Shining bright like a diamond, Samsung shows off new screen tech

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 21-05-2013-05-2008

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Shining bright like a diamond, Samsung shows off new screen tech

Screens, screens, screens – Samsung has a one track mind so far this week.

Samsung Display announced Monday the company will unveil a pair of new screen technologies during Display Week 2013 at the Vancouver Convention Centre, which runs through May 23.

The Korean manufacturer has chosen the annual Society for Information Display industry event to highlight its latest Diamond Pixel LCD technology on screens big and small.

On the larger end of the spectrum is an 85-inch Ultra HD LCD TV panel with a screen resolution of 3840 x 2160 featuring local-dimming control, which consumes 30 percent less energy than traditional LED displays while retaining vivid color reproduction.

Keeping up with the amped pixel theme, Samsung is also showing off a 10.1-inch WQXGA (2560 x 1600) LCD for tablets and a 13.3-inch LCD for notebooks. The company claims both can deliver 30 percent greater power-savings than existing LCD tablet screens, though we’ll believe that when we see it.

Diamond sharp text

For phones, Samsung Display is demonstrating a 4.99-inch, full HD (1920 x 1080) AMOLED display, which the manufacturer claimed has the broadest color gamut to date.

Since the human retina reacts more to the color green over red or blue, Samsung’s Diamond Pixel packs more green pixels into a display panel, resulting in a sharper screen that accurately reproduces roughly 94 percent of the Adobe RGB color space.

As a result, Samsung Display said text messages will appear 2.2 times clearer than 1280 x 720 HD displays, holding up against magnification of up to three times with fewer jaggies than conventional LCD screens.

Samsung has yet to confirm when Diamond Pixel technology will begin shipping, but Display Week attendees can check out the tech – plus a prototype 23-inch multi-touch LCD display capable of picking up 10 touch points simultaneously – through Thursday.

  • Read more about Galaxy S4 updates that could soon make it to the Galaxy S3.

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What delays? iPhone 5S screen production said to kick off next month

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 08-05-2013-05-2008

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What delays? iPhone 5S screen production said to kick off next month

Sharp is said to be readying its displays for the next generation of iPhone, which will kick off production in June – that’s next month for all you calendar fans.

Japan business daily Nikkan Kogyo claims that Sharp will begin building the LCD panels for the fabled iPhone 5S at its Kameyama Plant in Japan.

It certainly chimes with what we’ve previously heard, despite fears over possible delays. And also, you know, the predicable Apple cycle.

Sharp look

There’s nothing about whether the display will be bigger or smaller than the iPhone 5, but the paper claims that the specs are "similar" to the current iPhone.

Of course, Sharp is a long-term Apple partner and provided the screens for the iPhone 5, so it’s not hugely surprising that Apple has chosen to stay with it, even though Sharp did recently suffer a few production issues.

Sharp won’t be doing all the hard work though. LG Display and Japan Display (the latter being a combination of parts of Sony, Toshiba and Hitachi) will also be producing the screens.

Sir Jony Ive might want to get a move on with iOS7, then.

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Kobe Bryant scores a Lenovo P780 smartphone with a 5-inch screen

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 04-05-2013-05-2008

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Kobe Bryant scores a Lenovo P780 smartphone with a 5-inch screen

Kobe Bryant went on the Lakers’ disabled list due to a painful Achilles tendon tear, but before the NBA star’s season-ending injury, he was able to hawk the new Lenovo P780.

The Lenovo P780 is described as "a new style smartphone" by Bryant in a behind-the-scenes almost phone-less ad. It shows the basketball player holding the China-bound device at the very end.

The one-minute video doesn’t get into the official Lenovo P780 specs either, but the it will have a 5-inch display, 8MP camera, and 4,000 mAh battery, according to Engadget and GizChina.

That should make for Bryant-style battery stamina at full health.

The WCDMA device is also said to be 9.9mm thick and boast a sensitive touch screen that allows gloves and non-capacitive styluses to be used.

Lenovo P780 vs P770

The Lenovo P780′s battery life and camera solution are have certainly been upgraded over the P770 model.

Last year’s Android smartphone by the Chinese company had a smaller 3,500mAh battery, a 5MP camera, and a dual-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A9.

There’s no official word on the P780 CPU, but in all likelihood it will have a quad-core MediaTek chipset and 1GB of RAM, according to the latest rumors.

Lenovo is said to be launching the new smartphone in China later this month, but the Beijing company hasn’t announced plans to release this dual-SIM device outside of its home territory.

Bryant may be one of the few Americans to play around with the Lenovo P780 if that remains the case.

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#10: TTfone Venus TT700 – Big Button Flip Mobile Phone – Easy to Use Simple – Unlocked – Camera – Full Colour Screen – FM Radio – SOS Button

Posted by | Posted in Smartphone Bestsellers | Posted on 03-03-2013-05-2008

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TTfone Venus

TTfone Venus TT700 – Big Button Flip Mobile Phone – Easy to Use Simple – Unlocked – Camera – Full Colour Screen – FM Radio – SOS Button
by TTfone
(21)

Buy new: £61.28 £32.99
2 used & new from £32.99

(Visit the Bestsellers in SIM-free Mobile Phones & Smartphones list for authoritative information on this product’s current rank.)

View more at Amazon.co.uk: Bestsellers in Electronics > Phones > Mobile Phones & Communication > SIM-free Mobile Phones & Smartphones

iPhone 5 screen orders down by half; is demand waning?

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 14-01-2013-05-2008

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iPhone 5 screen orders down by half; is demand waning?

Apple has reportedly cut its iPhone 5 screen orders by around half as people cease flocking to throw their money at the company.

Two people ‘familiar with the situation’ told the WSJ that the first quarter screen orders were down because of weaker-than-expected demand, while other components were also being slashed.

The site also reports that sources also told Japanese newspaper Nikkei that Apple has slashed its iPhone 5 component orders.

Tide’s a-turning

Of course, the notion that the iPhone 5 is underwhelming is an obvious target; after the Apple Maps debacle, high-profile staff exits and the fairly underwhelming handset upgrades that the iPhone 5 brought with it, subsiding Apple-mania is a natural corollary.

There could be another reason for the rumours though – like with the new iPad 4 launch, there’s every possiblity Apple could be looking to a mid-year launch of a slightly upgraded ‘iPhone 5S’, which would feature an improved screen and better internals.

The timing of the reports couldn’t be worse for Apple, as it coincides with Samsung crowing about its Galaxy S range hitting 100 million sales, and as such a new iPhone in June would clearly steal the thunder from the Samsung Galaxy S4.

Still if it is just people getting bored of Apple’s stuff, there’s always the iPhone 6, right guys? Right?

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ZTE Nubia Z5 quad-core unveiled with slim body, big 1080p screen

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 30-12-2012-05-2008

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ZTE Nubia Z5 quad-core unveiled with slim body, big 1080p screen

As promised, the ZTE Nubia Z5 was unveiled in China on Wednesday, and the big new Android smartphone looks like a winner right off the bat.

Its previously rumored specs were not exaggerated, as the Nubia Z5 does indeed come in a 5-inch form with a Qualcomm 1.5GHz quad-core processor, full 1080p display, 2GB of memory, and 13MP/2MP cameras on the back and front, respectively.

Wednesday’s announcement also revealed that ZTE’s Nubia Z5 will come packing 32GB of storage, Wi-Fi display and MHL output for displaying content on larger screens, and either Yamaha or Dolby Digital Plus sound output.

Best of all, though, is the Nubia Z5′s incredibly thin chassis – at just 7.6mm thick and weighing 126g, it’s the slimmest 5-inch smartphone on the market.

Packing it in

Like we ourselves did at Christmas dinner on Tuesday, the ZTE Nubia Z5 packs a lot in, despite its extremely thin 7.6mm frame.

That includes a 2,300mAh batter in addition to everything mentioned above.

The Nubia Z5 manages to compare favorably in size with Samsung’s Galaxy Note II and Galaxy S3, while still sporting a gorgeous screen and powerful innards.

It was even designed by Italian designer Stefano Giovannoni.

Please, take our money

As Engadget pointed out on Wednesday, Nubia is a new division of Chinese company ZTE, so thus far it’s impossible to guess when the Z5 will be made available internationally.

In China, its cost ranges from ¥3,456 (US$554, UK£343, AU$535) to ¥7,890 (US$1,265, UK£785, AU$1,222) for the "titanium edition."

When it does become available internationally, Engadget reported, it will be LTE-compatible (no surprise there).

TechRadar will be on hand at CES 2013 to check out the ZTE Nubia Z5 if it does indeed make an appearance, so keep your eyes peeled as we head into the new year.

View more at TechRadar: All latest Mobile phones news feeds

iOS vs. Android: will screen size determine top phone system?

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 30-11-2012-05-2008

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iOS vs. Android: will screen size determine top phone system?

The battle between Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android for mobile-operating-system dominance has raged for some time, and neither side shows any signs of permanently pulling into the lead.

But a researcher at Kantar Worldpanel told TechRadar that soon, the battleground could become hyper-focused on one deciding factor: screen size.

The research firm announced on Tuesday that iPhone 5 sales allowed Apple to once again steal the top spot from Android in the US’s volatile smartphone market. However the ranking, based on the latest research, isn’t true in overseas markets.

But when TechRadar contacted Kantar Worldpanel to ask whether this battle will rage on forever, the firm’s Global Consumer Insight Director Dominic Sunnebo replied with some interesting insights.

A crucial decision for Apple

"One of the key battlegrounds we see coming up in the next 18 months is screen size," Sunnebo told TechRadar in an email.

Sunnebo said that iOS vs. Android arguments between consumers have recently become more and more focused on how big a device’s screen is.

Apple fans believe that a smartphone should be small enough to use with one hand, Sunnebo said, while Android users clearly believe the opposite, judging by the success of larger Android devices like Samsung’s 4.8-inch Galaxy S3 and 5.5-inch Galaxy Note 2.

So will Apple have to go even bigger than the iPhone 5′s 4-inch display?

"There is no strong motivation for Apple to move from its current position as sales are strong," Sunnebo said, "but in the future as we near smartphone saturation point in developed markets, and the only way to drive real growth will be to steal customers from Android, this will be a crucial decision Apple will have to make."

He added that Kantar Worldpanel’s ComTech research data indicates that consumers are generally unwilling to switch to a device with a smaller screen.

"This could prove a decisive factor in current Android consumers’ next purchase (particularly as the gulf between Apple and Android screen sizes widens)," he said.

Apple leads for now, though

Sunnebo told TechRadar that although Apple’s new devices typically allow the company to overtake Android for around three periods at time, he expects Apple’s current lead to last slightly longer, since "the iPhone 5 is a whole new device."

He added that while Android is more attractive to feature phone users looking to upgrade to their first smartphone, those users tend to switch to iOS for their next device, according to Kantar Worldpanel’s research.

Different OSes switch to iOS

Given the research that claims consumers don’t like switching to devices with smaller screens, though, even first-time Android users may grow less likely to switch to iOS, especially if Android devices continue get bigger while iPhones remain the same size.

Kantar Worldpanel’s ComTech research comes from large proprietary panels of individuals representative of the 16 plus population in multiple countries.

In the US alone, the firm conducts 260,000 interviews with consumers per year. That figure jumps to 2.2 million interviews globally.

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Windows Phone 8 to feature live wallpaper updates on lock screen?

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 27-10-2012-05-2008

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Windows Phone 8 to feature live wallpaper updates on lock screen?

Microsoft could incorporate a new kind of live wallpaper when it reveals the Windows Phone 8 operating system in full next week.

The as-yet-unannounced Live Wallpapers feature would, according to a leaked snap, bring updates from the likes of ESPN and USA today to the handset’s lock screen.

The Nokia Innovation site has posted an image (see above) with WP8 handsets showcasing updates from an NFL game and another showing thumbnail images from news stories.

A third handset within the image seemingly promises live updates from Bing.

Live Tile extension

The functionality would be a handy extension of the Live Tiles feature Microsoft pioneered with Windows Phone.

These tiles offer access to sports scores, breaking news and social networking notifications autonomously, without having to enter the app. Live Wallpapers could make that even easier.

Nokia Innovation is reporting that Live Wallpapers will be one of three new features explained by Microsoft on Monday when it reveals Windows Phone 8 in full.

Among the handsets flying the flag for the new-and-improved mobile OS are the Nokia Lumia 920 and the HTC 8X, both of which will go on sale in the second week of November

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BlackBerry Laguna spec splurge shows off super screen

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 01-10-2012-05-2008

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BlackBerry Laguna spec splurge shows off super screen

A spec list supposedly relating to an upcoming BlackBerry 10 handset known as the BlackBerry Laguna handset has been posted on a ‘berry fan site and reveals a rather tasty sounding display.

It’s a 4.2-inch handset toting 1280×768 resolution with 355 DPI which, on paper at least, gives Apple’s iPhone 5 a run for its 1136×604 326 DPI money.

As well as the resolutionary screen, the Laguna supposedly features a dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 processor, 4G/LTE connectivity, an 8MP autofocusing camera with flash and 1GB of RAM.

Out of date

There’s also talk of NFC capability, DLNA, Wi-Fi direct and Bluetooth 2.1 connectivity.

When it comes to software, the handset is said to come running BlackBerry 10 OS, although it’s referred to as Superphone/QNX OS here, which is a really old way to refer to it. That sets alarm bells ringing in our minds.

The spec-showing slide apparently comes from US network Verizon, although we’re not sure exactly where it came from or how much we really and truly believe what it says.

Still, we’ve heard before that the Laguna will be coming to Verizon, so you never do know.

Also in BlackBerry’s upcoming ‘L Series’ is the BlackBerry London, which promises a dual-core processor and 1GB of RAM; it’s not much to go on but it could potentially be the international variant of this mysterious Laguna.

Unfortunately, it’ll be a while before we know for sure; BlackBerry 10 handsets aren’t due to hit the shelves until the first quarter of 2013.

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In Depth: Why the iPhone 5 doesn’t have an AMOLED screen

Posted by | Posted in Smartphones News | Posted on 25-09-2012-05-2008

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In Depth: Why the iPhone 5 doesn't have an AMOLED screen

It’s 123.8mm long and its much-hyped Retina screen measures an impressive 1,136 x 640 pixels – achieving an eye-popping 326 pixels per inch – but does the iPhone 5 have the high-end screen it should?

It is, after all, only using a LCD display, not the latest AMOLED panel. Offering a larger colour gamut, better contrast, and much faster response time than LCD, AMOLED (that’s active-matrix organic light-emitting diode, to you) is now routinely used throughout the high-end smartphone market, with the Nokia Lumia 900, Motorola Razr i, Samsung Galaxy S3 and Galaxy Note 2 just a few of the full-screen devices sporting the latest and greatest touchscreen tech.

AMOLED is even being used in cameras, so why is it missing from the iPhone 5?

"Apple is not ignoring OLED," says analyst Ken Werner, Principle at Connecticut, USA-based Nutmeg Consultants, who deems AMOLED a ‘mainstream’ tech for smartphones, "but there has not been a sufficient number of smartphone-sized OLED displays available to cover the number of iPhones Apple produces."

Apple – which sold over 140 million iPhones in 2010 and 2011 – broke its own records in the wake of the iPhone 5′s announcement by racking-up two million pre-order sales in just 24 hours.

Legal battles

As well as the iPhone 5 being too big a product launch for AMOLED to grace, there’s also the small matter of the supply being dominated by Samsung Display, which makes over 90% of AMOLED screens. "Now Apple and Samsung are engaged in intense legal battles," says Werner, "it is unlikely that Apple would want its arch-rival to also be its single source for OLED displays."

LG's OLED TV is slimmer than the iPhone

Werner points out that Samsung is barely able to supply its own needs for smartphones and devices; its Galaxy Note has a 5.3-inch AMOLED display, but the new Galaxy Note 10.1-inch has an LCD display. "As for tablets," says Werner, "10-inch OLED displays would now be too expensive to make a tablet at a competitive price." That said, AMOLED is being used at the smaller end of the market, with the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 claiming an AMOLED panel.

Another possible reason for Apple’s swerving of AMOLED is resolution. The in-situ screen in the iPhone 5 presents 326 pixels per inch (PPI), whereas pixel densities for AMOLED currently reach around 250 PPI, though 280 PPI is now possible. "High resolution continues to be a relative weakness for small and medium AMOLED compared to LCDs," says Jae-Hak Choi, Senior Analyst for FPD Manufacturing at NPD DisplaySearch.

Missing tech

The lack of an AMOLED screen isn’t the only slab of ‘missing’ tech from the iPhone 5 that has vexed analysts. Cutting-edge new tech like Near Field Communication and wireless charging aren’t the only things missing from the new iPhone 5.

But rather than being a shock omission, is Apple’s ignoring of AMOLED actually in keeping with the brand’s past behaviour? "Apple tends to have quite a conservative approach to hardware," says Ed Border, Research Associate for TV Technology at analytics company IHS. "Apple usually adopts mature technologies and is happy to let others optimise the tech first."

You'll find an AMOLED screen in the iPhone'schief rival, Samsung's Galaxy S III

There are those that think that AMOLED has already been optimised. "OLED is already a mainstream display in smart phones," says Werner, who has other criticisms of the iPhone 5′s display. "Apple is falling sadly behind the curve with the four-inch display in its new iPhone 5. Although the quality of that display is good, and changing to a 16:9 aspect ratio is long overdue, the display’s size is barely acceptable in a high-end smart phone, and Apple’s failure to include enough pixels to give the iPhone 5 a true HD display is a disappointment."

Big future

Although the activity around AMOLED is smartphone-centric for now, the tech’s future is much bigger. It’s unproven and lacks any economy of scale above small sizes, but both Samsung and LG plan to sell 55-inch, 4mm-thin OLED TVs in the near future. Exactly when is anyone’s guess – Q4 2012 is the current promise from both companies – but expect to pay around €9,000.

According to NPD DisplaySearch, the manufacturing cost of a four-inch AMOLED screen destined for a smartphone is less than 1.3 times that of a similar-sized LCD screen – so only a small premium – but a 55-inch OLED TV is around eight times more expensive to produce than a standard 55-inch LCD TV.

"Price is an issue that will hold it back for several years, particularly given the continuing reduction in LCD prices," says Border of OLED tech. "As TVs get larger, it is not just image quality, but also resolution that matters, so long-term we may well be moving towards OLEDs with larger 4K resolutions. This is potentially many years down the line however, so LCD displays will be dominant for many years yet."

A niche TV product it may be destined to become, at least at first, but don’t put OLED in the same league as recent upgrades like 3D, smart TV and LED backlighting. "The introduction of OLED is more analogous to the introduction of flat-panels in the mid-2000s," says Border. "OLED offers thinner bezels, higher contrast, much wider viewing angles and, potentially one day, flexible displays."

A roll-up, even transparent iPad 10, anyone?

View more at TechRadar: All latest Mobile phones news feeds

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