Watch out for the Best 5 New Smartphones at the Mobile World Congress 2012!!!!
Best 5 New Smartphone at the Mobile World Congress 2012
HTC One X
Quad-core Android phones and high-quality camera phones are two major themes at this year's MWC, and the HTC One X brings those two concepts together elegantly. Rather than just blowing out specs, HTC is focusing on finish, feel, and quality, from the eye-popping Super LCD 2 screen to the mega-fast HDR camera enabled by a new image chip. The One X even uses both flagship processors shown off at the show—Nvidia's Tegra 3 in most countries, and Qualcomm's S4 in its AT&T version. It can be a bit too large for some with its 4.7-inch screen, but we think it just might be Android's hero product of the year.
Nokia PureView 808It's rare that you see a surprise, brand-new technology at one of these shows, but Nokia's true 41-megapixel PureView 808 cameraphone is blowing everyone away. The huge sensor lets you zoom after the fact, enables gorgeous, noise-free images at lower resolutions, and essentially kills the megapixel race. The only reason this phone isn't our top pick: it's running the zombified Symbian operating system.
Sony Xperia P
Sony seems to be the only Android vendor at this show focusing on design as much as HTC is. The Xperia P's clear plastic bar and rounded back make it look unlike other Android phones, and its White Magic display makes for truly stunning brightness. White Magic uses four subpixels for each pixel rather than the usual three; the fourth one is white. That makes the screen's whites extremely bright, and saves power all around because you only have to light one subpixel rather than three for white areas.
Samsung Galaxy Beam
The projector phone is back! And it actually looks usable this time. The Samsung Galaxy Beam brings a unique feature to a slim, attractive Android phone. The projector up top beams a 15-lumen image out the front onto whatever surface you can find. It's not thick, at 12.5mm, and the lens doesn't get in the way of slipping the phone into your pocket. The projector has 640-by-360 resolution, which is a 720p video reduced by half.
Orange* phone
Europe's first Intel-powered Android phone, the Orange* phone could herald a major shift in the entire smartphone market. Is the dominance of ARM processors coming to an end? Right now we're seeing the same kind of features on ARM-based phones as we did on the Orange*. But Intel, of course, is promising to do them better, faster, and cooler. Will it work? This phone's success or failure will help tell the tale.
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HTC One X
Quad-core Android phones and high-quality camera phones are two major themes at this year's MWC, and the HTC One X brings those two concepts together elegantly. Rather than just blowing out specs, HTC is focusing on finish, feel, and quality, from the eye-popping Super LCD 2 screen to the mega-fast HDR camera enabled by a new image chip. The One X even uses both flagship processors shown off at the show—Nvidia's Tegra 3 in most countries, and Qualcomm's S4 in its AT&T version. It can be a bit too large for some with its 4.7-inch screen, but we think it just might be Android's hero product of the year.
Nokia PureView 808It's rare that you see a surprise, brand-new technology at one of these shows, but Nokia's true 41-megapixel PureView 808 cameraphone is blowing everyone away. The huge sensor lets you zoom after the fact, enables gorgeous, noise-free images at lower resolutions, and essentially kills the megapixel race. The only reason this phone isn't our top pick: it's running the zombified Symbian operating system.
Sony Xperia P
Sony seems to be the only Android vendor at this show focusing on design as much as HTC is. The Xperia P's clear plastic bar and rounded back make it look unlike other Android phones, and its White Magic display makes for truly stunning brightness. White Magic uses four subpixels for each pixel rather than the usual three; the fourth one is white. That makes the screen's whites extremely bright, and saves power all around because you only have to light one subpixel rather than three for white areas.
Samsung Galaxy Beam
The projector phone is back! And it actually looks usable this time. The Samsung Galaxy Beam brings a unique feature to a slim, attractive Android phone. The projector up top beams a 15-lumen image out the front onto whatever surface you can find. It's not thick, at 12.5mm, and the lens doesn't get in the way of slipping the phone into your pocket. The projector has 640-by-360 resolution, which is a 720p video reduced by half.
Orange* phone
Europe's first Intel-powered Android phone, the Orange* phone could herald a major shift in the entire smartphone market. Is the dominance of ARM processors coming to an end? Right now we're seeing the same kind of features on ARM-based phones as we did on the Orange*. But Intel, of course, is promising to do them better, faster, and cooler. Will it work? This phone's success or failure will help tell the tale.
www.chargezone.co.uk
The Public Smartphone Charging Media with Brand Focused Advertising
Follow @chargezone
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