I also received the same Nougat update (2.41.709.3) today. It was an uneventful procedure, and I even didn’t have to remove my SD card to be able to do it. So far, no restarts nor any bug that I could be aware of.
I also believe my HTC 10 was directed to the HTC homeland (Taiwan) or to Hong Kong, because I had to do its first setup in Chinese language -Thanks to Google Translate for its ability to translate photos, otherwise I wouldn’t had been able to setup this-.
However, this update makes me wonder what is the real situation at HTC.
Just four days ago, HTC announced that they stopped the Nougat rollout “because it was crippled with bugs”. Is HTC that good to fix bugs this fast to already restart the rollout?
Next, is very evident a region preference for HTC, where they deployed Nougat months ago, and even already offered a second Nougat update. For the US there was Nougat, and monthly security updates for the Marshmallow version. As far as I know, the rest of the world gradually stopped receiving updates (on my HTC, my version was stuck on the September 2016 security patch).
Curiously, in the US there was no general outcry about Nougat “filled with bugs” on this or any related forum that I know and, as we can see with this update, the Nougat rollout was not really stopped. Are these lies or middle truths? Could be that HTC is busy with other more profitable projects, so other stuff is not a priority anymore?
Some user in this forum thinks that HTC chose the US to be its favorite place because he thinks is the only place in the world were people is able to buy high-end smartphones, while the poor rest of the world can only afford middle or low-level ones. Aside of being an untrue and very distorted vision, wasn’t the US the place where one major carrier dropped the HTC 10 due to, well, lack of sales?
If the HTC 10 sales were lackluster (in the US and all the world), why did they stop offering timely updates and security patches for most of the world? I can understand when high sales unlocked smartphones decide to rollout updates for different regions at different weeks, because its company has not enough servers or elastic services to serve all customers at once. But with a smartphone that had low sales, what’s the point of not giving access to their already created updates for all its customers?
So many questions, and so disappointed.