Not exact matches
You'll see
beautiful photos
of every product announced yesterday, and if you click on the links you can buy any
of the items made by Google (including last
year's Google Home) or made for Google (a whole lot
of headphones and
phone cases).
I wrote last
year that the handset is a
beautiful example
of everything that's wrong with Android, and after finally getting to use one (Essential didn't send me one for several months), my initial analysis hasn't changed: The PH - 1 is one
of the best - looking
phones you can buy (and that includes Apple's iPhone X), but unfortunately, its beauty is only skin - deep.
This
year, Samsung finally embraced the idea
of making a
beautiful phone that's not quite so bloated with crap.
As usually happens, the design technology will trickle down to mid-range and even budget
phones before next
year is out, so you won't have to spend hundreds
of dollars or pounds just to get your hands on these big,
beautiful displays.
The new
phone also gives us a preview
of what we can expect from other top global smartphone vendors this
year — namely, a big,
beautiful display stuffed into a smartphone that is much smaller than the phablets
of years past.
Two
years ago, HTC was the darling
of these fans because its HTC One M7 was simply a
beautiful premium
phone that came out at a time when Samsung was still releasing devices marred by cheap - feeling plastic.
HTC has been making metal
phones as
beautiful as — or even more
beautiful than — the iPhone for two
years now, while many
of its Android competitors are still playing catch - up.
It's a
beautiful phone, refined by maturity and three
years of work.
Finally, after all the effort that went into crafting Galaxy handsets that users wanted to buy for
years, Samsung is ready to torpedo its gorgeous new
phones with a crappy piece
of plastic that hides away the
beautiful designs that it's worked so hard to perfect.