China's smartphone giant Xiaomi on Thursday launched its new flagship phones to rival iPhone 6 at virtually half the prices and vowed to expand its India operations, brushing aside the legal challenges it faced over patent issues.
Xiaomi's founder, CEO Lei Jun formally launched two Mi Note phones which he claimed will challenge iPhone 6 and 6 plus in looks, size and in camera quality.
The phones were priced at 2,299 yuan (roughly Rs 23,000) for the 16GB model, while the 64GB model of the Xiaomi Mi Note will come at 2,799 yuan (roughly Rs 27,900) far cheaper than the new iPhone models.
Though it was a global launch, the company, the world's third-biggest smartphone maker, has not decided yet when to launch these models in India.
Instead, the Chinese company, which sold a million phones in India last year, will launch its most successful model Mi 4 as it has become highly successful in Chinese and other international market, Hugo Barra, Vice President Xiaomi, said.
He also said the company which currently markets its phones in India through Flipcart e-commerce platform is planning to launch a platform of its own called Mi.com, through which it plans to sell its phones and other products in India in the future.
"India is quickly becoming our most important market outside China. If you think about considering the size of the population and how large, the IT educated population is, we are naturally attracted to India because we tend to speak to geeks more than any other brand," he said, adding, "India could become our most important market anywhere in the world."
"We are just getting started in India. We brought so far four different phones. We are going to do lot more and will bring all of our products ... like the new box mini, headphones, air purifier and TV. All these products we firmly intend to bring to India," he said, allaying concerns that being a Chinese company it faced problems in India.
About patents issue, Barra said, "Every company in this industry has to go through the same drill. We like everybody else are going through that," and added that the Delhi court has allowed his company to sell its devices.
"All our plans for 2015, including bringing more devices to India, setting up exclusive centres, setting up own R&D centre will continue as it is," he said.
To a question that Xiaomi has least number of patents, Barra said: "It is certainly not about numbers. It is about being strategic and investing in Intellectual property. It is not patents that you have already acquired, it is also current technology which you are developing. We are developing a lot of new technology which we are patenting all around the world," he said.
"This is not a game of one or two years. This is a company that will build into the next few decades," he said.
Barra dismissed such reports as some people trying to discredit his firm. Barra also said Xiaomi has not faced any problems in view of India-China sensitivities.
"As far as India-China sensitives I have not seen much," he said, adding that occasional comments were refuted in the social media by several users of Xiaomi.
He said besides establishing an R&D centre in Bangalore, his company has planned to expand distribution and service centres all around India.
Xiaomi has already established 500 service centres in China with recreational facilities.
About the potential of Indian market, Jain said according to estimates about 80 million smartphones were sold in India last year, while total number of phone sales were stated to be around 230 to 240 million.
Barra said Xiaomi last year sold 61.1 million devices which was an increase of 18.7 in 2013.
Xiaomi recently completed a successful round of fund-raising from investors that valued Xiaomi at $ 45 billion, making it one of the world's most valuable technology brands.
Photographs, courtesy: Xiaomi
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