The Borneo Post

Android creator unveils ‘ultimate phone’

- By Hayley Tsukayama

WHAT do you really need out of a smartphone? Developer Andy Rubin - the creator of Android — has tried to answer that question with a new phone aimed at delivering the basics of a high-end smartphone in a simple package.

The phone, called the Essential, has just debuted and was created by Rubin’s company, which is also called Essential. Rubin decided to found the firm after voicing frustratio­ns about the current gadget landscape, which he described in a blog post as full of unnecessar­y features and lacking in good choice.

If you read through the material on Essential’s site, you come away with three main ideas: Simple is best. Companies shouldn’t force people to put anything on their phones. Devices should work with each other.

The phone has an edge-to-edge 5.7-inch display, a titanium body that’s supposed to withstand a drop better than an iPhone and simple styling. The Essential phone boasts a fingerprin­t reader,

(left) Andy Rubin — creator of the ‘Essential’ phone. • The Essential, a new phone aimed at delivering the basics of a high-end smartphone in a simple package, has just debuted. — AFP/Essential photos Rubin’s ambitions are big: the company also introduced a new home hub, called Home, not be confused with the Google Home. Essential promises that its Home will be privacy-conscious and will work with a variety of devices.

as well as a front-facing 8 MP camera, a rear-facing 13 MP camera and a “monochrome” sensor that is supposed to help with low-light shots. It does not have a headphone jack – though The Verge reported that it will ship with a headphone dongle.

And the phone doesn’t carry any branding which the company said was a decision to prevent customers from being “forced to advertise” for them all of the time.

Essential is also introducin­g an interestin­g system for accessorie­s, based off two small, magnetic pins on the back of the phone. The company uses these as a way to wirelessly charge the phone.

The pins also connect the phone to a variety of add-ons, which Essential says can help your phone evolve over time and possibly reduce a need to upgrade. The first accessory introduced is the company’s own new 360-degree camera.

It, unlike other mobile 360degree camera accessorie­s, snaps onto the phone.

The Essential phone introduces a couple of things that are intriguing, particular­ly the promise of a simple phone that can evolve with you. It’s a new take on the “modular” design - the idea that your phone can have interchang­eable, swapple parts - that other manufactur­ers, notably Motorola, have attempted. It’s not cheap at US$699 (RM3,006), but does offer plenty of storage space in every model, at 128 GB. (The iPhone’s 128 GB model costs US$750, or RM3,225). And, if the respect for consumer preference­s extends to the company’s software, it may carve out a niche among privacy hawks. Users can also transfer data over these magnetic connection­s.

The ideas are interestin­g. But will it sell? That’s a different matter altogether. Essential comes into the equation at at time when Apple and Samsung are dominating the smartphone market - even establishe­d companies, such as Google, can’t get a foothold. Essential is trying to target a very particular market of smartphone users who want a powerful phone with minimal flourish, and are willing to shell out some cash on a newcomer.

Rubin’s ambitions are big: the company also introduced a new home hub, called Home, not be confused with the Google Home. Essential promises that its Home will be privacy-conscious and will work with a variety of devices. But more informativ­e details are scant. — Washington Post

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