YotaPhone Russian Brand Smartphone Dual Side Screen

YoTa Phone
Russian expertise firm Yota Devices commenced the world's first dual-screen wireless phone on Wednesday, breathing fresh air into the fast-growing and competitive smartphone market. The YotaPhone has two partitions — a 4.3-inch feel computer display with a well known Android interface on the front and a curved Kindle-like electronic paper brandish on the turn around side. Both screens are defended by the state-of-the-art scratchproof Gorilla Glass. The back computer display is conceived to display e-books, alerts and text messages. As it only utilises power to generate new images, the telephone electric battery lasts up to 85 hours in e-book reading mode. Even when the phone is switched off, the image on the back screen does not go away — a befitting feature for brandishing a boarding-pass barcode, a map or just a wallpaper.

The device is not just another smartphone, Yota Device's chief boss Vlad Martynov said at the launch. It is "a new user know-how" that will change the way persons use their teletelephone. Founded in 2011 to make mobile connectivity devices for Yota, a personal wireless internet provider, the groundwork of Yota Devices' enterprise is LTE modems and routers, where the business has a worldwide market share of 6 per hundred. The YotaPhone proceeds on sale this month. It will be available in Russia for 19,990 rubles ($600), and in Austria, France, Germany and Spain for 499 euros ($680). Next year sales will start in the Middle East at a similar price. Currently, there are no plans to try the U.S. assesset.

"If we really strike the assess then in two to three years every person will be copying us, and we will be joyous" Martynov said. Artem Lutfullin, reviewer of mobile-review.com, although, poured freezing water on that idea, pointing out that products with alike functionality currently live, such as wireless telephone situations with inbuilt electrical devices paper displays on the back. Bayram Annakov, from Moscow-based wireless submission developer Empatika, said that while the idea of the always-on electrical devices paper display sounds intriguing, it has yet to be seen if the market will adopt it.

"Most likely, the apparatus is not proposed to become a smartphone as such, but as a platform upon which to deal applications and services apt for the back screen," Annakov said. Yota Devices' goal was to conceive a product that was different anything additional on the market, and they did well, said Lutfullin. YotaPhone cannot and will not contend against the market managers, he said — it has conceived a market segment of its own.

Yota may have a good possibility — smartphone sales grew 44.5 percent year-on-year in the first half of 2013 to come to 77.5 billion rubles, according to data from telecoms giant MTS.

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