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General Category | GDPR - Important notice => Patents, Software Patents, Patent applications => Topic started by: javajolt on August 11, 2019, 07:06:02 PM
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Recently, LG announced that their dual-screen smartphone will be ready for release next month. Yesterday, their patent for a specially designed foldable phone was approved. The device bears resemblance to the Samsung Galaxy Fold, but with a Z-Fold folding system.
(http://i.postimg.cc/GpRKn5FW/909-D2-F48-9-D6-F-408-E-BFC4-B82803-CA6-C6-C.png)
The design patent was filed in China on 6th March 2019 and included 18 sketches of a rectangular-shaped folding device with two displays; one of which is a flexible screen.
The smartphone unfolds according to the Z-Fold principle, which is also used in brochures for the retail trade.
After you unfold the phone, you’ll see a flexible screen which is twice the length of a regular screen and folds open in width like a tablet.
Additionally, the housing accommodates a second display, which is half the size of the flexible main display. This allows you to create an even wider screen surface.
(http://i.postimg.cc/KvrrrNSQ/vouwtelefoon-z-fold-model.jpg)
Recently, LG announced that their dual-screen smartphone will be ready for release next month. Yesterday, their patent for a specially designed foldable phone was approved. The device bears resemblance to the Samsung Galaxy Fold, but with a Z-Fold folding system.
The design patent was filed in China on 6th March 2019 and included 18 sketches of a rectangular-shaped folding device with two displays; one of which is a flexible screen.
The smartphone unfolds according to the Z-Fold principle, which is also used in brochures for the retail trade.
After you unfold the phone, you’ll see a flexible screen which is twice the length of a regular screen and folds open in width like a tablet.
Additionally, the housing accommodates a second display, which is half the size of the flexible main display. This allows you to create an even wider screen surface.
The second display also serves as a front display. Because of its unique hinge, the front screen bends to become a part of the inside main display.
(http://i.postimg.cc/KzxmLxn0/lg-opvouwbare-telefoons.jpg)
The smartphone looks like it accommodates a dual camera on the back, but shows no sign of a front-facing camera. This makes it likely that the company are working on incorporating an under-screen camera, and possibly under-screen fingerprint sensor too.
In the sketches, two physical buttons can be seen on the right of the phone. The bottom shows a microphone and speaker, but no 3.5 mm headphone jack or USB-C port; suggesting that the device can only be charged wirelessly.
Check out the patent here (http://nl.letsgodigital.org/uploads/2019/08/lg-vouwtelefoon.pdf).
source (http://mspoweruser.com/lg-solves-the-tri-fold-smartphone-problem-with-innovative-patent/)