LG has launched its latest device called WING, the company’s unique dual-screen smartphone under its new Explorer Project.
LG WING features a swiveling dual-screen device with two screens that can be used in a number of configurations.
In its Basic Mode, the smartphone functions normally, with a single display on the front, a front-facing pop-up camera, and a rear-facing camera on the back.
In Swivel Mode, however, the entire front display can be turned 90 degrees, exposing a second 3.9-inch below it.
A single application can be expanded to both screens when in Swivel Mode or two applications can be displayed simultaneously – one on each display.
The LG Wing packs some impressive hardware, with its main screen comprising a 6.8-inch P-OLED display.
The second screen can also act as a grip, with the Grip Lock feature allowing it to ignore accidental touches.
The LG Wing boasts three rear cameras – a 64MP Ultra High Resolution OIS Wide lens, a 12MP Ultra Wide Big Pixel lens, and a 13MP Wide lens – all of which are designed to work with the smartphone’s unique gimbal technology.
Highlight Specifications of LG WING
Display: 6.8-inch (2440 × 1080 pixels) Full HD+ 20.5: 9 aspect ratio P-OLED display, 3.9-inch (1240 x 1080 pixels) 1.15:1 G-OLED second screen
Chipset: Octa Core (1 x 2.4GHz + 1 x 2.2GHz + 6 x 1.8GHz Kryo 475 CPUs) Snapdragon 765G 7nm EUV Mobile Platform with Adreno 620 GPU
Storage: 8GB RAM + 128GB / 256GB storage, expandable memory up to 2TB with microSD
Operating System: Android 10
Cameras: 64MP rear camera with LED flash, OIS, 13MP 117° ultra-wide lens, 12MP 120° ultra-wide Gimbal mode Camera; 32MP pop-up front-facing camera
Sensor: In-display fingerprint sensor
USB Type-C audio
Dimensions: 169.5 x 74.5 x 10.9 mm; Weight: 260g
MIL-STD 810G Compliance, Water and Dust Resistance (IP54)
Network: 5G, Dual 4G VoLTE, Wi-Fi 802.11 ac (2.4GHz + 5GHz), Bluetooth 5.1, GPS/GLONASS/Beidou, NFC, USB Type-C
Battery: 4000mAh battery with Quick Charge 4.0+ 25W fast charging, 10w wireless charging.
Pricing
No word on pricing at the moment.
This thing na phablet na, why would anyone call it a smartphone? And is even too big to operate with one hand any phone using two (2) screens can be full of distractions.