Although we've been hands-on with a very early and fragile prototype, the physical improvements are immediately obvious. When you turn the phone over to its "normal" side, for example to watch video or use the camera, you'll notice that the 720p LCD panel has been upgraded to a slightly bigger 5-inch, 1080p, AMOLED one. Android performance will also benefit from the inclusion of a 2.3GHz Snapdragon 800 instead of the old Snapdragon 600, and overall thickness has been reduced to 8.9mm (0.35 inches). Assuming that the price doesn't soar much higher than the original's 499 ($675), these are all very welcome changes.

Unfortunately, it sounds like you still won't be able to run the whole of Android (and all Android apps) on the E Ink side, despite the addition of full touch sensitivity. That's a shame, because there are literally thousands of mainstream apps that could be put to good use in low-power mode (not least major e-book readers and music streamers). However, Yota Devices has a plan: It's making its SDK open to everybody today, which should make it easier for developers to tweak their code to support the rear panel, and it says it's still in talks with Google, Amazon and Barnes & Noble to make all those apps compatible. So, who knows? If they can get some of this support in place by the time this next-gen YotaPhone launches later in the year, we could be looking a drastically superior product.