- Analysis by KJ David
Turing Robotic Industries does away with most artsy smartphone stuff, and turns their attention to communication as well as physical safety with the Turing Phone. Its pros and cons include the Imitation Key chipset , removing the need for third-party servers and facilitating safer exchanges of sensitive data. However, this feature is pretty much exclusive to Turing Phone owners . It also introduces Liquidmorphium (casing), a liquid-metal alloy apparently stronger than steel. Additionally, this phone is waterproofed by its IPx8 certification.
The Turing Phone runs on a 2.5GHz quad-core Snapdragon 801 SoC , which is similarly employed by several other high-end devices. For all its muscle, however, its 5.5-inch Full HD screen falls short of the Quad HD resolution of some 2015 premiums. It also offers 128GB of memory (with 16GB and 64GB variants) , though this capacity translates to the lack of a microSD card .
This pioneer phone from Turing Industries may not be the be-all-end-all of smartphones, but Alan Turing, who is largely responsible for modern-day computing, would likely have been proud.
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