With a strategy that seems to be unique to HTC, today in Taiwan HTC announced the HTC Butterfly S. This device is the successor to the HTC Butterfly which we reviewed less than favourably earlier in the year and as per the original Butterfly the specs of the S version are impressive.
The HTC Butterfly S comes with a Snapdragon 600 clocked at 1.9GHz, 2GB of RAM, a 5″ 1920 x 1080 fullHD display, UltraPixel camera, front facing Boom Sound speakers, 16GB onboard storage with a microSD card slot and 3200mAh battery. The HTC Butterfly S will run Android with Sense 5 however they have not specified the version of Android.
Late last year HTC announced they were going to slow the release of new phones and concentrate on one flagship. Then in February when they announced the HTC One we were led to believe this was to be their 2013 flagship. So where does this leave the Butterfly S? The specs on it seem to be an upgrade from those of the One. A massively improved battery, an sd card slot, a higher clocked processor, and now available in four different colours – Red, White, Black and Grey – make it a definite player in the high-end phone category, although a lack of LTE in the Butterfly may hamper its chances somewhat.
So which is it HTC? Do you still have a “One phone” strategy? Where does the Butterfly S fit in? Have you changed your mind about the one phone idea and would rather just release phones with incremental upgrades every few months thereby keeping their flagship fresh and at the top of the heap? Time will tell what HTC’s plans are but nothing they do would surprise me. One thing for sure though (in my opinion), they still make the most beautiful phones around. The Butterfly S is no exception to this.
As the original HTC Butterfly was never released officially in Australia it’s not definite that we will see the Butterfly S here in Australia. So far there isn’t any news on an Australian release, nor for any other country but we’ll be asking HTC Australia and will keep you posted if we hear anything.
If you picked up the HTC One would you be annoyed at HTC for releasing a slightly better phone less than a few months later? If you were thinking of getting a HTC One will you now consider this instead?