HTC, Like Apple and RIM, May Want Its Own Mobile OS
Smartphone maker HTC is considering
whether to equip its phones with its own operating system, Bloomberg reported
April 13.
"We continue to assess, but that requires a few conditions to justify [having
our own OS]," HTC CFO Cheng Hui-ming told
Bloomberg.
HTC is the manufacturer of several popular
smartphones running the mobile Google OS, Android. Among them are the Google
Nexus One, the T-Mobile myTouch 3G, the Droid Eris and the HTC
Evo-the world's first 3G/4G Android handset. HTC
additionally offers devices, such as the HD2, that run a mobile OS from
Microsoft.
Offering an OS of its own, as Apple and BlackBerry maker Research In Motion
have successfully done, would enable HTC to be less reliant on outside parties.
"There are multiple factors to be considered together, rather than a simple
statement as to own or not to own," Cheng said.
HTC's consideration of a mobile OS of its own is
likely to give new legs to reports that HTC is interested in purchasing the
for-sale Palm. While it's been suggested that HTC could benefit from Palm's
patent portfolio, Palm's mobile platform, webOS, is its more obvious best
asset.
"WebOS
is a good, modern OS, and it could be a strong competitor to Android-based
devices given a proper level of marketing investment, especially in the
home markets of the acquirer," analyst Jack Gold, with J. Gold Associates,
wrote in an April 13 report on possible Palm suitors.
Morgan Stanley analysts believe that webOS could enable Motorola to have a more
long-term mobile device business, Bloomberg reported, and finds Nokia to also
be a possible fit.
Lenovo, Microsoft, LG, Dell and Samsung have been named as possible, though not
likely, purchasers for Palm.
