A report on Thursday claimed that Nokia is planning a high-end successor to the Lumia 920 with a thinner and lighter form thanks to a new aluminum body.
The existing Nokia Lumia devices all use polycarbonate, making them thicker and heavier than they could be with aluminum instead.
The new aluminum Lumia smartphone, which will reportedly be similar in specs to the 920, is currently known only by the code name "Catwalk," possibly because of its attention-grabbing body.
An aluminum frame could make the Lumia 920 successor thinner and lighter, yes, but it could also come with some drawbacks.
Aluminum vs. polycarbonate
Several other high profile devices, including Lumia 920 competitor HTC Windows Phone 8X and Samsung's Galaxy S3, use polycarbonate for their shells as well.
Others, including the iPhone 5 and HTC One S, sport aluminum on their chassis.
Polycarbonate is considered quite well-suited for mobile devices, being relatively lightweight and scratch-resistant. Nevertheless, aluminum could be a step up.
On the other hand, let's not forget that it was the iPhone 5's scratch-prone aluminum back that caused so many problems back in October around the smartphone's launch.
Three new Lumias total
The Verge also claimed on Thursday that Nokia has two other new Lumia handsets planned to debut this year as well.
The site's sourcing was minimal, though, so it's not clear where this information comes from.
Little more is known about any of the new Lumia devices, besides that The Verge expects them all to be introduced in 2013.
TechRadar has reached out to Nokia to find out whether it would like to share any more information, but the Finnish company has yet to respond.
Source : techradar[dot]com
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