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Micromax unveils 'Yu' brand for digital youth



Micromax today unveiled a new range of devices under 'Yu' brand, focussed on the fast growing segment of tech enthusiasts. (Image: micromaxinfo.com)

NEW DELHI: Country's second biggest cell phone creator Micromax today uncovered another scope of gadgets under "Yu" brand, focussed on the quickly developing portion of tech lovers. 

An auxiliary of Micromax, Yu Televentures, has joined forces Cyanogen to offer modified client experience to end clients. 

The primary handset will be dispatched one month from now. Subtle elements of the gadget and valuing were not revealed. 

"This will be a diversion changer in India as well as comprehensively as well. Yu has been en .. 

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Nokia revives the brand with launch of iPad lookalike

Sebastian Nystrom, head of product business at Nokia Technologies, presents N1, Nokia's new Android tablet, at the Slush 2014 event in Helsinki November 18, 2014. REUTERS/Heikki Saukkomaa/Lehtikuva


(Reuters) - Finland's Nokia (NOK1V.HE) launched a new brand-licensed tablet computer on Tuesday which is designed to rival Apple's(AAPL.O) iPad Mini, just six months after the company sold its ailing phones and devices business to Microsoft (MSFT.O) for over $7 billion.

Nokia, a name which was once synonymous with mobile phones until first Apple and then Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) eclipsed the Finnish company with the advent of smart phones, said the manufacturing, distribution and sales of the new N1 tablet, will be handled under license by Taiwan's Foxconn (2354.TW).

The aluminum-cased N1, which runs on Google's (GOOGL.O) Android Lollipop operating software but features Nokia's new Z Launcher intelligent home screen interface, is due to be in stores in China in the first quarter of next year for an estimated price of $249 before taxes, with sales to other markets to follow.

Sebastian Nystrom, the head of products at Nokia's Technologies unit, said the company was looking to follow up with more devices and will also look into eventually returning to the smartphones business by brand-licensing.

"With the agreement with Microsoft, as is customary, we have this transition and we can't do smartphones ... We have a time limit. In 2016 we can again enter that business," Nystrom told Reuters.

"It would be crazy not to look at that opportunity. Of course we will look at it."

Microsoft last week dropped the Nokia name on its latest Lumia 535 smartphone, which runs on its Windows Phone 8 operating system, but still uses the brand for more basic phones.

After the Microsoft sale Nokia was left with its core network equipment and services business plus its smaller HERE mapping and navigation unit and Nokia Technologies, which manages the licensing of its portfolio of patents and develops new products such as the N1 and the Z Launcher.

Asked about rumors that Nokia was looking to re-enter the handset market, Chief Executive Rajeev Suri said last week he was looking into ways to bring the brand back into the consumer market through licensing deals.

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