I thought the Mate 30 Pro was the best-looking phone released in 2019, and the Mate 40 Pro builds on that design. The unit I have is in the "Mystic Silver" colorway, which Huawei is promoting the most heavily. It's a lot more unusual than the name makes it sound the back is frosted glass, but there's a kaleidoscopic effect where the phone shimmers different colors depending on the light. It looks great.

Around the front, the notch has been jettisoned in favor of a double-wide hole punch cutout for the dual selfie cameras. The OLED display is a little bigger this year at 6.76 inches, and it still has the 88-degree "waterfall" curves on the edges, which Huawei calls a "horizon" display.

Overall the Mate 40 Pro is looking like another physically and technically impressive Huawei flagship phone, and I'm looking forward to finding out what the company has managed to achieve particularly with the camera and the new Kirin 9000 processor. The software, of course, will be another matter entirely. Stay tuned for a full review.


Resource: theverge.com


\n

Here's our first look at Huawei's Mate 40 Pro

I thought the Mate 30 Pro was the best-looking phone released in 2019, and the Mate 40 Pro builds on that design. The unit I have is in the "Mystic Silver" colorway, which Huawei is promoting the most heavily. It's a lot more unusual than the name makes it sound the back is frosted glass, but there's a kaleidoscopic effect where the phone shimmers different colors depending on the light. It looks great.

Around the front, the notch has been jettisoned in favor of a double-wide hole punch cutout for the dual selfie cameras. The OLED display is a little bigger this year at 6.76 inches, and it still has the 88-degree "waterfall" curves on the edges, which Huawei calls a "horizon" display.

Overall the Mate 40 Pro is looking like another physically and technically impressive Huawei flagship phone, and I'm looking forward to finding out what the company has managed to achieve particularly with the camera and the new Kirin 9000 processor. The software, of course, will be another matter entirely. Stay tuned for a full review.


Resource: theverge.com


\n

No comments:

Post a Comment