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The Yotaphone 2, a double screen Android-based smartphone, is pictured in Helsinki January 29, 2015. [Photo/Agencies]
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Russia's Yota Devices, the maker of a dual-screen smartphone which has so far proved a flopwith consumers, has reached its first mass market distribution deal with an agreement to sellphones in China through state-backed Potevio Co.
The YotaPhone has attracted a minor cult following among gadget enthusiasts with its distinctive,two-screen phone that seeks to stand out in a crowded, undifferentiated mobile market.
While the phone has a conventional screen for calls and other common phone functions, on theflip side it sports a second, always-on display that streams social media, text messages, maps,weather and breaking news and works as a mini e-book reader.
The YotaPhone has enjoyed the high-profile backing of President Vladimir Putin who wasphotographed handing one to Chinese President Xi Jinping on his November trip to China.
Moscow-based Yota said late Tuesday that Potevio would begin sales across China of its latestYotaPhone2 models this quarter. Potevio sold 36 million phones in China last year for a total of46 billion yuan ($7.4 billion), according to the company.
Yota Chief Executive Vlad Martynov said an earlier version of the YotaPhone, which sold poorlyin 20 countries where it was marketed, was merely a proof of concept, but that China held outpromise as the Russian handset maker's first mainstream market.
"China will be the biggest market in terms of volumes, no doubt about that," Martynov toldReuters in a phone interview.
Trying to stand out
Martynov said Yota had reached deals with the biggest online sales portals in China and signedup 20 top content providers to offer popular local features including social media, search, e-book, stock and weather information.
But entering the world's most competitive phone market poses significant challenges. Whilemore than 284 million phones were sold in China in the first nine months of 2014, according togovernment data, shipments fell 10.9 percent year over year.
Moreover, in excess of 90 percent of handsets were sold by domestic brands, which chargearound $200 for increasingly sophisticated smartphones, leaving less than 10 percent of themarket to foreign brands priced at $400 to $500 or more.
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