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It would be politically problematic - on both sides of the border - for North Korea's leader to concede the technological innovation of South Korea. And it would mix messages to rely on an American-designed device on the same week North Korean propaganda fantasized about wiping out an American city. So what's a busy dictator-on-the-go to do? Huawei, which hails from from China, the closest ally of the Hermit Kingdom, and has a booming smartphone business, may have made the most sense. But it appears that Kim went with Taiwanese device maker HTC.
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It's an interesting choice for a powerful political leader, since HTC has become one of the most irrelevant phone makers, losing 91 percent of its profits last quarter. But a smartphone of any brand is a privilege for most North Koreans, who only have access to cell phones that make calls within the secretive state. That HTC, like a regular 21st Century smartphone, looks like it connects to the Internet. Plus, it looks like an upgrade from Kim Jong Un's landline:
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