I like the design of the phones but i dislike the physical button…One can only hope they will have an IPS display. But if its taking its cues from the prada 3.0 then it will probably be a Nova display….which is ok too. It’d be nice to see it in a bigger form factor.
LG Optimus L3 – 3.2-inch display, Android 2.3 Gingerbread
LG Optimus L7 – 4.3-inch display, 1,500 mAh battery, Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
LG L-Style’s design philosophy is comprised of five aesthetic elements: Modern Square Style for a comfortable grip, Floating Mass Technology for a slimmer look, Seamless Layout for a more intuitive arrangement of keys, Harmonized Design Contrast utilizing metallic accents and Sensuous Slim Shape that naturally draws one’s attention.
The new LG Optimus LTE Tag does not look like an attractive device. NFC is nice but some other features seem 2011. If the price is right, it can be an interesting phone for the people not living on the cutting edge of technology.
The Optimus LTE Tag gets its name from a unique new feature, LG Tag+, which uses NFC (Near Field Communication) to communicate with special stickers or “tags” that can be programmed to automatically change the phone’s settings. Swiping a tag upon entering the office could put the Optimus LTE Tag in silent mode and activate Wi-Fi. A tag on the car dashboard could be programmed to turn on Bluetooth, GPS and raise the volume. The options are limitless.
LG Optimus LTE Tag cell phone feautres a 4.3-inch (800 x 480) IPS display, 1.2GHz Dure-Core processor, 5.0MP with AF-LED Flash (Rear) & 1.3MP (Front), 16GB eMMC16GB eMMC, NFC, LG Tag+, MHL(Mobile High Definition Link), DLNA(Digital Living Network Alliance), 1,700mAh and Android 2.3 Gingerbread OS.
The new LG Optimus Vu is a beauty, and a 5-inch screen is the sweet spot. But damn, a 4:3 aspect ratio makes it just too wide! All modern movies are made in 16:9 and this is 4:3 so there will be some black lines around the movies when you watch it.
I just don’t know what I should do with this 5 inch gadget. Too big for a smartphone, too small for a tablet. Somehow weird aspect ration – especially for a smartphone. The point of this sub market (oversized display, pen input, phone-tablet hybrid) is to try to give you a workable solution for two types of devices in one.
LG Optimus Vu Specifications:
- Carrier: - Available: 2012 - Networks: 4G LTE - Display: 5-inch (1024×768) IPS Display, 4:3 aspect ratio - Camera: 8MP with AF LED Flash (rear) and 1.3MP (front) - Operating system: Android 2.3 Gingerbread upgradeable to Android 4.0 ICS - Input: Touch Screen, Rubberdium pen - CPU: 1.5GHz Dual-Core Processor - Memory: 1GB DDR2 - Memory card: - Storage: 32GB eMMC - Connectivity: GPS, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA, HDMI - Battery: 2,080mAh - Talk Time: - Standby Time: - Dimensions: 139.6 x 90.4 x 8.5mm ; 5.5 inches (h) x 3.56 inches (w) x 0.33 inches (d) - Weight:
LG Miracle Windows phone Specs: – 4-inch WVGA NOVA screen, – 1GHz Snapdragon – 5.0-megapixel rear camera with 720p capable – VGA-class front-facing webcam – 8GB of storage – Windows Phone 7 OS
8GB of storage and no expandable memory. I think they are trying to push cloud services. However I read somewhere in the next major Windows Phone update it will support SD…
Looks like a great phone, 4.7-inch screen, now this sounds like the phone dimensions are going to be on the rather large size. LG phones usually have nice specs and awesome screens. I can’t believe that Android people are jumping up and down about Tegra 3.