Last week we traced the upwards trajectory of phone storage, letâs do the same but for screen size. Note that weâll focus only on phones - that is no PDAs.
With that in mind, get ready for some Nokia domination. Hailing from the distant 1996, the Nokia 9000 had a 4.5" 640 x 200px screen and a graphical web browser to surf the web at a blistering 0.0096Mbps. It was a true smartphone (running GEOS, a predecessor of Symbian) on a 33Mhz processor.
This phone spawned a multitude of successors, all of which featured its unusual laptop-like design - easily accessible screen outside, big screen inside. The last of this fabled line is the Nokia E90 from 2007. It hid a 4â screen inside with 800 x 352px resolution. The CPU had a clock speed 10 times higher - 330mHz.
The Nokia 9110 on the l eft and 9000 on the right (photo by Oldmobil)
Okay, the Communicators had a fairly awkward form factor. We think the Sony Ericsson P800 was a brilliant idea - it seamlessly combined a big touchscreen and a hardware keyboard. It didnt need two screens to do it and the keyboard could be detached if you didnt want it. Its 2.9" screen wasnt that big, but it was still way above average for its time in 2002.
Sony Ericsson P800
Anyway, back to 2007. After a decade of Nokia on top, HTC made the Advantage X7500. Itâs squarish 5â screen made it fairly chunky looking - this was more of a micro netbook than a phone (but it did have phone functionality). Compare that to the Communicators, which tried to maintain the silhouette of a phone (meaning their screens were wide but not very tall).
HTC Advantage X7500
A couple of years later, the fabled HTC HD2 came out (4.3â screen and slim bezels for the time). But for 2009 we want to focus on the LG BL40 New Chocolate. Itâs screen only had a 4â diagonal, but it was big in other ways - an extra-wide 21:9 aspect ratio. Even the Galaxy S8 (18.5:9) canât match that.
LG BL40 New Chocolate
The following year we saw the Dell Streak âtabletâ. Well, it seemed like a tablet with its 5â screen, thatâs for sure. Okay, we still havenât progressed since the 5â mark made by the Advantage, but at least the hardware keyboards have disappeared - phones were looking like phones again rather than mini laptops.
Dell Streak
Even so, these were still outliers. Samsung was among the first to recognize the appeal of a huge screen and in 2011 the Galaxy Note debuted. Its 5.3â Super AMOLED screen supported S Pen input - the missing QWERTY was replaced by handwriting. But Samsungâs commitment to the large screen movement wasnât 100% just yet. So its biggest phone in 2013 wasnt a Note, but instead a mid-range Galaxy Mega 6.3, which had - you guessed it - 6.3â screen.
Samsung Galaxy Note N7000
Also in 2013 Sony beat Samsung at its own game with the Xperia Z Ultra - a massive 6.4â in a super slender body. It measured only 6.5mm thick, despite its IP58 waterproof rating. You can still se e similarities between this phone and the current X series.
Sony Xperia Z Ultra
The dividing line between âphoneâ and âtabletâ is fairly arbitrary - many tablets have voice call functionality, so they can be used as phones if youâre brave enough. There are several 7â devices from 2014 onward, so weâll stop here.
Xiaomi Mi Mix
But before we go, here is an honorable mention - the Xiaomi Mi Mix. By mercilessly slashing bezels, it fit a whopping 6.4â screen in the same footprint as the iPhone 7 Plus. Is it fair to say that a handset stops being a phone when it no longer fits in your pocket? We think thatâs a better distinction than an arbitrary screen size an d the Mi Mix is the way to go forward when it comes to extra huge screens.
! ( hope useful)
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