AMOLED To the rescue….

The “Sol” in the phone’s name means “Sun”. In order to make the Optimus Sol visible in sunny conditions, the handset has what LG call an “Ultra AMOLED” display. This 3.8″ 800 x 480 pixel panel is the latest iteration of AMOLED technology.
Unlike the not very popular Optimus 3D, the Optimus Sol does seem to address a real market. If you try to use a standard TFT LCD display outdoors then the ambient light does wash it out and make it difficult to read, but even AMOLED displays suffer somewhat when the sun is really bright. Electronic paper displays, such as those found in the Amazon Kindle and Motorola FONE work very well in sunlight, they are useless in the dark. AMOLED based displays seem to offer the best compromise in these situations.
One side effect of the different technologies is the different power drain characteristics. TFT displays always draw the same amount of power from the battery, no matter what is displayed. AMOLED screens draw more power from the battery when they are brighter, so LG are shipping the Optimus Sol with a specially designed dark UI to maximise battery life.
LG Optimus Sol Display aside, this is a fairly typical midrange Android smartphone with a 1GHz single core CPU and 512Mb, 5 megapixel primary camera plus a VGA video calling camera, WiFi 802.11 b, g and n connectivity plus 3.5G, DLNA, a media player, FM radio, Bluetooth, GPS, a microSD slot (with 2GB in the box) and all the usual Android features. An NFC variant should also be available, although NFC is not installed as standard. The operating system is Android 2.3 with LG’s own Optimus UI on top.
- Read more from http://www.mobilegazette.com.
- Date: Aug 22th, 2011
- Score:(1-10): 8