It's incredibly loud when you rest a Galaxy S or Note
phone on a hard surface if you don't use a case.
It's incredibly loud when you rest a Galaxy S or Note
phone on a hard surface if you don't use a case.
The back doesn't have the same solid build, and the glass feels more like plastic when putting
the phone on a hard surface.
Most of the stats you see aren't for drops on concrete, which is much less forgiving, but LG does test
its phones on that harder surface as well.
Not exact matches
You use the Switch's screen to press forward
on one or both of the Joy - Cons which causes one or both to vibrate at a frequency capable of moving the vehicle across a
hard surface, like when your
phone vibrates off your bedside table when you won't stop your alarm in the morning.
On a
hard surface this isn't a problem since a small bump raises the
phone up enough for sound waves to travel.
It's not waterproof, so folks looking for that ability will simply have to look elsewhere, but Lenovo absolutely guarantees that normal drops from around 5ft / 1.5 m onto
hard surfaces won't break the screen, and it can do so because of the second generation ShatterShield technology
on the front of the
phone.
The higher the drop, the more likely it is for the screen to break, especially if the
phone lands
on a
hard surface.