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There have been a lot of interesting announcements surrounding Samsung lately, some of which indicating that the Korean company holds the largest smartphone market share on the global market. Other reports have suggested that Samsung is almost ready to push the Exynos 64-bit chip into mass production. In other words, the company in question has been -and continues to be- quite busy.

The latest news regarding the company's plans have now revealed that Samsung is ready to mass produce curved / warped batteries. These will most likely help with the development of curved smartphones. As you may already be aware of, the Galaxy Round is Samsung's first curved handset. Spec-wise, the device shares many elements with the Note 3 flagship, except for the battery. The reason for this is because, in reality, due to the curved nature of the Round, Samsung was not able to fit the device with the same, large 3,200 mAh unit that is found on the Note 3. Instead, the curved device has to make do with a smaller, 2,800 mAh unit.

You may be wondering how LG managed to fit a beefy 3,500 mAh battery in the LG G Flex, and the answer is simple. LG has developed a new technology that allows it to create curved batteries, thus the Li-Ion unit itself is shaped in order to meet the handset's design cues. In contrast, LG has used the "Stepped" technology (flat unit) for creating the LG G2's more conventional battery.

As stated above, according to Samsung SDI's president, the consumer electronics giant is now reportedly ready to push its own curved batteries into mass production. While no other curved smartphone has been confirmed yet, this is a pretty big clue that Samsung intends on working on other Round-like handsets. Perhaps next year we'll get to see more curved gadgets hitting a wider market, and if that's the case, then chances are that more smartphone manufacturers will deliver their own "warped" devices as well.

What are your thoughts on these recent developments? Do you like the idea of more curved smartphones hitting the market in the future?

Source: ZDNet (Korean)
Via: GforGames
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