Like any other industry, trends come and go fairly quickly in the smartphone market. The same will be true in , when a nifty new design trend makes its way to store shelves. Beginning in , smartphone designs were all about the notch. Apple wasnt the first maker to cut a chunk out of a smartphone screen LG has that honor courtesy of the V10 smartphone it released all the way back in but no one would deny that Apple is responsible for the boom in smartphone notches that began in late with the iPhone X. Once Apples tenth-anniversary iPhone design began to leak, nearly every smartphone maker on the planet rushed to copy it. The end result was a bit embarrassing since just about every Android maker on the planet released phones that were spitting images of the iPhone X, but seeing Android makers copy Apples designs is obviously nothing new.
In , something new is happening, though. For the first time in a long time, Apple is no longer responsible for starting a major smartphone design trend. Instead, it was Samsungs announcement last year that it was building smartphone displays with holes cut into them instead of notches. This way, rather than have a larger amount of space consumed by a notch, screens only need tiny little holes that allow the selfie cameras to peek through. Its a cool new design and itll definitely be all the rage this year, but the truth is that it really isnt any better than Apples old notch design.
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Often referred to as a hole-punch display, the idea of this new smartphone design is to increase the screen-to-body ratio and reduce the amount of dead space around a smartphones screen. In that regard, theres no question that it succeeds. Phones with notches place things like cameras, speakers, and various sensors in the notch, but theres still plenty of unused space between those components.
With a hole-punch screen like the one pictured in the featured image at the top of this post, all of the empty space from the notch is completely eliminated. The camera lens (or camera lenses in the case of phones with dual front-facing cameras) pokes through a tiny little hole cut into the screen, and other sensors are small enough to be placed in the barely-there bezel above. A thin cutout for the s speaker is typically also found in the top bezel, or some phones use newer tech that actually lets a smartphones screen double as a speaker.
Theres precious little question that hole-punch displays are new and cool. The Galaxy S10 series Samsung is set to unveil in less than a month will be the first globally available flagship series to ship with hole-punch screens, and this new design will definitely help set them apart from earlier flagships. Once the novelty of the hole-punch display wears off, however, people will begin to realize that this new design really isnt any better than a notch.
Screen-to-body ratio is a stat that hardcore gadget fans throw around all the time. It measures the amount of display on the face of a smartphone as compared to the amount of unused space around the display. So a smartphone with an old design that has big bezels above and below the screen will have a low screen-to-body ratio. Apples old iPhone 8, for example, has a screen-to-body ratio of about 65%. Phones with notch displays and narrow bezels have much higher screen-to-body ratios. On the iPhone XS it climbs to about 83%, and its even higher on smartphones with smaller notches.
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Phones like the upcoming Galaxy S10 will have screen-to-body ratios that climb significantly higher. Early rumors suggested that the Galaxy S10s screen-to-body ratio will come in at around 93%. Not even phones with small notches like the OnePlus 6T break the 90% mark; the OnePlus 6Ts screen-to-body ratio is about 86%.
Heres the thing: none of this really matters. If youre a nerd, these are fun numbers to toss around. If youre anyone else though, youre just happy that modern smartphones now have bigger screens than before without the overall size of the phones increasing. When the iPhone X and copycat phones first came out, the notch design was probably a draw for some people because it was cool and new. Now its not because its just the norm. When the Galaxy S10 first comes out, the hole-punch design will probably be a draw for some people because itll be cool and new. By the end of the year, however, itll just be the norm.
Moving beyond the novelty of screens like Samsungs Infinity-O display, theres something else that should be considered: is this new design really any better than a notch? Theres no question that phones with holes in the screen have more display real estate than phones with notches. But the part of the screen affected by holes and notches is way up at the top edge.
The only content of consequence thats ever displayed near the top edge are the menu bar and things like battery and reception icons. On a smartphone with a notch design, that content is spread out a bit on either side of the notch. On smartphones with a hole-punch design, that content is squeezed to one side or the other while the hole resides in a top corner.
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So, I ask again. Is this design:
better than this design:
in any meaningful way?
No, its not. In either case, the status area at the top of the screen is shifted a bit, and you lose a small amount of screen near an edge when watching videos or viewing photos. Even on phones with big notches like the iPhone XS and iPhone XR, any actual disadvantage compared to a hole is minimal. Apples status area still shows all the info you need.
In the end, both of these designs are just pit stops on the way to smartphones with true all-screen designs. Technology is currently being developed by multiple companies including Samsung and Apple that will allow components like cameras and proximity sensors to be embedded beneath the screen without the need to actually cut a hole through it. Yes, displays can be made transparent remember this awesome invisible TV demo from back in ? Within a few years, phones with no notches or holes (or stupid pop-up selfie cameras that are begging to break) will be the norm. Even then, the actual benefit from eliminating tiny notches and holes will be minimal. Itll be cool and novel at first, sure, but increasing the screen-to-body ratio by a few percentage points at the very outer edge doesnt actually offer any significant benefit.
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I have a lot of love for Russell. He's a great guy, has a wonderful sense of humor, and is someone I have a tremendous amount of respect for. I do, however, disagree with his recent Hole punch displays are worse than notch displays editorial.
Hole punches are the latest trend when it comes to smartphone displays in our never-ending quest to eliminate bezels, but no, I do not think they're a worse solution than the notch. They're not 100% better, but they do come with a benefit that notches don't.
We've seen a lot of different solutions for cutting back on bezels, ranging from traditional notches, waterdrop notches, hole punches, and even sliding mechanisms that introduce moving parts to hide certain components behind a 's display. All of these serve the same main goal, and hole punches seem like the obvious step forward from notches.
Apple popularized notches with the iPhone X, and since then Android OEMs have been in a race to add notches to their own phones and make them as small as can be. The first wave of phones had notches that looked identical to Apple's, then we got ones using the waterdrop style, and now we have hole punches a small, circular cutout in a screen to accommodate the front-facing camera.
Looking at the current implementation of hole punches, they differ from notches in a couple different ways:
It's a pretty different look compared to what we've grown used to with notches, and that's created for a lot of excitement/anguish over them. I get that the left or right positioning has a greater impact on the status bar and that the implementations we've seen so far aren't perfectly symmetrical with the rest of the 's design, but hole punches have a pretty big positive to them, too media consumption.
I've become quite accustomed to the notch over the last few months, but whether it be on my OnePlus 6 or iPhone XS, the time the notch bothers me the most is when I'm watching a fullscreen video. Having that large black bar in the middle cover the content I'm watching is always a pain, but with the hole punch notch, you see a lot more of what's playing. Instead of a huge unibrow staring back at you, there's now this small circle in the bottom corner. It's less invasive, leaves more of the screen free for you to watch your shows, and in this sense, does a better job at getting us to the bezel-less future we're trying to get to.
Hole punches mean more screen real estate, and that's something I can get behind.
This may be an unpopular opinion, but I'm all for having more screen real-estate at the expense of having one or two fewer icons show up in my status bar. I really don't rely on them anyways with our current notch setups, but again, I could be in the minority there.
Going throughout , it'll be interesting to see if OEMs keep with this current hole punch fad, continue to evolve the notch, or come up with yet another solution we haven't even seen yet.
All of these things are just transitional pains we have to put up with until the day we have a that really is all display and nothing else, and if you ask me, the hole punch is one of the better ones we've had yet. It leaves more space for movies/games, doesn't compromise a 's structural integrity, and is a pretty impressive engineering feat compared to where we were at just a year ago.
We got used to notches pretty quickly, and we'll get used to hole punches, too.
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