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The ZTE Blade V880 (also known as ZTE Lutea) is a smartphone manufactured by ZTE Corporation for the Android platform. Unveiled by Orange UK as San Francisco, it went on sale on 21 September 2010, with a white variant released later. [3] By 2011, more than 8 million Blade handsets had been sold in more than 50 countries worldwide. [4]
ZTE-G X760, also known as Orange Vegas, T-Mobile Vairy Touch, [1] Vodafone Indie, and Vodafone V-X760, is a discontinued budget touchscreen mobile phone released in mid 2009 and made by ZTE. The cost of the Vegas was kept as low as possible by omitting many features from higher products while keeping a trendy touchscreen design.
The Orange Rio is a rebadged version of ZTE's X991. It is sold on the Orange network, and is a BlackBerry -styled phone directed to people on budgets or young users, with a QWERTY keyboard and a 2.4" touchscreen .
ZTE is a major shareholder and was instrumental in the creation of the company in 2007 but holds a minority of the shares in the entity. [86] ZTE agreed to take over a 48% stake in Turkish company Netaş Telekomünikasyon A.Ş. for $101.3 million from the American private equity firm One Equity Partners in December 2016.
The last HS 52 A and B exchanges were in operation until the end of 1997. The personnel-intensive electro mechanical systems were shut down prematurely then, due to the imminent opening of the telecoms market in Switzerland. The last AXE-10 local subscriber were migrated to VoIP in June 2020.
The ZTE Skate (also marketed as ZTE V960 in China) is a phone manufactured by China's ZTE Corporation for the Android platform. It went on sale in March 2011 in Europe as the Orange Monte Carlo locked to the Orange network. [ 2 ]
Nubia Technology is a Chinese smartphone manufacturer headquartered in Shenzhen, Guangdong.Originally established as a wholly owned subsidiary of ZTE in 2012, it became an independent company in 2015 [1] and received a significant investment from Suning Holdings Group and Suning Commerce Group in 2016. [2]
Flip phone referred to phones that opened on the vertical axis. As clamshells disappeared from the market, the terms again became disambiguated. By the mid-2000s, "flip" designs reached the peak of their availability and declined afterward, being replaced by sliders which in turn were completely replaced by slate smartphones.