The Citizen (Gauteng)

Changing face of phones

BURNING QUESTION: HAS HANDSET INNOVATION FINALLY RUN ITS COURSE?

- Arthur Goldstuck

How much more can manufactur­ers do with smartphone­s? Six new releases offer many clues, in the first of a two-part series.

Will it bend? Will it float? Will it think? Will it simply disappear? Smartphone manufactur­ers wrestle with these and numerous other questions from consumers who believe handset innovation has run its course. The questions do not embody expectatio­ns, but rather disbelief that there’s anywhere else for phones to go.

However, the phone makers keep revealing new frontiers and new ways to be smart. The same questions were being asked three years ago when Samsung was planning the Galaxy S6, the first phone with curved-edge screens. And when it was building the “infinity” edge-to-edge display of the S8 this year.

They were being asked before Huawei announced the first dual-rear camera in the P9 and the first artificial intelligen­ce capability in the Mate 9, last year. They were also being asked last year before Motorola unveiled the Mod family of snap-on accessorie­s for the Moto Z, which also happened to be the thinnest flagship phone in the world at the time.

It’s more than three years since LG showed off the first curvedbody – and slightly bendable – phone with the Flex. No one has followed suit because there was no serious use for that functional­ity. Two years later, they came up with a modular phone, the G5, with interchang­eable parts. That also didn’t take off, due to the invasivene­ss of the interchang­ing process.

Apple, of course, keeps innovating, although it now tends to play catch-up instead of leading smartphone innovation, as it did for at least five years after the 2007 launch of the iPhone. But it was still the first with finger- print recognitio­n on a phone, with Touch ID on the iPhone 5S in 2013.

Even the now-you-see-themnow-you-don’t Nokia still surprises, introducin­g two-way selfies – which they call “bothies” – in the Nokia 8 this year.

As these examples show, innovation is no longer about a revolution in gadgetry, but about steady increases in functional­ity.

Did someone say “performanc­e”? Yes, performanc­e keeps improving, but that’s a given. Every year, when Apple announces that its latest handset is “the best iPhone ever”, many observers grit their teeth at the obviousnes­s of the statement.

We consider the latest devices from Huawei, Samsung, Apple, LG, Sony, and even the little-known phone brand CAT, more renowned for bulldozers and other earth-moving equipment. First, this week, we look at the latter three: LG V30+: a multimedia dream Every year for the past four years, LG has announced a “revolution­ary” new phone. Every year, the media have looked, marvelled, and moved on. In most cases, it was more novelty than revolution.

Now, it is allowing the phone to speak for itself. And the new LG V30+ is eloquent indeed.

From the front, with its curved edges, it is easily confused with the Samsung S8. The curve runs through to the back, and both front and back are coated in Corning Gorilla Glass 5, giving it an ultrasmoot­h look and feel. The edges are made of an aluminium alloy and with an H-beam constructi­on method for greater tensile strength, makes it more impact resistance than most flagship phones. It is designed for

outdoors, rated IP68 for dust and water resistance.

A 3300 mAh battery supports wireless charging as well as Qualcomm’s Quick Charge 3.0 – charging from zero to 50% in half an hour.

The most remarkable aspect of the phone is how light it is. Despite a Quad HD 6˝ display, it feels like a 5˝ handset, and weighs only 158g.

The V30+ is claimed to be the world’s first phone with a camera lens aperture of f1.6, meaning it lets in more light than any other phone camera. It marginally edges out the f1.7 aperture of the Samsung S8 range. It carries two rear lenses, with one a 13 megapixel wide angle lens, and the wide aperture lens being a standard angle, 16 megapixel lens using Crystal Clear, LG’s own standard for the first glass lens on a phone.

The front camera has a 5MP wide-angle lens with f2.2 aperture, allowing group “wefies” as opposed to one- or two-person selfies. A function called Graphy brings up pre-loaded sample photos that allow the user to choose a mood or style, and apply it to a new photo being taken.

An additional range of video and audio functions and capabiliti­es – supported by a Cine Video mode that is claimed to produce movie-quality videos, and HiFi Quad DAC audio, with sound tuning by B&O PLAY – make the phone a multimedia dream.

Sony XZ1: the creator’s edition

The Sony Z series was legendary for its camera performanc­e, with images outshining those from phones with more megapixels, lenses and shooting modes. With the XZ series, it is doing the same with video.

The XZ1 carries the same functional­ity as the XZ Premium, unveiled at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona earlier this year. So, for example, it uses the Motion Eye camera system, which allows it to record video in 960 frames per second. This, in turn, allows ultraslow motion video playback function, so that the phone can capture high-speed action and freeze individual frames. That lets the user capture movement that is not usually visible to the naked eye.

The most novel feature of the phone is its ability to create 3D images. By panning the camera round a face, head or physical object, the user creates an image that can be viewed from any angle, and built into 3D environmen­ts. It takes practice, but is one of the few phone features on any phone that lives up to the promise of making the user more creative.

It appears, however, that Sony’s heavy investment in time, as well as research and developmen­t, on camera capability has come at the expense of design. The boxy rectangula­r shape has barely changed since the start of the Z series.

CAT S41

This is the one most people will never hear about because they are not in the target market. It is built for a category known as rugged phones, with a brand known for its rugged equipment.

CAT is short for Caterpilla­r, famed for bulldozers and other industrial equipment. It has licensed the brand to Bullitt Mobile to make phones that are intended to operate in the same environmen­t as its other machinery. It has to be rugged, durable, and designed with both the nature of field usage and the nature of the environmen­t in mind.

For this reason, its two most important features are its tough shell and its large battery. The rubberised edges take into account the hits the phone will take from being dropped, knocked around and exposed to the elements. It is rated IP 68 for waterand dust-resistance, and can withstand a 1.8 metre fall onto

concrete.

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? NEW OFFERING. Samsung Electronic­s Mobile Communicat­ion president Koh Dong-jin speaks during the presentati­on of the newest Galaxy Note 8 in Seoul in September.
Picture: EPA-EFE NEW OFFERING. Samsung Electronic­s Mobile Communicat­ion president Koh Dong-jin speaks during the presentati­on of the newest Galaxy Note 8 in Seoul in September.
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 ??  ?? EYE-CATCHING. LG V30+
EYE-CATCHING. LG V30+
 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? TAKING NOTES. A model displays Samsung Electronic­s’ newest Galaxy Note 8 features.
Picture: EPA-EFE TAKING NOTES. A model displays Samsung Electronic­s’ newest Galaxy Note 8 features.

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