to 1.8 per cent of the market last year, down from 2.4 per cent in 2011, according to Gartner, and delivered disappointing first-quarter sales guidance early this month after reporting a 91 per cent plunge in fourth-quarter net profit.

HTC launched its new device, which features a 4.7 inch screen and quad-core processor, days before the mobile phone industry’s biggest gathering in Barcelona.

Analysts said that the new smartphone would help HTC to differentiate its brand from the typical Android offering but that competition from Samsung remained the biggest threat.

“HTC One is the best Android smartphone for the time being, but consumers will wait till they see Galaxy 4S, which is expected to launch in mid-March, to decide to buy or not,” said Birdy Lu, an analyst at Daiwa Capital in Taipei.

HTC said the device would be available in more than 80 countries from March.

Shares of HTC closed down 1.6 per cent on Wednesday in Taiwan, versus a 9 per cent rise in the broader market