LG has announced a new handset for South Korea based on its popular Optimus LTE line -- The Optimus LTE Tag, a trimmed-down version of the original with NFC connectivity.
The Optimus LTE Tag is a 4.3-inch, device with a 1.2 GHz dual-core CPU, 1GB of RAM and a WVGA (480x800) IPS display. As well as the obvious 4G LTE and NFC connectivity, the phone also sports a 5MP rear camera and 1.3MP front-facer. On the software side, you get Android 2.3 Gingerbread with LG's Optimus UI, and the promise of an upgrade to Ice Cream Sandwich in the future. The specs are a step down from what's inside the original Optimus LTE, though LG has made up for this by packing the LTE Tag's guts into a slimmer chassis.
The manufacturer is keen to point out the potential practical uses for NFC, besides just being a bullet point on the back of the box. It's developed a technology it's calling LG Tag+, which allows customers to use NFC tags to automatically change the phone's behavior when in a certain location. For example, you might want to enter car dock mode, or start up a navigation app when it's in your car. Sure, there are apps on the Android Market that allow you to do things like this on any Android phone with NFC, but it is pretty cool to see this being offered straight out of the box.
Currently the Optimus LTE Tag has been announced for Korea only, however it's likely we'll see the LG Tag+ tech included in future NFC-enabled handsets from the manufacturer in other territories, too.
We've got today's press release, and the full spec list, after the break.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/DafHUqKZhI4/story01.htm
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