The Phnom Penh Post

Why Apple, LG and others have given in to the notch on phones

- Hayley Tsukayama

LG LAST week unveiled the LG G7 ThinQ, and it got attention for all the wrong reasons. The phone boasts a 6.1-inch edge-toedge screen. But as with many recent smartphone­s, it drew criticism from tech journalist­s for having a notch at the top of a screen. The notch is a dark cutout in the top of the screen that houses the frontfacin­g camera, speaker for phone calls and other important sensors.

The G7 is the latest phone to follow the design “trend”, which embodies the compromise that companies make between aesthetics and function.

Apple’s iPhone X was the first mainstream phone to grab attention for its notch – and often not in a compliment­ary way. (Apple wasn’t the first to introduce the notch; that distinctio­n goes to Essential, the smartphone start-up founded by former Android head Andy Rubin.) The notch on the iPhone X was seen as a design compromise to make the screen larger. Many did not mince words, calling it “odd”, “bad” and downright “ugly”. There’s even an app on Apple’s App Store called “Notch Remover”, which will put a black bar across the top of the phone to mask that bucktoothe­d gap.

Yet since the iPhone X made its market debut, several companies have followed suit on the notch front including Huawei, OnePlus, Asus and now LG.

LG’s head of product planning Shintae Hong told Engadget that the company surveyed 1,000 people about the design, and decided on its design after only 30 percent of people said they didn’t like the notch.

The company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The main argument for notches comes down to simple real estate. Tech reviewers and consumers have long-complained about bezels, the dark frames many phones, TV and even wearables have around screens. A notch gives companies an answer. Moving the time or battery indicator up to the top edge gives people that little bit of extra space for a slightly bigger Netflix or YouTube window. In other words, notches offer a way to increase screen size without making phones too large, compromisi­ng on features like a good selfie camera or having to pay to increase the size of a screen.

In other words, aesthetics can’t drive everything, said Ramon Llamas, mobile analyst at research firm Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n. “Overall, the research I have says that people want a bigger display, but they don’t want a bigger phone.”

 ?? COURTESY OF LG ?? The LG G7 ThinQ smartphone.
COURTESY OF LG The LG G7 ThinQ smartphone.

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