London-based client electronics firm Nothing on Wednesday formally introduced that the Nothing Phone (2) shall be launching as a premium smartphone. The firm has shared a cryptic teaser on Twitter and is more likely to introduce the Nothing Phone (2) in India too.
“Premium. Phone (2) is coming summer time 2023. Sign-up for updates: http://nothing.tech/pages/occasion,” Nothing tweeted on Wednesday.
Nothing Phone (2) shall be launched within the US this summer time adopted by an unveiling in India, media stories say.
The Nothing Phone (2) is a much-anticipated smartphone, which shall be launching this summer time. Previous leaks and rumours recommended that Nothing’s subsequent cellphone can be launching within the third quarter (Q3). The firm has teased some particulars in regards to the upcoming smartphone, together with key specs, such because the processor.
As talked about earlier, Nothing Phone (2) will not be a mid-range machine just like the Nothing Phone (1). The machine shall be powered by top-tier Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 SoC. The Phone (2) might include an up to date Glyph Interface and a probable mute button.
Previous stories recommended that the smartphone will make its debut within the US, adopted by different world markets, together with in India.
To recall, the Nothing Phone (1) was unveiled in India final 12 months and it was launched after a lot hype. It caught plenty of consideration with its semi-transparent and rear facet with LED sample. The smartphone remains to be a novel proposition to personal proper now with its design and LEDs that gentle up in numerous patterns for notifications. Some of the smartphones it rivals in India, embrace the Redmi Note 12 Pro+.
Meanwhile, Nothing Phone (1) has been in various controversies since its launch with one being relating to the smartphone’s marketed peak brightness which fell quick in a real-world take a look at. The Nothing Phone (1) had marketed that it’s able to attaining a peak brightness of 1200 nits, however in accordance with a real-world take a look at by a German tech publication named ComputerBase, the machine couldn’t transcend a peak brightness of 700 nits.


























