LG Electronics officially
launched its Optimus Vu "phablet" in Korea Feb. 19, surprising those
who expected the half-phone, half-tablet to debut at the Mobile World Congress
event in Barcelona later this month.
Early in February, LG
released a teaser of the device, and many of the suspected specs hold true:
The Vu features a 5-inch display with a resolution of 1,024 by 768 and an
aspect ratio of 4:3. It weighs 0.37 pounds and measures 139.6 by 90.4mm.
The iPad, by contrast, measures 241 by 186mm.
One surprise: Like the Samsung Galaxy Note—another 5-incher,
or phablet—the Vu Optimus also works with a stylus. Or, in the
Google-translated press release, a "common pen," which it seems can
collect data from a screen, for sharing, with a single click.
The Optimus Vu runs Android 2.3, known as Gingerbread, but within three months of its release will be
upgraded to Android 4.0, or Ice Cream Sandwich, LG said in a statement.
Also on board are a Qualcomm 1.5GHz dual-core processor, an 8-megapixel rear
camera, a 1.3-megapixel front camera, 32GB of internal memory, a 2,080mAh
battery, and WiFi and Long-Term Evolution (LTE) connectivity.
It also has Digital Living Network Alliance support, and can connect and share media with other DLNA devices.
The Optimus Vu will be available from South Korean carriers
SK Telecom and LG+, though pricing—and wider distribution—details
weren't shared.
The Samsung Galaxy Note, for now the Vu's main competition, as
form factors go, went on sale Feb. 19 on the AT&T network, for $300 with a
contract. Will its head start hurt LG? Perhaps not. While tablet-savvy consumers
are said to be more ready for phablets than they were when Dell premiered its
unsuccessful 5-inch Slate, there is still the matter of talking on these
devices, which by most accounts requires a headset—at least to not feel
silly.
An eWEEK reviewer testing out the device said he felt
like a not-funny Maxwell Smart, talking into his shoe phone. The Wall
Street Journal's Walt Mossberg complained that it's like "talking into a
piece of toast," and The Boy Genius Report's Jonathan Geller noted,
"You will look stupid talking on it, people will laugh at you, and you'll
be unhappy if you buy it."
Not what Samsung was going for, surely, in re-blazing that
trail. Perhaps, in addition to a stylus, it should come with a trusty headset
to remove all embarrassment, not to mention potential health concerns. If Research
in Motion recommends keeping
the BlackBerry Bold at least 0.98 inches from one's head or body when in use,
for reasons of radiation, users may feel uneasy about holding a 5.5- by
3.5-inch tech slab to their heads.
As a tablet, however, the Note is said
to be "blazingly fast," and its S Pen stylus to really feel
and look and behave like a pen.
Still, an even bigger wrench in the works of the budding
phablet market could be the introduction of the iPad 3, which is now expected
to arrive March 7 and feature a super-duper 2,048 by 1,536 display, being
called a "Retina Display," and less certainly a quad-core processor
and 4G LTE connectivity.
Even more worrisome for LG and Samsung: Apple
may this time even release a smaller version of its tablet, not going so
far as 5 inches, but instead debuting a 7-inch model.
The next few weeks should be interesting.