Lenovo has expanded its smartphone portfolio as it seeks to upset the mobile handset status quo, however its devices will only appear in certain markets.
The six new smartphone models will initially be sold only in China and other “select global markets,” according to announcements Lenovo made 7 and 8 January at the 2013 International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
That could mean that China-based Lenovo is launching the new smartphones on a limited basis to see how they sell around the world before bringing them into the United States and other major world consumer markets where they would compete with established market leaders such as Apple, Samsung, Google Android and others.
Neither prices nor carriers have yet been announced for the phones.
“For smartphone users, one size does not fit all,” Liu Jun, senior vice president of the Lenovo Group, said in a statement. “We’ve learned from our customers, and we know they have many different, unique reasons for selecting Lenovo smartphones.
Lenovo’s new portfolio is designed for a wide range of customers globally, “with a phone for every user,” said Jun.
Lenovo’s flagship smartphone will be the K900, which includes a 5.5-inch full 1080p HD touch-screen with 400 pixels per inch and Gorilla Glass 2, according to Lenovo. The phone, which is just 6.9 millimeters (mm) thick, runs on an Intel Atom processor and is built into a housing made from a composite of stainless steel alloy and polycarbonate. The K900 also includes a 13-megapixel front camera with an F1.8 focal length lens, as well as a rearview camera. The K900 will debut in China in April and will spread to other markets soon after, said Lenovo officials.
The other five smartphone models from Lenovo include:
These five phones are slated to be offered for sale later in January starting in China with other markets to be announced, according to Lenovo.
Daniel Maycock, a mobile IT analyst with Slalom Consulting, told eWEEK that Lenovo’s broad foray into the smartphone marketplace is reasonable because sales of its core laptop and desktop computer products are dropping as users turn to tablets, smartphones and other more mobile computing platforms.
“To be a really competitive OEM, you have to have a mobile play,” said Maycock. And it also is understandable that Lenovo isn’t initially targeting its new phone line for US sales because competitors such as Samsung already have a strong presence and market penetration here, he said.
“Maybe Lenovo thought to go to places where companies like Nokia might have dropped the ball in the smartphone space, like in Asia,” he said. “I think there’s more opportunity there for them. They’re an Asian company. That’s just a better move for them if they want to get competitive to start.”
Still, though the US smartphone market is filled with companies such as Apple, Samsung, Google, Research in Motion, HTC, Nokia and others, plenty of potential room still exists for phones from Lenovo in the United States, Maycock said.
“Android and Samsung are the competitors to beat,” he said. “It makes sense that Lenovo would do this.”
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Originally published on eWeek.
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