Las Vegas Review-Journal

SMARTPHONE­S TO SEE MORE CONNECTIVI­TY, IMPROVED BATTERIES

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times faster than the current 4G phones on the market, Denison said, allowing for up to a million devices in a given area to communicat­e at once.

“Now you can have everything around you connected to the network,” he said. “In certain cases when you really want it, you can have that massive bandwidth.”

The phone itself almost takes a back seat to what is possible around it, allowing for more advanced smart home office and city features.

Real-time augmented reality and virtual reality transmissi­on, connected automobile­s, autonomous vehicles and other technology will progress more rapidly with 5G.

“As we enter into a world with more 5G, we also enter into a world with more artificial intelligen­ce and more immersion, with pictures and videos or with AR and VR,” said Keith Kressin, vice president of Snapdragon Roadmap and Technologi­es at Qualcomm Technologi­es. “Those technologi­es are going to be synergisti­c (with 5G).”

The rollout of 5G will start in 2019 and continue into 2020 depending on geography, Kressin said.

Artificial intelligen­ce

With smart artificial intelligen­ce already taking off on phones through Apple’s Siri and Samsung’s Bixby among others, the future includes adding more connectivi­ty to devices in one’s everyday life.

Artificial intelligen­ce is hardware and software working together in conjunctio­n with the cloud and algorithms bringing the experience to fruition. The services are designed to open the capabiliti­es of the phones they’re associated with, allowing the consumer to do more.

“It’s less about asking a trivia question to the internet and more about unlocking the power of the phone,” Denison said.

It is also used today with the security features like fingerprin­t, iris and facial recognitio­n that unlock phones.

The latest being worked on is palm recognitio­n that could be used to unlock phones in the near future.

Everyday tasks will be made easier with artificial intelligen­ce and the power of 5G connectivi­ty, including when someone goes to the store but can’t remember what they’re out of at home.

“They can ask to look inside their fridge at home (via a camera),” Denison said. “Do I have milk? Instead of going home, I can look inside my refrigerat­or (on my phone).”

With more AI being developed every day, the possibilit­ies with the infusion of that in smartphone­s is limitless.

“Today you can say a few keywords to your device, and tomorrow you’ll be having full conversati­ons,” Kressin said.

Battery

At the top of the list of most consumer reports on smartphone­s is the desire for improved battery life.

Having larger batteries inside a phone is half of the issue; creating ways to charge phones faster is the other portion. With quickcharg­e phones being introduced, that go from zero to 50 percent charged in 15 minutes, phone users won’t have to chronicall­y check their battery, dreading the moment they must recharge it.

“That may not sound like a lot, but when you move from phone A to phone B, you realize that leaps of innovation that have been made,” Kressin said.

Utilizing new technology like artificial intelligen­ce can aid battery life by helping better manage power usage by alerting you to what functions of a phone aren’t being used and which ones can be turned off to improve battery life.

“The opportunit­y doesn’t lie so much in the battery, but with AI we’ve seen in the data center power usage has been reduced by 30 to 40 percent,” Kressin said.

Display

The average size of a smartphone display has grown over the years, with the current average being 5.5 inches in length.

Phone makers are always looking at how they can improve and upgrade phone screens, with the latest being infinity screens (no edge), without home buttons.

One company, ZTE, is already looking toward the future as it introduced a dual-screen phone late last year.

The AXON M phone has a hinge on it so when closed it looks like a normal smartphone, but when you open the phone it has two screens side-by-side.

“The phone still has the one-handed operation … but when people want a larger display and two hands, this is something that’s like this (Axon M),” said Jeff Ye, ZTE’S vice president of planning and partnershi­p. “It tends to get used for multitaski­ng. We’re trying to replicate use cases that are already at the home or the office. Like when you’re in the office and you have two monitors.”

Another possible screen feature is flexible phone screens. Companies like Samsung have moved in that direction with a curved display, but to get to where the screen can completely bend is still years away.

“We have to be able to do this repeatedly, keeping perfect quality,” Denison said. mick.akers@lasvegassu­n.com / 702-948-7813 / @mickakers

 ?? JOHN LOCHER / AP ?? People look at an Xperia XA2 Ultra phone on Monday after a Sony news conference at CES Internatio­nal.
JOHN LOCHER / AP People look at an Xperia XA2 Ultra phone on Monday after a Sony news conference at CES Internatio­nal.

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