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Sony Launches Phone With World's First 4K HDR Screen; Nokia Brings Back the 3310 Handset (wired.com)

Rumors were true. Nokia did launch its 3310 handset at MWC. It's been almost 17 years since the 3310 first came out. In that time the Nokia brand has been bought, sold, and stripped for parts. From a report on Wired: The 3310 is still very much a feature phone. It has a web browser, but only barely -- it's a dumbed-down version of Opera, basically there for emergency tweeting. It exists for you to make phone calls, send texts the way you did a decade ago (T9 FTW!), and play Snake. The 3310 weighs less than three ounces, and its battery lasts an absurd 31 days in standby time, or up to 22 hours of talk time. The new 3310 has a camera, for one thing, a 2-megapixel shooter. It also has a 2.4-inch, 240x320 screen, which is hilariously small and low-res but still a huge improvement over the original. It is priced at 49 Euros ($51). Also at the event, Sony announced that it is not done with putting a 4K screen on smartphones. From a report on The Verge: The XZ Premium has the world's first 4K HDR (2,160 x 3,840, High Dynamic Range) display in a smartphone. Sony has the latest and best Qualcomm chip while others are still offering the Snapdragon 820 and 821, but the Xperia XZ Premium won't be out until late spring or just ahead of the summer. Hell, the demo units shown off ahead of MWC weren't running anywhere close to final software -- so Sony is pre-announcing its new flagship device by a long margin. Other notable features include water resistance, rated to IP65 and IP68, a thinner profile at 7.9mm, and MicroSD storage expandability. The phone's battery is a reasonable 3,230mAh, and there's a fingerprint sensor integrated into the side-mounted power button as usual.

2 of 76 comments (clear)

  1. Come on guys, isn't this a bit rediculous? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 4, Insightful

    '4K' TV is one thing (putting aside for a moment the lack of OTA broadcast 4K content), assuming your TV is gigantic, but a 4K display on a phone? Really? How does that even make sense? On the other hand I'm sure wireless companies love the idea, because of how much data you'll use up so fast watching online 4K content on a tiny little phone screen.

  2. just a new package by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Umm ... Nokia or Microsoft or HMD Global has been making and selling these feature phones for many years. While the new 3310 is styled to look somewhat like the original, the feature set appears to match the MRE (MAUI Runtime Environment from MediaTek) phones (such as the Nokia 220, which by the way retailed for ~$29 US) that have been available since the death of Series 40 phones. The real story would be the return of 3 & 3.5G S40 mobiles.