Oppo has announced its first camera-centric Android smartphone, the Oppo N1.
The Oppo N1 features a 5.9-inch 1080p IPS display (can be used with gloves and styluses), 1.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon 600 processor, Adreno 320 GPU, 2GB of RAM, 16/32GB internal storage (no microSD slot) O-Touch (a 12 cm2 rear touch panel that lets you to scroll, tap, or snap photos without covering the screen), 3,610mAh battery and run Android 4.2.2 with Oppo's improved (410 design improvements over stock Android, and 37 unique patents) ColorOS UI on top. Oppo has also announced the collaboration with Cyanogen Inc. and will also bring CyanogenMod Edition N1 on the market (no worries N1 will be easily flashed to CyanogenMod using the stock recovery).
The biggest selling point of the N1 is its camera. The Oppo N1 comes with a single, 13-megapixel rotating camera (tested to last through 100,000 rotations) that features a 206° rotation and can securely lock at any angle. N1 is the first Android smartphone equipped with six physical lenses, it uses Sony's 1/3.06" CMOS module, f/2.0 aperture, long exposure (up to 8 seconds), camera will boot in just 0.6 seconds (a simple 120° rotation of the camera will wake a sleeping screen and let you immediately start taking pictures) and dual flash (a normal flash for back facing shots and a diffused softer light for when you flip the camera forward).
Here are some photos taken with the Oppo N1
The Oppo N1 will also come with O-Click that lets you remotely operate the N1 camera even when you're away from the device (up to 50 meters).
It will launch in China in October for CN¥3,498 (around $570) and internationally in December.
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