- Feb 14, 2005
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Engadget Link.
Wow. I gotta say that after watching the video, that has to be one of the most intriguing phones I've seen in a long long while. Seriously, the last time we've seen such a large shift was with Apple and their large touchscreen and spartan (button wise) controls and simplified but highly usable iOS.
While Android is arguable on equal footing with iOS at this point, there is no question a lot of the UI was copied from iOS. But looking at a lot of the Android phones...there isn't a lot to really say that Android has innovated anything. They've certainly improved things in certain areas vs iOS but there isn't that huge leap in innovation.
With this new concept phone from Fujitsu I was genuinely impressed. I do think the hardware, when closed, looked a bit clunky. However, opened and with the different ways you can configure and view the dual screens, I really wanted to own one.
Wow. I gotta say that after watching the video, that has to be one of the most intriguing phones I've seen in a long long while. Seriously, the last time we've seen such a large shift was with Apple and their large touchscreen and spartan (button wise) controls and simplified but highly usable iOS.
While Android is arguable on equal footing with iOS at this point, there is no question a lot of the UI was copied from iOS. But looking at a lot of the Android phones...there isn't a lot to really say that Android has innovated anything. They've certainly improved things in certain areas vs iOS but there isn't that huge leap in innovation.
With this new concept phone from Fujitsu I was genuinely impressed. I do think the hardware, when closed, looked a bit clunky. However, opened and with the different ways you can configure and view the dual screens, I really wanted to own one.