InFocus enters Indian Mobile Market with new phone

The latest smartphone player to enter India, the US based InFocus has announced the launch of its revolutionary smartphone M2. Designed in America, this 4.2 inch marvel promises to be a true game changer thanks to its superlative specifications which is set to create a veritable disruption in the Indian smartphone market. All InFocus mobiles are manufactured by Foxconn, the world’s largest Original equipment mobile phone manufacturer and therefore the devices come with the guaranteed top-of-the-line build quality. The M2 will be available to the Indian market exclusively on Snapdeal.com, India’s largest online marketplace.

 The InFocus M2 sports a 4.2 inch WXGA (1280 x 768) at 355 ppi promises to deliver exceptionally sharp images. Both front and rear cameras are 8 MP with auto focus lens and clicks photographs with smile, face and voice detections. Front camera has diffused Front facing LED for brighter selfies and super bright LED on the back for everything else which ensures best pictures in even low light conditions. The device has powerful 1.3 Ghz Quad Core processor & 2,010mAh Li-Ion battery. With an internal memory of 8 GB, the device supports expandable memory up to 64GB and also comes with 1GB RAM to easily keep up with the daily routines, and supports Dual SIM.

Speaking on the launch, Sachin Thapar, Country Head, InFocus Mobiles said, “With InFocus, we are going to change the rules of the game in the Indian smartphone industry. The kind of superlative features InFocus M2 offers are often unheard of in smartphones priced at even double its cost. It also comes with the indelible stamp of superior quality that all Foxconn-manufactured handsets sport. Our vision is to make products keeping our customers’ life in focus and to make user-friendly and highly advanced features accessible to the masses.”.. See more 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

N Chandrasekaran appointed chairman of Tata Sons

DoT Secretary hints at making Draft NTP 2018 available in public domain soon

Visa buys NFT based CryptoPunk and paid $150,000 in Etherium