So, with the iPhone 15 Pro and its devilishly thin bezels, will there be anywhere to hold the phone without brushing against the touchscreen? Apple will have thought of this, but it’s an interesting conundrum.īeyond that, the predicted screen looks very striking, and it’s noticeable that the Dynamic Island remains in place, and the same size as before, it seems. Miners, whose working fingers might have had traces of arsenic on them, could discard the crimped edge which they used to hold it while eating, it was thought. The shortcrust pastry is formed with meat and vegetables inside and a crimped edge around it, creating a complete meal which could be easily carried and eaten without cutlery. When Cornish tin miners in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries needed a food they could eat without washing their hands, they turned to the pasty. Apple’s technique is to take a flexible OLED screen and bend it round behind itself so the drivers are out of view.īut with such a move to an even thinner bezel, a question arises: the Cornish pasty effect. Other smartphones to this day often have a bigger bezel on the bottom edge, because that’s where the display drivers sit. One of the reasons that Apple’s Face ID iPhones have looked great since 2017 is that the bezel is uniform all the way round. And not just because of that 1.55mm measurement. But the thinner the bezel, the more compelling the image.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |