Sharp's latest smartphone was unveiled in Japan today. It's the Aquos Zero, which features the company's first OLED panel designed and manufactured in-house.
It's a curved 6.2-inch 1440x2992 screen with support for the DCI-P3 color space and Dolby Vision, and as you can see it comes with a huge notch. Not just that, but the parts of the top bezel that are to the left and right of it are pretty substantial too, at least by the usual notched smartphone standards.
Oh, and there's also a chin. Anyway, enough about that. Thanks to its magnesium frame and aramid fiber back it weighs just 146g, and Sharp is clearly proud of this achievement, boasting about how this is one of the lightest flagships around. By the way, for reference, note that Kevlar is a type of aramid fiber although Sharp doesn't mention that brand anywhere in its marketing materials so we're assuming it didn't pay DuPont the associated licensing fees.
The Aquos Zero is powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 chipset (what else?), paired with 6GB of RAM and 128GB of UFS storage. Its battery has 3,130 mAh capacity and the phone runs Android 9 Pie. Its dimensions are 154 x 73 x 8.8 mm.
The single rear camera has 22.6 MP resolution and f/1.9 aperture, while the selfie cam is an 8 MP unit. The Aquos Zero is IP68 certified for water and dust resistance. A fingerprint scanner is on the back of the handset, and it also has a face unlock system. Stereo speakers are in too, with Dolby Atmos technology.
The Sharp Aquos Zero will be available in Japan by the end of the year. There's no telling if it will be offered elsewhere at any point - but since the company now has a presence in Europe, maybe we'll see it there in the future.
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