We have all that flagships we want from the big players in the game early this year, expect one South Korean giant's. Yes, we are talking about the consumer electronics manufacturer, LG who is all set to unveil their next generation high-end Android smartphone soon, the yet to go official and rumored LG G3. Internally originally codenamed B2 from LG has hit the rumor tags for a while now, where yesterday, courtesy of The Verge, we got a glimpse of how the upcoming handset's retail box will look like on the internet.
According to reports from the source, the new phone is still rumored to feature a 2K screen of 2560 x 1440 resolution pixels, listed as the first 1440p attributing phone from the talked about major multinational manufacturers, including Samsung, Apple, Sony and HTC. Reportedly the unannounced purported device's packaging box gets photographed in golden flavor, which according to The Verge, is a confirmation to see LG's 2014 front runner in a Golden color option at launch. It is also said that the earlier leaked, upcoming LG isai FL is LG made G3's modified version for the Japanese market, while noting that the phone we saw yesterday will have familiar resemblance for the firm's upcoming flagship, featuring really thing and narrow bezels on the front, possibly also packing a biometrics reader on the back.
Folks, for now we can keep you entertained with the previously reported and rumored details for the unit's internal specifications, suggesting us to see a Qualcomm based Snapdragon 800 processor speeding at 2.3GHz, a 5.5-inches UHD screen of tipped 2560 x 1440 resolution display, 32 gigabytes of internal mass storage (expandable via microSD card slot), three gigabytes of Random Access Memory (RAM), 13 megapixels main camera on the back with a 2.1 megapixels secondary front facer and running Android's version 4.4 KitKat out of the box, compensating LG's customized Optimus User Interface over the hood. We still hear the dates of 17th May, 2014 as a day of an official announcement from Life's Good.
Source: The Verge