Flexible phone , holographic screen, brochure smartphone ... The phone of the future will not know the crisis and the giants of the mobile...
new Apple, LG, Samsung, Nokia coming out : What cell phones for tomorrow? |
The revolution in flexible displays
In October 2011, Nokia launched the movement by revealing its Nokia Kinetic, a fully flexible at the annual Nokia World show in London prototype smartphone. The principle? Able to fully control the phone interface, without even need to touch the screen. Just "twist" the screen to scroll through images or zooming, for example.Samsung, which has seized the concept, having launched the production of a first series of flexible displays, whose output was scheduled for late 2013, delayed production due to technical faults. For the moment, no smartphone Samsung flexible screen should therefore be created before 2014. Another Korean giant LG, however, could leave the first flexible displays by the end of the year, if he gets a partnership with the Ministry of Finance South Korea.
The "phablets" and other "tabphones"
Another innovation in mobile telephony: the success of "phablets", "tabphones" or "fonepad" terminal halfway between the touch pad and smartphone, whose screen measures between 5 and 7 inches. Once again, Samsung has been a pioneer in this field, with its Galaxy Note 13 inches diagonally. Other phone giants have also stepped into the now open breach of these new hybrid devices like LG Vu with her.Asus has its unveiled at the Mobile World Congress 2013 in Barcelona at the end of February, the new Padfone Infinity, a 5-inch device that introduces a high-definition 1080p display resolution side.
A leaflet Smartphone
In early 2012, the Russian Ilshat Garipov imagine a new concept smartphone, the "pamphlet", consisting of several interconnected touchscreen and can unfold. This amazing smartphone and would read the paper or check a map as the old, unfolding the "pages." Powered by nanoparticles, which absorb solar energy, green smartphone does not risk becoming marketable immediately.In Japan, NTT DoCoMo and NEC operators have also introduced a foldable smartphone. It has two screens side by side, make him look like a Nintendo DS. It allows to open multiple applications at the same time to play while sending SMS, go to Facebook or watching a video. This smartphone will be available in Japan in April.
A transparent phone
After six years of research and development, the Taiwanese branch of U.S. Polytron Technologies unveiled in March 2013 a new concept of mobile phone: transparent phone. The internal components of the phone (like the SIM card and battery) have been miniaturized and placed in the bottom of the smartphone."The screen is conductive glass allows LED to be lit with no visible wire," says Chen, who works for the public relations division of the Taiwanese. The prototype, only 0.5 inches thick, is 25% lighter than the iPhone, with a 4.3 inch screen, and can display images on the front and rear of the unit. It should be out before the end of the year.
Recharge your batteries by full light
Smartphones, that's fine, but when it comes to battery life, opinions are less enthusiastic. To solve the problem of discharge of the battery, and if you do not necessarily have to take with you, the French start-up Wysips recently introduced a new concept of smartphones able to capture the energy of light to charge its battery.The company has NPowerPEG, meanwhile, imagined an external battery that feeds when the user moves and moves.
Smartwatch a gadget James Bond?
The smartphone of the future may soon adopt a more amazing shape: that of the watch, which allows the user to be permanently connected, discreetly. Worthy of a James Bond gadget, the Apple iWatch consider putting on the market may well revolutionize the mobile phone market.A holographic screen
HP has introduced a new screen form, which could foreshadow the phone of the future: mobile holographic screen, which features new viewing angles, wider. HP unveiled the prototype allows for time to see a fixed hologram 200 different angles.An HP researcher has said that in the future, "a smartphone could display a 3D interface. For example, architects could use a tablet to show a 3D model to a client, instead of building the physical model. "We can not stop progress.