LG (NASDAQOTH:
LGEAF) will hold a special media event on Oct. 1. If recent reports are any
indication, the Korean tech giant will use the spotlight to unveil its latest
flagship smartphone. LG has seen the popularity of its smartphones surge in
recent quarters, and its growing market share poses a challenge to other
vendors, including Apple(NASDAQ: AAPL) and Samsung(NASDAQOTH: SSNLF).
A smartphone with a second display?
According to
prolific leaker Evan Blass, LG plans to launch a new smartphone in October. The
phone will be around the same size and sport hardware similar to that of its
existing flagship, the G4, but LG will distinguish this new phone by including
a secondary display.
If so, it won't
be the first smartphone to include such a feature. Samsung released the
Continuum in 2010. A modified version of its original Galaxy S, it included a
secondary display along the bottom of the screen. Like the tickers perpetually
running across cable news channels, the Continuum's second display gave the
phone's owner a quick way to take in information at a glance real-time news,
social media updates, and notifications. It may sound somewhat gimmicky, but at
the time, it was well-received. When it reviewed the phone, CNet praised the
dedicated ticker feed, highlighting it as one of the phone's single best
features.
Ticker
displays, however, never caught on. Samsung ditched the feature, and its rivals
never bothered to copy it. Admittedly, Samsung's modern Galaxy Edge smartphones
do offer something somewhat similar the curved edges on the Galaxy S6 Edge and
S6 Edge+ can show notifications without activating the rest of the display -- but
the implementation is different, and it hasn't been nearly as well-regarded.
Reviewing the Galaxy S6 Edge, techradar wrote that it was difficult to access
(it requires an odd swiping motion), and the information it offered was
limited.
If LG does
launch a phone with a secondary display, it may not use it in the same fashion.
The invitation to LG's upcoming event includes a prominent image of a
clapperboard, the black, handheld chalkboard used in film-making to designate
particular scenes and takes. With such an obvious allusion to the film
industry, could LG's new phone center around media consumption?
LG's
rising popularity
LG is the third-largest smartphone vendor
in the U.S., behind only Apple and Samsung. Last month, Kantar World panel
reported that LG's share of the U.S. smartphone market nearly doubled in the
second quarter on an annual basis, and that it captured more first-time
smartphone buyers than Samsung. Its flagship G4, which made its debut in June,
may have been the driving factor.
With the decline of HTC, LG has become
Samsung's biggest North American Android rival. Among Android phones, LG's G4
is perhaps the most compelling alternative to Samsung's Galaxy Note 5, with a
large display and a speedy processor. Notably, it offers both a removable battery
and expandable storage two long time Galaxy Note features Samsung cut this
year.
It also provides some competition to
Apple's larger iPhones, though likely to a lesser extent. Apple's iPhone 6 Plus
and 6s Plus are around the same size as LG's G4, but run an entirely different
operating system. Consumers who prefer iOS have no choice but to go with
Apple's iPhones. Still, in terms of offering a large, high-end handset, LG is
Apple's second-largest rival.
Investors in the sector should follow LG's
event closely, and keep a close eye on what it announces. While it may prove to
be another gimmick, LG may just introduce the next revolutionary smartphone
feature.
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