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China's latest luxury phone packs a massive 7,000mAh battery

onebyone

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Gionee's M2017 should last days on a charge, and look good doing it.

Jon Fingas
, @jonfingas
18h ago in Mobile


q:100



Many luxury smartphone makers see their work mainly as a matter of wrapping an ordinary device in upscale materials, maybe adding a concierge service and calling it a day. Gionee, however, is taking a different approach: it's giving you one huge feature that gives you a clear reason to pay a premium. It just launched the M2017, a metal-and-leather 5.7-inch phone whose centerpiece is its enormous 7,000mAh battery. Yes, there's a real chance that it has a larger power pack than your tablet. The company estimates that it'll last for nearly 32 hours of talk time and 26 hours of non-stop video, or enough to get you through a few days of moderate use. If you're a jetsetting business type (Gionee's target market), you might never need to plug in during that all-important day trip.

Thankfully, the M2017 is (mostly) above-average beyond its epic longevity. It packs a curved quad HD AMOLED screen that's bound to be noticed, a hefty 6GB of RAM, at least 128GB of storage, a front 8-megapixel camera and two rear cameras (12MP and 13MP) that promise an iPhone 7 Plus-style 2X optical zoom. You get a front-facing fingerprint reader, too. About the only major head-scratcher is the use of a mid-range Snapdragon 653 processor. While that's not a slow part by any stretch, it probably wouldn't have killed Gionee to include a Snapdragon 821 and deliver performance that matches the battery life.

When the M2017 goes on sale in China on January 6th (an international release isn't likely), it'll start at RMB 6,999 (about $1,007) for a 128GB version and jump to RMB 16,999 ($2,446) for a 256GB model. This isn't the most expensive phone on the market by any means -- it's closer to mainstream devices than the several thousand dollars you typically pay for posh handsets from the likes of Vertu and Lamborghini. It's far from a trivial purchase, however, and Gionee is clearly betting that you're willing to spend a lot to both flaunt your success and use your phone non-stop.
https://www.engadget.com/2016/12/27/gionee-m2017-packs-massive-battery/
 
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Pay 2500 $ for a chinese phone with a outdated processor ? Even chinese are not that stupid. Its going to fail massively unless price is brought down to 250 usd .
 
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Pay 2500 $ for a chinese phone with a outdated processor ? Even chinese are not that stupid. Its going to fail massively unless price is brought down to 250 usd .

"Even" Chinese?

You show your Indian smart by writing tricky insults. Put 70% of this tricky mind aside for efficiency, you will come up with gadgets that look fairly better than Nokia 5110.
 
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It is clearly stated that it is a luxury phone.. so it is meant for those who can afford it.. there are hundreds of thousands of millionaires in China who can buy cars for 100 000 to 250 000 $, so a phone for 2500 $ is quite affordable for them, and it also comes with a very valuable value plus in the form of a very long life battery, so it is very good for business people who use their intelligent phones extensively.. add to it that its cost is most probably tax deductible for these businessmen and women..
 
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"Even" Chinese?

You show your Indian smart by writing tricky insults. Put 70% of this tricky mind aside for efficiency, you will come up with gadgets that look fairly better than Nokia 5110.
Indian prefers very low-end smart phones.

As per Gartner, the Average Selling Price (ASP) of smartphones in India is $70 and smartphones under $120 contribute around 50% of overall smartphone sales here. Now consider the pricing of the new smartphones launched in China. The Mi Note 2 starts selling at $413 and goes all the way to $516 for the high-end variant. The Mi Mix starts at $516 and goes till $590 for the high-end variant. Lastly, the Mi 5s is priced at $295 for the base variant and goes all the way to $385 for the high-end Mi 5s Plus.

And their annual sales of smart phone equals our sales in one quarter.

China's high-end phones won't even enter indian market because of their very low purchasing power. Xiaomi sells its low-end Redmi to indian, but will never launch bezel-less Mi Mix. Apple does not have one single flagship store in the shining supa powa, whilst in China it opens everywhere though iPhone is not even among top3.


Huawei's high-end phones have been launched in Germany.
屏幕快照 2016-11-04 00.32.24.jpg



You know what, the middle-end One Plus to average indians is some sort of luxury.

屏幕快照 2016-12-03 14.59.54.jpg
 
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This is too much money, can only be afforded by the rich.
What I would do is to buy a very good phone and then use a battery power bank to charge it when on the go.:partay:
Good power banks of 13,000mah are available for less than 50$.
 
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"Even" Chinese?

You show your Indian smart by writing tricky insults. Put 70% of this tricky mind aside for efficiency, you will come up with gadgets that look fairly better than Nokia 5110.

Oh no you didn't, dang, that was some punch packed answer! :tup:
 
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Gionee's M2017 should last days on a charge, and look good doing it.

Jon Fingas
, @jonfingas
18h ago in Mobile


q:100



Many luxury smartphone makers see their work mainly as a matter of wrapping an ordinary device in upscale materials, maybe adding a concierge service and calling it a day. Gionee, however, is taking a different approach: it's giving you one huge feature that gives you a clear reason to pay a premium. It just launched the M2017, a metal-and-leather 5.7-inch phone whose centerpiece is its enormous 7,000mAh battery. Yes, there's a real chance that it has a larger power pack than your tablet. The company estimates that it'll last for nearly 32 hours of talk time and 26 hours of non-stop video, or enough to get you through a few days of moderate use. If you're a jetsetting business type (Gionee's target market), you might never need to plug in during that all-important day trip.

Thankfully, the M2017 is (mostly) above-average beyond its epic longevity. It packs a curved quad HD AMOLED screen that's bound to be noticed, a hefty 6GB of RAM, at least 128GB of storage, a front 8-megapixel camera and two rear cameras (12MP and 13MP) that promise an iPhone 7 Plus-style 2X optical zoom. You get a front-facing fingerprint reader, too. About the only major head-scratcher is the use of a mid-range Snapdragon 653 processor. While that's not a slow part by any stretch, it probably wouldn't have killed Gionee to include a Snapdragon 821 and deliver performance that matches the battery life.

When the M2017 goes on sale in China on January 6th (an international release isn't likely), it'll start at RMB 6,999 (about $1,007) for a 128GB version and jump to RMB 16,999 ($2,446) for a 256GB model. This isn't the most expensive phone on the market by any means -- it's closer to mainstream devices than the several thousand dollars you typically pay for posh handsets from the likes of Vertu and Lamborghini. It's far from a trivial purchase, however, and Gionee is clearly betting that you're willing to spend a lot to both flaunt your success and use your phone non-stop.
https://www.engadget.com/2016/12/27/gionee-m2017-packs-massive-battery/
Good for the chinese maybe but personally have never seen anyone buy a gionee phone here, they may have a market in the lower segment in india but apart from one plus all the chinese brands like gionee, lenovo, xiaomi, etc are usually perceived as unreliable and lacking quality build. I personally am a blackberry fan currently using the priv and the passport SE.
 
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"Even" Chinese?

You show your Indian smart by writing tricky insults. Put 70% of this tricky mind aside for efficiency, you will come up with gadgets that look fairly better than Nokia 5110.

If volvo brings out a luxury car are people going to change over from their mercs, audis or bmws ? No.
Understand the value of brands . Chinese have a brand positioning of low cost , unreliable , use and throw products.
Ppl are not going to replace their iphones with gionee , whether you like it or not.
 
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If volvo brings out a luxury car are people going to change over from their mercs, audis or bmws ? No.
Understand the value of brands . Chinese have a brand positioning of low cost , unreliable , use and throw products.
Ppl are not going to replace their iphones with gionee , whether you like it or not.
Gionee is no volvo of the mobile sector...lol
 
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