Quote from: Jason Y. on March 02, 2020, 04:35:22
Cool Device!!
By the way, why does the article say the detailed specs are not known? There is a very detailed table on the company's website incl. display resolution and RAM..
A little more research might have helped before writing this article. ;)
I love the concept, obviously as a new player in the industry things can't be as streamlined and perfect as with established players that have 100s of millions in resources at their disposal. Every company including Apple and Co. had their issues when they started off (and still have). I think it's due time for new exciting alternatives to the one fits all concept of the industry. All premium smartphones have specs that are way higher than 99% of people could ever need, so why keep comparing specs all the time. What is needed are new exciting concepts in form factor and design, like the foldables or like this Carbon 1!
Where are you finding the specs? The "full specs" link just leads me to a wireframe drawing of the phone with the dimensions and weight, and nothing more (except a large white expanse of blank page). Tested in Firefox mobile, Firefox and Chrome desktop, same results all around.
All this aside, I'm highly skeptical of any smartphone startup. Do they have the resources to provide software updates for 3+ years? Do they have the resources to provide proper warranty services? If not, the experience for users will undoubtedly be poor.
As for moving away from unrecyclable plastics - that's great! I just don't see how moving into unrecyclable polymer composites is any different from this whatsoever. It might be that the carbon can be reclaimed, but I have a hard time believing this material to be any more recyclable than other polymer-hardened fiber composites - which are typically
entirely unrecyclable. If this is somehow different, they really ought to describe and explain how.