With a new smartphone lineup, HTC hopes to win hearts in Pakistan
The year was 1997. Mobile phones were being touted as one of the greatest mediums of change when two individuals H.T. Cho and Peter Chou teamed up with the daughter of one of Taiwan's richest men Cher Mi Wang. The trio subsequently formed an electronics company, aiming to innovate the mobile phone space with something more cutting edge: Personal Digital Assistant.
The company was named High Tech Computer Corporation. Today the world knows it as HTC.
Constantly pushing boundaries since its inception, obvious examples of which are i-mates, XDA development, WindowsMobile, Android, QWERTY keyboards, touch screens, Xperia, HTC has been credited with establishing several firsts.
But like its contemporaries Nokia and RIM (Blackberry), it started to lose ground with the dawn of iOs and Android.
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Despite its best efforts, HTC failed to outshine the rest of the competition in camera technology. A massive blow to HTC was the departure of its lead designer Jonah Becker last year in May 2015 — the second person to do so in less than year.
These setbacks led to massive dips in the vendor's popularity, which it has been struggling to reclaim. Recently, it announced to re-enter old markets, including Pakistan.
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For HTC loyalists in Pakistan, this news was indeed welcome. On May 15, 2016, the company launched its HTC Pakistan page on Facebook. After a number of teasers and trailers, it held a launch event on May 25, 2016 at Marriot Hotel, attended by celebrities and top industry professionals.