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| A store employee holds up an iPhone 4S at a shop in Hangzhou, China's Zhejiang province, on January 13, 2012. |
The rumor was later endorsed by the Wall Street Journal, which based its report on people briefed on the matter.
The low-priced iPhone will have a big screen along the lines of those popular with consumers today, according to DigiTimes.
Such a move would be a dramatic shift from Apple's unabashed style of crafting premium products that sell in the high-end of the market instead of getting caught up in price wars with rivals.
Apple sees huge potential in China, and coming out with a more affordable iPhone may be a necessary move to ward off competition from bargain-priced smartphones powered by Google-backed Android software.
Expanding the ranks of iPhone users would also increase the potential for the California-based company to sell people mini-applications, music and other digital content popular on smartphones.
