US Pixelated rear screen allows Nothing Phone (3) users to play spin the bottle - Nothing users will be able to create new functions for the glyph matrix via the Nothing Community platform, with a magic eight-ball already co-developed

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Consumer-tech startup Nothing has launched a smartphone that it calls "a statement on where we are going as a company", as well as its first over-ear headphones.

Nothing's Phone (3) is a significant design departure from its two predecessors, Phone (1) and Phone (2).

It ditches the "glyph" light display that characterised those products in favour of a new "glyph matrix" – a small pixelated screen in one corner of the reverse side.
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Nothing has called Phone (3) its first "flagship" product
Operated via a dedicated button, this micro-LED screen can show app- or person-specific notifications, or enable the user to play with digital "toys".

These range from useful everyday tools, such as a stopwatch and battery indicator, to micro-games like rock, paper, scissors and spin the bottle.

"Now you might be thinking, 'When am I going to use these toys?'" Nothing CEO Carl Pei said at a launch event in London on Tuesday. "And yeah, you know, some of them are just for fun, because we believe that fun also deserves a place in tech too."

Nothing users will be able to create new functions for the glyph matrix via the Nothing Community platform, with a magic eight-ball already co-developed.

Phone (3) also reinterprets the inside-out look that Nothing employs across its product range compared with the brand's previous smartphones.

The back of the phone now features a three-column grid, designed in reference to the three circuit boards inside the phone.
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The glyph matrix includes the option to play micro-games like rock, paper, scissors
"Phone (3) design builds on an idea that we had ever since the Phone (1), turning the internal logic of the phone into something visual and emotional and even architectural," Pei told the event.

As well as improved performance, other changes from previous iterations include the addition of a third, periscope-lens camera, a thinner bezel around the edge of the screen, and a red-dot light on the reverse that flashes during filming.

New artificial intelligence (AI) features have been introduced, including Essential Search – a smart search tool that allows users to look things up without opening an app.

"AI is everywhere right now, but most smartphone AI feels surface level," Pei said. "At Nothing we're taking a different approach. We believe the smartphone is where consumer AI will be the most useful for the foreseeable future."

With its AI tools, the glyph matrix and monochrome operating system, Nothing claims it is seeking to help users do less mindless scrolling.

"Phone (3) is our first true flagship. But what is a flagship for us? It means that it's a clear statement of where we're going as a company, a product that expresses our vision and sets the tone for everything that comes next," said Pei.

Also launched today was the company's first over-ear audio product, Headphone (1), which Nothing developed in collaboration with British audio brand KEF.
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Nothing created Headphone (1) in partnership with KEF
"Headphones have three big problems: they look boring, the controls are frustrating, and the sound rarely looks up to the promise," said Pei. "Current designs on the market are uninspiring, and we wanted to create something radically different."

Differently to the oval-shaped ear cup on many headphones, Headphone (1)'s speakers are housed in a rectangular aluminium case.

In keeping with Nothing's see-through design motif, transparent circles mark out the acoustic chambers.

Rather than double- and triple-tap controls, the headphones are operated by a combination of a roller, a paddle and a button.

"The problem with most of the headphones today are that the controls are guesswork," said Pei. "We didn't want that, we wanted to make it a lot more intuitive, physical and satisfying."
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Nothing said it wanted more satisfying controls than on other headphones
London-based Nothing was founded in 2020 with the stated aim of disrupting the consumer-tech industry through a design-focused approach. It has since sold more than nine million devices and generated over $1 billion in revenue, according to the company.

"We've gone from a design-led upstart to a serious challenger in just four years, and we're building for a new generation – a generation that still wants to feel something when they use tech," said Pei. "We're officially entering chapter two by introducing our most ambitious products to date."

Other smartphones recently published on Dezeen include the Fairphone 6, which gives users a dumbphone option, and Infinix's Zero Series Mini Tri-Fold concept, which folds down to the size of a credit card.
 
So they ditched the lights, the one thing that made the phone different for a shitty arduino OLED screen, genius move...

Specs........are not great for the price, tho the 7 years of updates is probably unheard-of for android phones, but by then it might run like shit because devs can't be arsed to optimize anything these days, or nothing might not even be around anymore.

Anyway, if I wanted overpriced form-over-function crap I would get an iphone instead.
 
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tho the 7 years of updates is probably unheard-of for android phones
That's the new standard for Pixels. 7 years of updates from launch date, starting with the 8 series back in 2023. Not sure if feature updates go for that long, but security updates do. I'm running Graphene on a Pixel 8 and have been getting updates every 2-4 weeks. Usually just a few days after the latest AOSP release. So I'll be getting updates through 2030, and with Graphene there will likely be further "harm reduction" security updates put out by them for a little bit after Google EOL's the devices.
 
That's the new standard for Pixels. 7 years of updates from launch date, starting with the 8 series back in 2023. Not sure if feature updates go for that long, but security updates do. I'm running Graphene on a Pixel 8 and have been getting updates every 2-4 weeks. Usually just a few days after the latest AOSP release. So I'll be getting updates through 2030, and with Graphene there will likely be further "harm reduction" security updates put out by them for a little bit after Google EOL's the devices.
my blackberry key2 on android 6 still got security updates until like 2022. the company doesn't even exist anymore and the phone still works so i'm not really sure what you're trying to get at

also for an individual using updated software is more trouble than it's worth and you should probably just keep using a specific version of software so that you aren't vulnerable to the most likely attack vectors. that's smart for an organization to do to make sure all of their infrastructure is coherent but it's one of those things that makes no sense from a security perspective as an individual and just attempting to appeal to the authority of an organization kind of undermines the point you're trying to make
 
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I was interested in this phone for about 5 minutes, when I realized it's main gimmick seemed to be the camera, something I don't care about.
Now I will never think about this stupid phone again. Thanks for Nothing.
 
Dammit, I knew I should have stuck out a few months longer instead of settling for a OnePlus. The Nothing 2 is probably going for a song, now.

(Phone discussions turned into algebra so slowly I didn't even notice)
 
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