Microsoft is busy testing the upcoming
Surface Duo internally, a device that has two screens on two equal sides, with
a 360-degree hinge between them. So while neither display panel is foldable,
that hinge gives you plenty of use case flexibility. The Surface Duo will be
just 4.8mm thin when opened, and thus 9.6mm thick when shut. A bunch of specs
of the device have been leaked today, so here's what we should expect.
The Surface Duo's screens will be
identical - 5.6" each, AMOLED, with 1800x1350 resolution and huge bezels.
The device will run Android 10, with a planned update to Android 11 hitting
very soon after launch. Support for the Surface Pen is built-in.
The chipset at the helm is Qualcomm's
Snapdragon 855 from last year, which is a very odd choice, let's not forget
that iconic devices that arrive on the market with yesterday's flagship SoC
have never done well, sales-wise. The reason for this move apparently has to do
with the fact that Microsoft had finalized the Surface Duo's internal design
way before the Snapdragon 865 was a thing, and there's simply no room inside
for the X55 5G modem that Qualcomm requires companies use in tandem with the
865.
The device has 6GB of RAM, which may still
be okay for Google, but is mid-ranger level in the very competitive Android
smartphone market, where flagships now start at 8GB and go up to 16GB. Anyway,
there will be 256GB of storage too, and it's not expandable. The camera
(singular) will be an 11 MP f/2.0 snapper with 1.12um pixel size, which once
again feels like a blast from the past (aside from the odd resolution).
A fingerprint scanner will take care of
biometric authentication, and the battery capacity for the Surface Duo is said
to be... 3,460 mAh. That's small, no matter how you look at it. The only
comparison in which it doesn't come up short is with the Pixel 4, but that
phone has appalling battery life for a reason.
There's no NFC and no wireless charging,
and no 5G either. All of Microsoft's pre-installed apps will support working
across both screens with drag and drop between two different apps where
applicable, but not all third-party apps will be capable of this. It's going to
be up to developers to add such functionality, and we all know how well that
went for Android tablets having UIs that aren't just a phone's but scaled up.
The Surface Duo may be "almost
ready" to launch, despite Microsoft claiming that it would only arrive in
stores towards the end of this year. Plans could have changed in the meantime.
