Thursday, 22 March 2018

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lenovo S5 | lenovo S5 specification



Display            :    5.7 inches                                               
Processor        :   Octa-core 2.0 GHz Cortex-A53
Rear Camera   :  13 MP
Front Camera  :   16 MP 
Resolution       :   1080 x 2160 pixels   
RAM                :   4 GB RAM     
OS                   :   Android 8.0 (Oreo)
Network           :   4G LTE
Storage            :  128/64 GB         
Battery             :   Non-removable Li-Po 3000 mAh battery

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Lenovo Group Ltd. is a leading global manufacturer of personal computers (PCs). The company was already the largest PC manufacturer in China when it acquired IBM's Personal Computing Division in 2005. In addition, the parent Lenovo Group produces PDAs and mobile phones, and operates consulting and Internet ventures. It has several manufacturing sites in China in addition to IBM's former facility in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Humble Origins

Like many other high-tech start-ups, Lenovo grew from modest origins. The Zhongguanchun (Zhong Guan Can) district of Beijing had a reputation as an electronics black market; the area would eventually be called the Silicon Valley of China.

Lenovo is a spinoff of the Legend Group, which was established in 1984 by a group of eleven computer scientists led by Liu Chuanzhi. Liu managed with a very authoritarian style, at least in the beginning, according to later interviews.

Liu was born in Shanghai; his father worked for the Bank of China. Liu studied radar systems at the Military Communication Engineering College until 1966, then went to work for the China Academy of Sciences (CAS) in Beijing. Some ill-timed criticism of the Cultural Revolution got him transferred to a rice paddy in the late 1960s in an effort to rehabilitate his bourgeois thinking.

In 1970, Liu began working for the CAS's Computer Technology Institute. In the early 1980s, as Deng Xiaoping was reforming the economy, Liu successfully lobbied to start a new computer company (there was already another state-owned computer manufacturer).

The CAS provided start-up capital of CNY 200,000, or $24,000. Legend began by importing a wide range of equipment from abroad, including roller skates, an employee told Time International. Color televisions and electronic watches were early flops. An important technical achievement was the creation of a Chinese character set for computing in 1985.

Legend was the Chinese distributor for Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) throughout the 1990s. Liu considered HP "our earliest and best teacher." While distributing HP and Toshiba, the company built the country's first nationwide computer distribution network. This would be a key to its dominance of the market for decades to come. The company's state ownership had given it another advantage in the domestic market, which was rooted in the Communist system.

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