This card-sized smartphone may be world's thinnest and lightest ever made
While Apple, Google and other major handset makers are packing smartphones with ever more bells and whistles, a Japanese company is releasing a phone that latches onto another trend: the rise of the smaller, simpler smartphone.
NTT Docomo is scheduled to release a phone in November that they claim is the world's thinnest and lightest smartphone ever made, and is designed as a "lite" version with only basic smartphone capabilities.
But this isn't even first phone produced this year that prides itself on being so tiny. 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.
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NTT Docomo says its phone is the "world's thinnest" smartphone, and is the size of a credit card.
The Card Keitai KY-01L is about the size of a credit card, give or take a few millimeters on the length and width. At 0.2 inches, the phone is incredibly skinny and really not that much thicker than a normal credit card.
The KY-01L can make phone calls and browse the web, but that's about it.
When a phone is so small in size, some sacrifices have to be made. This is definitely a "lite" smartphone. The phone has LTE connectivity and 4G for phone calls and web browsing. However, the phone does not have a camera or any store to download apps from.
Palm released an "ultra-mobile" phone last week whose size is also comparable to a credit card, but has more functionality.
Palm's device is designed, like the KY-01L, to be small enough to fit in your wallet alongside your credit cards.
But as Business Insider reported last week, the Palm phone acts as a "companion" smartphone that actually works in tandem with your regular-sized smartphone. 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.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
Contributer : Tech Insider https://ift.tt/2QUQXzc
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