Sunday, December 23, 2012

Huawei Teases 6.1-inch 'Ascent Mate' Smartphone - PC Magazine

Huawei Ascend Mate

You knew this was coming. Not only are the various mobile manufacturers all trying to beat each other out on their various smartphones' features and capabilities, but it looks like they're going to try to one-up each other on sizes, too.

At least, that's what we're led to believe by smartphone manufacturer Huawei's apparent leak of its 6.1-inch "Ascend Mate," a smartphone that would likely be larger than any pants pocket you could think to store it in.

The video that shows off this monstrous smartphone was first reported by Engadget and, unfortunately, it doesn't hint at much else about what's inside the smartphone-slash-miniature-tablet.

The 1080p-friendly device (sporting 361 pixels per inch on its screen) has been rumored to sport a quad-core, 1.8-GHz HiSilicon K3V3 CPU and two gigabytes of memory. Additionally, it's been suggested that a whopping 4,000 mAh battery will power the device. It'll be interesting to see just what kind of uptime Huawei will be able to deliver given the trade-off between the phone's massive screen size and equally massive battery.

Just to put the Ascend Mate in a bit of perspective, its alleged screen size is going to be all of half an inch larger than Samsung's Galaxy Note II, a device that PCMag.com reviewer Jamie Lendino already described as being a little bit troublesome to use one-handed.

However, don't expect that Samsung's just going to sit back and let someone else usurp its claim to the, "Is it a smartphone? Is it a tablet?" title. The latest rumors suggest that Samsung is allegedly working on a follow-up to the Galaxy Note II that will come in at an eye-opening screen size of 6.3 inches – all of 0.2 inches greater than the size of the Huawei's Ascend Mate.

While the final specifications of Huawei's smartphone have yet to be announced, to see the smartphone make its official appearance at January's upcoming Consumer Electronics Show. We somehow doubt you'd be able to miss this large device if even if you tried.

For more tech tidbits from David Murphy, follow him on Facebook or Twitter (@thedavidmurphy).

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