Preview: Prada Phone by LG 3.0
- 08 February, 2012 11:09
- Comments
Prada Phone by LG 3.0: available in Australia in April
The Prada Phone by LG 3.0 is the third smartphone LG has developed in collaboration with Italian fashion label Prada.
• LG Optimus Black review
• LG Prada (KE850) review
• LG Prada (KF900) review
The Prada Phone by LG 3.0 (a terrible name in our opinion), is the third phone to come from the collaboration between the two companies. The LG Prada (KE850) was launched in 2007 and was the first completely touch interface phone to be released in Australia, while the LG Prada (KF900) added a physical, slide-out keyboard to largely the same phone. Both phones were relatively unsuccessful in Australia, so LG will be hoping the Prada Phone 3.0 represents a third-time lucky.
The Prada Phone by LG 3.0 will definitely turn some heads. It features Prada's signature "Saffiano" pattern on the back in a classic black colour. A Prada branded dock and Bluetooth headset will be sold as optional accessories, along with a Prada bag to store the phone in. The phone is just 8.5mm thin and weighs 138g, so it's both compact and fairly lightweight.
We are more interested in the specifications than the design of the Prada Phone and it's here that things become a little disappointing. A 1GHz dual-core processor and 1GB of RAM should mean the Prada Phone 3.0 is no slouch, but its a shame the phone won't ship with the latest version of Android, 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich. Instead, the Prada Phone 3.0 will come with Android 2.3 Gingerbread — LG says it won't be upgraded until "later in 2012". The delay for the upgrade likely stems from LG's custom user interface, which the company says features a unique black, grey and white menu and icons.
The Prada Phone 3.0 has a 4.3-inch NOVA display, the same screen used on the LG Optimus Black Android phone. A basic resolution of 800x480 means text clarity won't stack up highly against top quality alternatives, but an outdoor brightness of 800nits is almost twice the brightness of most other smartphone screens. This should effectively result in excellent sunlight legibility.
Other features of the Prada Phone 3.0 by LG include an 8-megapixel rear camera that doubles as a full HD 1080p video recorder, a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera and 8GB of internal memory along with a microSD card slot for extra storage. LG says the Prada Phone 3.0's 1540mAh gives it around five hours of talk-time, which doesn't sound too appealing. We'll wait to review it before we judge, but the standby and talk-time ratings seem quite low.
The Prada Phone by LG 3.0 will launch exclusively on the Vodafone network in Australia in April. Pricing and plan details have yet to be announced.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
How to implement next-generation storage infrastructure for Big Data
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Blurring boundaries: The disappearing gap between work and home life
Call it multi-tasking, life-splicing or bleisure but increasingly, fuelled by advances in technology, employees are blurring the boundaries between home and work. ‘Generation Standby’ employees, never truly ‘switched off’ and always ready to be called upon, are now enjoying, and expecting, greater levels of flexibility and mobility than ever before. Read on. -
Best Practices for Secure Enterprise Content Mobility
To secure mobile devices while enabling employees to share data securely, organisations need a comprehensive and flexible solution for secure enterprise content mobility. A secure enterprise content mobility solution complements Mobile Device Management (MDM) solutions and enables mobile workers to easily share data with other authorised users, while ensuring that data is always secure and IT operations are always compliant. Read this whitepaper to learn: How the popularity of Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) is creating new security challenges; Why MDM is useful, but not sufficient; How enterprise content mobility provides an essential layer of security and control for organisations with mobile users. -
IDC Insight: V-Ray Gives Symantec NetBackup a Competitive Advantage Today and into the Future
Over a decade ago, Veritas software announced NetBackup FlashBackup to address the millions of small files problem, which had been and often remains the nemesis to fast and efficient backup of large file servers. Today, the FlashBackup technology is used to provide a logical understanding of what is stored with a VMDK- or VHD-image-level backup, without the necessity to install an agent inside each virtual machine. Read more.
-
Changing Software Development - Learning to Become Agile
-
It Success ! - Towards a New Model for Information Technology
-
PowerPoint 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
IPod & iTunes for Dummies®, Australian One Spot Edition
-
It Architecture for Dummies®
-
Mastering Data Warehouse Aggregates
-
Professional Application Lifecycle Management with Visual Studio 2010
-
Objects, Data Structures and Abstraction Using C++ with WileyPlus Registration Card
-
Introducing Maya 2009








Comments
Post new comment