The Finnish manufacturer Nokia could be working at the moment on a successor for the Nokia X, a smartphone presented at the beginning of this year 2014 that surprised us with a curious integration of the Android operating system within Windows Phone. In fact, rumors suggest that the presentation of this new Nokia X2 will take place at the beginning of July, and as in the case of the Nokia X we would be facing a mobile mainly destined for emerging markets.
But the information that is currently handled on the Nokia X2 goes far beyond a simple integration of Android applications within the Windows Phone operating system. Some sources indicate that the Nokia X2 will incorporate both operating systems installed as standard, and it will be the user who will decide at all times whether to use the mobile under Android or under Windows Phone.
Regarding the technical specifications of the Nokia X2, the first reports reveal us that this smartphone could incorporate a screen of 4.3 inches that offer a type resolution WVGA, ie 800 x 480 pixels. Inside a processor stay Qualcomm Snapdragon 200 of two cores that operate at a clock speed of 1.2 GHz in company memory RAM whose capacity would be set to one gigabyte. The internal storage space would be 4 GigaBytes, and if the specification of the external memory card of the Nokia X is repeated, the user would also have at his disposal a slot for microSD cards of up to a maximum of 32 GigaBytes. A curious detail is that this new model could also incorporate a Start button that would replace the Go back button that the Nokia X brought with it on the front of the terminal.
If we thoroughly analyze these technical specifications we will see that there is a small detail that tells us that the possibility that the Nokia X2 incorporates two operating systems is quite remote. It turns out that the internal storage capacity seems to be only 4 GigaBytes, which makes it completely impossible for all the files that the Android and Windows Phone operating systems bring with them to be stored inside the mobile. Therefore, the Nokia X2 most likely incorporates only a small proportion of the Android operating system (that is, little beyond the compatibility with applications designed for the Google operating system.).
Still we must not forget that all this information belongs to a leak that has emerged from a shipment of Nokia smartphones destined to be tested by Indian developers. In the event that these technical data are true, it is most likely that these same developers are the ones who end up filtering the first photographs of this new Nokia X2.