Los Angeles Times

Android creator unveils smartphone

Called Essential, it focuses on basic, high-end features.

- By Hayley Tsukayama Tsukayama writes for the Washington Post.

What do you really need out of a smartphone? Developer Andy Rubin — creator of the Android mobile operating system now owned by Google — has tried to answer that question with a new phone aimed at delivering the basics of a highend smartphone in a simple package.

The phone, called the Essential, made its debut Tuesday and was created by Rubin’s company, which also is called Essential. Rubin decided to start the company after voicing frustratio­ns about the current gadget landscape, which he described in a blog post as full of unnecessar­y features and lacking in good choices.

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 and 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 Apple iPhone and simple styling.

The Essential phone boasts a fingerprin­t reader as well as a front-facing 8megapixel camera, a rearfacing 13-megapixel camera and a sensor that is supposed to help with low-light shots.

It does not have a headphone jack — though the Verge reported 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 the brand all the time.

Essential also is 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 new 360-degree camera. It, unlike other mobile 360-degree 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, swappable parts — that other manufactur­ers, notably Motorola, have attempted. At $699, it’s not cheap, but it does offer plenty of storage space in every model: 128 gigabytes. (The iPhone’s 128 GB model costs $750.) And, if the respect for consumer preference­s extends to the company’s software, it may carve out a niche among privacy hawks. Users also can transfer data over these magnetic connection­s.

The ideas are interestin­g. But will it sell? 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, those 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 says its Home will be privacy-conscious and work with a variety of devices.

 ?? Essential ?? ESSENTIAL, at $699, includes 8-megapixel frontfacin­g and 13-megapixel rear-facing cameras.
Essential ESSENTIAL, at $699, includes 8-megapixel frontfacin­g and 13-megapixel rear-facing cameras.

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