LG Flex New (mobile)
Introduction
With so many flagship
"plus ones" out there, it's refreshing to see something truly
revolutionary. The LG G Flex is curved like a Beckham free kick and has a
flexible screen and battery, along with a unique self-healing coating on the
back.
LG G Flex official images
The LG G Flex is curved
top to bottom and, as the name suggests, it can flex. It's not bendable like rubber;
you have to really put some muscle to it. It's quite impressive all the same,
as nothing about phones is flexible, not the screen glass, not the screen
itself, nor the motherboard or battery. Oh well, they didn't use to be.
Key
features
Ø Unique
curved design
Ø Quad-band
GSM/GPRS/EDGE support; CDMA and 1xEV-DO
Ø Quad-band
3G with HSPA; Penta-band LTE Cat. 4
Ø 6"
16M-color 720p curved POLED capacitive touchscreen; Gorilla glass
Ø Android
OS v4.2.2 Jelly Bean; LG Optimus UI
Ø Quad-core
2.26 GHz Krait 400 CPU, 2 GB RAM, Adreno 330 GPU, Qualcomm Snapdragon 800
chipset
Ø 13 MP
autofocus camera with LED flash, geo-tagging, Intelligent Auto, Time catch
shot, smart shutter and VR panoramas
Ø 1080p
video recording @ 60fps with continuous autofocus and stereo sound; HDR mode,
Dual recording, optical image stabilization
Ø 2.1 MP
front-facing camera, 1080p video recording
Ø 32GB
of built-in storage, 24GB user-available
Ø microUSB
port, USB host support, USB on-the-go, SlimPort TV-out
Ø Bluetooth
v4.0
Ø NFC
Ø Wi-Fi
a/b/g/n/ac, Wi-Fi Direct and DLNA
Ø GPS
with A-GPS, GLONASS
Ø Standard
3.5 mm audio jack
Ø Stereo
FM radio with RDS
Ø Voice
commands
Ø Multi-tasking
with Dual Window, mini-apps with optional transparency (QSlide)
Ø Accelerometer
and proximity sensor
Ø Active
noise cancellation with dedicated mic
Ø Non-replaceable
3,500mAh Li-Po battery
Ø IR
emitter for remote control of home appliances
Main
disadvantages
Ø Screen
has low ppi, issues
Ø Rather
large device even for a phablet
Ø No
optical image stabilization for the camera
Ø The
hardware controls at the back take some time getting used to
Ø No
microSD slot
Ø Non-replaceable
battery
LG leaned on its
component manufacturing skills and created a Plastic OLED (POLED) screen that's
flexible (more so than the G Flex itself). The next step is a curved, flexible
Lithium Polymer battery (a world first). Despite its odd shape and 8.7mm
thickness of the phone, the battery has a respectable 3,500mAh capacity.
The screen measures the
massive 6", but the curve of the device helps the ergonomics. While it
impresses with size and flexibility, the screen has only 720p resolution
(245ppi). Here's hoping that the new technology makes up for the lacking
density.
While flexible screens
and batteries might become more popular with wearable devices (say a smartwatch
that wraps around your wrist), the next trick might become standard for all
sorts of devices - the coating on the back can heal itself if scratched. This
will put an end to all the silly cases and protectors that just make phones
thick and ugly.
LG G Flex in our office
Beyond the breaking
news, the LG G Flex is just the phablet version of the LG G2 with a Snapdragon
800 chipset, 13MP camera (no OIS though), Optimus UI gestures and updated
multitasking (with a split-screen option). It even has the trademark hardware
controls on the back. The Optimus G Pro is getting a little old and small and
the LG Vu 3 is a niche product with its 4:3 screen, so another phablet is a
welcome addition to LG's fleet.
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