LG patent shows a new smartphone with quad camera setup, no notch and rear fingerprint sensor

referring to LG recently launched the V40 ThinQ, its first smartphone with a triple camera setup and a traditional fingerprint sensor on the back. The South Korean company has filed new design patents that suggest it has another new phone with quad-camera setup, and a traditional fingerprint sensor. The quad camera setup is arranged similar to the square format we first saw on the Huawei Mate 20 Pro. One of the notable things here is that the fingerprint sensor is still placed on the back of the device. This new smartphone from LG could stick with standard capacitive sensor as opposed to in-display fingerprint sensor seen on premium flagship smartphones.


How does NTT Docomo's tiny new smartphone measure up?

The Card Keitai KY-01L offers basic smartphone capabilities, but how does it compare with card-sized rivals such as the Palm phone and the Light Phone 2? Here's how NTT Docomo's Card Keitai KY-01L stacks up against other smartphones that aim to be more ultra-mobile and simplistic than ever. Why the iPhone 7 is still a smart choiceNTT Docomo says its phone is the "world's thinnest" smartphone, and is the size of a credit card. At 0.2 inches (5.08mm), the phone is incredibly skinny and really not that much thicker than a normal credit card. Unlike the NTT Docomo phone, Palm's device has a full set of smartphone functions, including a camera, an app store, and a voice assistant.

How does NTT Docomo's tiny new smartphone measure up?




Samsung's new 32MP and 48MP smartphone camera sensors go into mass production later this year

As it stated in While Google's Pixel 3 and Apple's iPhone XS may be the best cameras on the market today, it's hard to ignore Samsung's mobile photography prowess. This week, new Samsung camera sensors have been announced and are set to go into mass production later this year. The best gifts for Android usersDetailed in a recent press release, Samsung's new ISOCELL GM1 and ISOCELL GD1 deliver the whopping 32MP and 48MP sensors all designed to fit inside of your average smartphone. These new sensors deliver 0.8μm pixel image sensors while the sensor found in the Galaxy S9 is 1.22μm (bigger is better in this case). It hasn't been detailed yet when we'll see these new Samsung camera sensors debut in a smartphone, but the company has already confirmed that both offerings will go into mass production this year.







collected by :John Smith

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