Are LG phones set for a comeback? New patent offers a glimmer of hope

zohaibahd

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In context: It may seem like yesterday, but LG's phone division went out of business way back in April 2021, taking some of the most innovative foldable/rollable designs we had ever seen with it. As cool as those designs were, they were perhaps too wild for their own good and never caught on, sealing the division's fate. Or did it? Fresh patent filings reveal that LG may still have a few cards to play.

For a quick refresher, LG was working on this wild rollable smartphone concept, aptly dubbed the "LG Rollable." It even made it to the prototype stage, but the project was ultimately shelved when LG bid farewell to the smartphone market.

The phone gained greater media attention a year later in 2022 when a hands-on review from BullsLab surfaced. The device featured a screen that could extend from a 6.8-inch display to a 7.4-inch mini-tablet. It also featured a Snapdragon 888 processor with 12GB RAM and a 4,500mAh battery.

However, it appears now that LG Display, the display manufacturing subsidiary of LG Group, has been quietly tinkering away on the rollable display tech. Their latest patent, filed in October 2023 and published this month, describes a clever magnetic system to keep that extendable OLED screen smooth and wrinkle-free.

Here's how it works: a magnetic sheet is added to the back of the display, while magnets are built into the device's frame. This magnetic force helps smooth out any wrinkles that may form when the screen is extended or retracted, allowing the display to return to a pristine, flat state faster.

The 21-page patent application even includes detailed schematics showing how this rolling display tech could be adapted for both smartphone-sized devices and larger formats.

Before you get too excited, it's important to note that LG hasn't made any official announcements about reviving its smartphone efforts. Phone makers file patents all the time, mostly to protect their intellectual property. So, the chances are extremely slim here.

Still, it's hard not to feel a twinge of excitement at the thought of LG's return to the smartphone game. After all, it's the same company behind quirky gems like the dual-screen LG Wing, the curved LG G Flex 2, and the detachable secondary display on the LG V60 ThinQ.

A rollable phone with an extendable display would fit right in with LG's penchant for unique, futuristic designs. And who knows, maybe this patented tech could find its way into a device from another manufacturer if LG decides to license it out.

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I hope so, although I am not planning to upgrade from my Note ultra 23 any time soon. I loved the V20 and V40 ( still in use as backup) phones.
 
If they bring back the G or V series, with swappable batteries and headphone jacks, with a ROM not UIed to death, I am on board. Even at iphone prices itd be worth it.

somehow I fell I will be disappointed.
 
I wish they would come back to making phones. I used the LG V10 and V40 and I had to switch to Pixel. While I do like the Pixel for the most part I really want LG to bring back the V series. I'm positive I would jump back to them.
 
I absolutely adored my G3 and G5. Fantastic phones with great features. I switched to a Fold 3 and soon to a Fold 6 but I would wayyyyyy prefer a rollable instead. Rollables have many advantages: 1 screen instead of 2: great for cost and reliability.
A motor driven mechanism for a gentle, reliable screen flex instead of the hinge you can smack open on a Fold.
Only 2 sets of cameras instead of 3.
Thinner overall device!
A back screen!
 
Considering its coming from LG display, who sell their displays etc. to tons of other companies, this just seems like a patent to cover them selling this to other manufacturers rather than a phone per se
 
Who cares, trash tier company with zero QC. Ever company that uses LG has major issues.

As for adoring your G5, it was utter trash with a broken GPS, that LG refused to fix. Internet was full of
p!ssed off users having to come up with hacks to try and get it to work. My own G5 gps stopped working after 1 year. I have never owned an LG device that hasnt failed prematurely.
 
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