LG is one of three display makers supplying screens for Apple devices, alongside Sharp and Japan Display. The screens are thinner thanks to the use of so-called in-cell panels, allowing for a slimmer design for the new iPhone, widely expected to be announced Sept. 12. Sharp also said that its share of displays is on the way.
In-cell technology panels use touch sensors inside the color filters of the screen. Current iPhone models use on-cell technology, which places the touch sensors on top of the color filters. Without an extra layer for the touch sensors, the in-cell system allows for slimmer screens (and devices), some 0.5mm at least.
"We just began mass production and we don't expect any disruption in supplies," Han Sang-beom, chief executive of LG Display, a panel supplier for Apple, told Reuters. LG initially had some difficulties in manufacturing the new type of display, the company’s CEO also told Bloomberg: “We had some hard times at first… but it seems those hard times have finally ended. There were a lot of trials and errors as we tried a technology that hadn’t been used.”
The screen of the next-generation iPhone will not only be thinner, but also larger than on previous models, recent unconfirmed reports suggest. Tipsters pegged the size of the new iPhone display at 4 inches (30 percent bigger than current iPhone). This would make the phone slightly taller to accommodate the screen with a 1,136 by 640 pixel resolution, some extra 176 pixels horizontally from the previous 960 by 640 pixel resolution.
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