Showing posts with label Lenovo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lenovo. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 August 2015

Lenovo A2010 India Cheapest 4G Smartphone Launched At Rs 4990

Lenovo ने लॉन्‍च किया इंडिया का सबसे सस्‍ता 4G स्‍मार्टफोन4.5 इंच की है डिस्‍प्‍ले
लेनेवो कंपनी ने अपने इस नये स्‍मार्टफोन A2010 में एंड्रायड का ऑपरेटिंग सिस्‍टम दिया है। इसमें आपको एंड्रायड का लेटेस्‍ट लॉलीपॉप ओएस मिलेगा। वहीं इस हैंडसेट में आपको 4.5 इंच की डिस्‍प्‍ले मिलेगी। इसके अलावा अगर इस हैंडसेट के प्रोसेसर पर गौर करें तो इसमें आपको 1.0 GHz का 64-bit quad-core MediaTek MT6735m प्रोसेसर मिलेगा। वहीं A2010 में आपको 1जीबी रैम मिलेगी। अगर इसकी स्‍टोरेज क्षमता की बात करें तो इसमें 8जीबी की इंटरनल मेमारी मिलेगी। और 32जीबी तक माइक्रोएसडी कार्ड की सुविधा है।

5 एमपी का रियर कैमरा
लेनेवो कंपनी ने अपने इस नये हैंडसेट A2010 को काफी स्‍टाईलिश बनाया ह‍ै। इसका बेहतरीन लुक यूजर्स को अट्रैक्‍ट कर सकता है। इसमें आपको 5 एमपी का रियर कैमरा मिलेगा, जिसमें की एलईडी फ्लैश होगा। इसके साथ ही 2एमपी का फ्रंट कैमरा भी उपलब्‍ध है। http://inextlive.jagran.com/lenovo-a2010-india-cheapest-4g-smartphone-launched-at-rs-4990-201508200010

Source: Tech News

Wednesday, 12 August 2015

Lenovo sold over 3 lakh units of K3 Note in India in just one month

In its each flash sale at Flipkart, the company registered a huge sale of its hot-seller product within seconds.
Priced at Rs 9,999, the Lenovo K3 Note sports a 5.5-inch Full HD display with 1080 x 1920 pixels of resolution and 401 ppi pixel density.

It comes with 64-bit 1.7GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6572 processor, ARM MALI-T760 GPU coupled with 2GB of RAM. The device supports 4G and runs on Android 5.0 Lollipop with a layer of its own Vibe UI. See more - http://post.jagran.com/lenovo-sold-over-3-lakh-units-of-k3-note-in-india-in-just-one-month-1439372764

Source:Tech News

Wednesday, 22 July 2015

Lenovo K3 Note: 5.5-inch display, 13MP camera, 2GB RAM, 16 GB internal storage and more

The K3 Note sports 5-inch full-HD (1080x1920 pixels) display and is powered by a 64-bit 1.5GHz octa-core MediaTek MT6572 processor backed by 2GB of RAM. The smartphone runs Android 5.0 Lollipop OS and offers 16GB of inbuilt storage which can be expandable upto 32 GB via microSD card.

The Lenovo K3 Note packs a 13-megapixel rear camera with LED flash and a 5-megapixel front shooter.  On connectivity front, the device supports 4G (TD-LTE/ LTE), Wi-Fi, GPS/ A-GPS, Bluetooth, and Micro-USB. The smartphone gets its juice from 3000mAh battery and will be available to buy via flash sale on Flipkart.


As per CMR’s India quarterly data, 4G-LTE device shipments had grown 108 percent to 2.2 million units for the January-March quarter. Lenovo also sells A7000 smartphone at Rs 8,999 in India.

Lenovo aims to be among the top three smartphone players in the country in the next few quarters as the Chinese technology major expands its product portfolio and increases presence in the offline market.

Source: Tech News

Monday, 24 February 2014

Lenovo, LG named as Microsoft’s Windows Phone partners

Representational picture
These new Windows Phone 8 partners will supplement the existing Windows Phone partners HTC, Samsung and Huawei, according to company officials who shared the updated list at the MWC show.

These changes announced on Monday will certainly add more appeal and higher volume to the platform around the world. The changes are good for Microsoft to indirectly address growing concerns that its upcoming acquisition of Nokia's device division would limit the interest of outside manufacturers.

Microsoft also announced details about the next Windows Phone update, presumably 8.1, which should be arriving in spring 2014. It is believed that it will bring support for low-end devices (such as those with 512MB of RAM and 16GB of storage), as well as better support for non-touch devices.

The new version of the platform will also support phones with Snapdragon 200 and 400 chipsets, as well as dual SIM devices, paving way for low and mid-range device makers.

JPN

Thursday, 13 February 2014

ThinkPad turnaround provides blueprint for Lenovo’s Motorola handset business

Reporting third-quarter profit that witnessed an increase of 29 percent, Lenovo's chief executive warned the drive to turn around the Motorola handset business it bought from Google Inc and the computer server unit that it bought from IBM will squeeze earnings in the short term.

For Yang, the pain may only last "a couple of quarters" after the deals close, he said, and is worth it: though October-December personal computer sales were strong, the aggressive acquisitions are a key plank in Lenovo's search for future sources of growth as the broader desktop PC market shrinks and computer users go mobile.

"In the short term (the deals) will have a negative impact on performance," Yang said in a telephone interview after the earnings were announced. Lenovo, the world's biggest maker of PCs, later specified that it will likely take three to five quarters to turn around the Motorola phone business.

Analysts say it may take the company at least that long to turn around its acquisitions. Heavyweights like Samsung Electronics Co and Apple Inc, dominant in global smartphones, will also provide stiff competition as Lenovo seeks to build up the Motorola business.

"I'm expecting a slowdown in the underlying, organic business," said Jean-Louis Lafayeedney, a Hong Kong-based technology analyst at JI Asia, an affiliate of Societe Generale.

"It will be at least a year before Lenovo can turn around growth," he said, speaking before Yang's comments,” Louis added.

Deja vu

Investors might be experiencing déjà vu. Motorola Mobility and IBM x86 server unit currently lose money - Motorola alone lost more than USD one billion in 2013 - just as ThinkPad did when it became the Chinese company's way into businesses across United States in 2005.

After the ThinkPad deal, Lenovo's net income dropped sharply and only recovered after almost two years.

To bring the new acquisitions into the fold, Lenovo plans to revive its tactic of integrating ThinkPad through cost-cutting, lower material costs and merging the business with its own supply chain.

Lenovo will sell Motorola handsets and IBM servers through the same channels it uses for its own low-margin smartphones and its PC business, Yang said in a post-earnings call, without elaborating on financial targets.

Lenovo said it plans to re-introduce the Motorola brand to its home country - a smartphone market now beginning to become saturated - as well as expanding to emerging markets. A key part of its strategy for IBM's low-end servers is to surf on Lenovo's presence in China, where it said server demand remains strong.

But the sheer size of these deals - the price tag is close to half of Lenovo's market value - will weigh on the company for some time. Analysts don't expect the deals to be finalised until the third quarter of 2014.

"They did not have a choice, they had to acquire a business to take their smartphones to the developed markets," said Lafayeedney.

"They cannot waste the kind of time needed to grow organically into developed markets," the analyst said, speaking before the October-December earnings were announced.

Ahead of estimates

Lenovo on Thursday reported net income of USD 265.3 million for the October-December quarter, ended before the acquisitions splurge. That was well above the USD 204.9 million it posted a year earlier, as well as a USD 247.2 million consensus forecast.

Although Lenovo is the world's fourth-biggest manufacturer of smartphones by shipments as of the quarter ended December, according to data firm IDC, the company is still dependent on China for vast majority of its sales.

Of the 13.9 million handsets Lenovo shipped in that quarter according to IDC, Lenovo said on Thursday only two million or 14 percent of those were sold outside China.

Yang told analysts in a conference call that the smartphone unit does not yet contribute a lot to the overall profit of Lenovo, particularly in China, where margins are slimmer than in other markets. Overall China smartphone shipments fell for the first time in more than two years in the quarter that ended in December, declining 4.3 percent quarter-on-quarter to 90.8 million handsets, according to IDC.

The speed and scale of the buying spree - partly paid for by issuing new shares - spooked some investors. Earlier this month, Lenovo shares tumbled 16 percent in one day after a report said the company was interested in buying Sony Corp's Vaio PC division.

Lenovo shares have dropped 8.7 percent since the start of the year, compared with Hong Kong index's loss of 4.82 percent. By close of trading on Thursday, the stock was down 0.58 percent, while the index was off 0.54 percent.

(Agencies)