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Huawei Mate X - a huge coke for Samsung

Huawei Mate X - a huge coke for Samsung

Did you think the Samsung Galaxy Fold was cool? You haven't seen the Huawei Mate X yet!

 Huawei Mate X - a huge coke for Samsung

The first officially announced folding phone is named after Samsung, but Huawei is lurking in their heels, and the Mate X has also gotten better and cooler. . However, what is very important is essentially completely frameless.

MATEX

When closed, the display is 2480 x 1148 on the front panel and 2480 x 892 pixels on the back panel, of course based on AMOLED technology. In this condition, the front panel has a diagonal of 6,6 and the back is 6,38 inches. When you open the phone, you get a huge 8-inch screen and the display resolution will be 2480 x 2200 pixels. The soul of the phone is a Huawei Kirin 980 unit with 2 Cortex A76 cores at 2,6 GHz, two other A76 cores at 1,92 GHz and four Cortex A55 cores at 1,9 GHz. The chip contains the ARM Mali-G76MP10 graphics accelerator. We get 4 GB of the built-in LPDDR8x memory and 512 GB of storage.

The interesting thing about the phone is that the cameras on the back are housed in a prominent band on the back. When closed, it is at the same height as the back panel display, and when open, it protrudes slightly from the back panel. Here we find three cameras, the main camera uses a 40 megapixel sensor, above it is a 1.8 aperture lens. In addition, we can use a 16-megapixel sensor with an ultra-wide-angle lens and an 8-megapixel sensor with a 2,4-aperture lens system.

Another interesting fact is that the fingerprint reader is located at the front of the device. The new mobile, of course, uses state-of-the-art 5G LTE radio, we also get NFC, dual-band, ac-standard wifi and Bluetooth 5.0. The battery has a capacity of 4500 mAh, which can be charged up to 55 watts.

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s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.