New Android Phone Trends To Look For In 2013: Bigger Screens, TV Control And More

What Can We Expect From The Best Android Phones Of 2013?
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Models hold Samsung Electronics' Galaxy Note II smartphones during its unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2102. The Galaxy Note II , which runs on Android 4.1 with 1.6 GHz, goes on sale in the domestic market on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

Remember when you first saw advertisements for "The Voice"? You probably wrote it off as a half-hearted copy of "American Idol" or deemed it a ploy by NBC to cash in on the success of the Fox/Simon Cowell mega-hit with its own low-quality, cobbled-together version.

Now, though, "The Voice" enjoys excellent ratings, challenging the stagnating "Idol" for primetime talent show dominance; the format, the featured hosts and the competitors have proved to be more enjoyable and more satisfying than those on "Idol." To many, the student, the late-arriver -- the ripoff -- has morphed into the superior product.

The rise of "The Voice" in the face of "Idol" is roughly analogous to the way Android has risen to compete with the iPhone, if not in sales than in critical acclaim. What was initially viewed as a shoddy copy of Apple's iOS, Android is now more regularly judged as a worthwhile competitor even by Apple's most staunch cheerleaders.

Android, and the manufacturers that produce Android smartphones, have been improving every year -- especially in 2012, with the introduction of Android Jelly Bean, the Samsung Galaxy S III, the HTC One X and the LG Nexus 4. What will Google and company come up with in 2013? How will these Blake Sheltons and Cee-Los of the tech world improve their smartphones this time around? In short: what can we expect from the world of Android in 2013?

BIGGER SCREENS

Android has become associated with huge displays, thanks in part to the 4.8-inch Samsung Galaxy S III and 5.5-inch Samsung Galaxy Note II. Though some questioned whether there was any consumer appetite for such mammoth screens, those concerns have subsided as both devices have proved sales successes.

In 2013, expect for screens to continue to grow. From the Galaxy S IV (expected to be 4.99 inches) to the Galaxy Note III (expected to be 5.9 inches), Android should continue to corner the market on supersized smartphones. At this year's Consumer Electronics Show, we even saw an Android smartphone made by Chinese manufacturer Huawei that measured in at 6.1 inches. With Samsung's success peddling large phones, look for competing companies to go bigger, not smaller.


What it feels like to use an iPhone after using the Galaxy Note II for a few days.

QUAD-CORE, AND OCTA-CORE, PROCESSORS

In 2012, it was kind of a big deal when companies like HTC and Samsung introduced the first smartphones with quad-core, instead of dual-core, processors. This meant that smartphones could handle more tasks at once, hypothetically improving overall performance. The quad-core processor enabled features like Samsung's pop-up video player, which lets a user watch a movie in a small window while performing other tasks.

Look for the quad-core processor to become a standard feature on all top-of-the-line Android phones, and, if we're lucky, we might just see the first octa-core smartphones by the end of 2013. The Galaxy Note III is already rumored to be among the first.

TV CONTROL

A dream of mine -- and likely many a smartphone owner, given the glut of remote-control apps available -- is to toss away my television's remote and simply point my phone at the tube and use that as the clicker. Signs are emerging that this could soon be a reality, with no software download or set-top box purchase required.

Already we've seen the HTC One, revealed last month at an event in New York City, come equipped with an IR emitter, which means it's capable of manipulating the power, the volume, the channels and more on almost any television set. While we haven't heard any whispers of other smartphone manufacturers adding IR emitters to their own devices, it is encouraging that a major player like HTC would invest in one for its flagship phone. Perhaps other Android makers will follow suit and we'll never have to buy AA batteries again.

KEY LIME PIE

As it does every year, look for Google to unwrap a new version of Android named after a dessert. This year, it's going to be Key Lime Pie, and we should enjoy our first taste of said pie in May, at the Google I/O Developers Conference.

Rumored crumbs on Key Lime Pie include added improvements in touchscreen responsiveness, the fruits of Google's Project Butter to make Android less laggy; different Performance Profiles, a holdover from the Motorola patents Google acquired in its 2011 purchase of the company; and an option to try any app or game on the Google Play Store for free. TechRadar has compiled several other minor features that could be on their way; overall, though, Google has kept Key Lime Pie a fairly mysterious little sweet treat.

FURTHER MOVES TOWARD INDESTRUCTIBILITY

In late 2011 and 2012, Motorola made a lot of noise with its nigh-indestructible RAZR phones, which had backs made of Kevlar and a display made of Gorilla Glass. Those phones proved that Motorola was seeking the aura of immortality enjoyed by Nokia's brick-like phones of the mid-2000s.

This year, expect more smartphones that you can run over with a car or use to hammer a nail or perform any other number of "Fear Factor" stunts. Sony's 2013 flagship, the Xperia Z, is waterproof, allowing for underwater photos and videos (and survival of drops in the swimming pool and toilet). In January, Corning unveiled its Gorilla Glass 3, which is insanely shatter-proof and will make its way onto devices by the middle of this year. And there have been rumors floating around that the next Nexus phone -- from Motorola, natch -- will be truly indestructible.

That's what we expect, broadly speaking, from Android this year. Now all you have to do is choose just one from an increasingly excellent crop.

Before You Go

How Android Got Better (And Better, And Better) In 2012
Motorola Droid Razr(01 of11)
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NOVEMBER 2011The beginning of Android Insanity 2012, the original Droid Razr was released in November 2011. It would be all but obsolete by February, with the release of the Droid Razr Maxx.
Weight: 4.48 ouncesDisplay: 4.3 inches, 256 ppi, 540 x 960 pixelsProcessor: dual-core, 1.2 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery 12.5 hours talk, 1,780 mAHOperating system: Android 2.3 Gingerbread (initially)
Keep your eye on these specs: the operating system, the battery life, the processor speed, the RAM and the display size. All will increase as we move forward in time. Onward!
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Google Galaxy Nexus by Samsung(02 of11)
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DECEMBER 2011At the beginning of the year, the Galaxy Nexus was probably the Android smartphone to own. It was the first phone with Android 4.0, or Ice Cream Sandwich, and would remain so for several more months; it came with a large (at the time!) beautiful display and a quick processor. It was a summation of what Android could be and a preview of the direction of the OS, especially in terms of display size and quality. (Remember the number 316 pixels-per-inch on the display, or PPI; the higher the PPI, the better. You're going to see this number increase from the 200s to a mandatory 300+ number as 2012 progresses).
Weight: 4.76 ouncesDisplay: 4.65 inches, 720 x 1,280 pixels, 316 ppiProcessor: dual-core, 1.2 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery: 17.66 hours talk time, 1,750 mAhOperating system: Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich -- first phone with ICS)
Yes, as we celebrated New Year's Eve 2012, the Galaxy Nexus was the superphone of superphones. Until...
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Samsung Galaxy Note(03 of11)
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FEBRUARY 2012WHAT CHANGED: Screen size, screen size, screen size.
Weight: 6.28 ouncesDisplay: 5.3 inches, 800 x 1,280 pixels, 285 ppiProcessor: dual-core, 1.4 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery: 26 hours, 2,500 mAhOS: Gingerbread, upgraded to ICS
The 4.65-inch display on the Galaxy Nexus (previous slide) seemed positively gargantuan at the end of 2011; today, it's something like mid-size, thanks to a revolution in large displays brought about by Samsung and its Galaxy Note. Popularly referred to as a "phablet" (half-phone, half-tablet), the Note is noteworthy (see what I did there?) mainly for its size. Its pixel density (ppi) remains relatively low, as does its weak battery life (though the Note featured a large battery, it did not prove large enough to power the first Note for a satisfactory length, per many reviewers). Mostly, you see, we're highlighting the Note for its mammoth, made-for-man-hands screen size. Though none but Samsung would match the sheer enormity of the Note (more on that to follow), competitors would follow Samsung's lead in the race to get huge. At this point, remember, Apple's iPhone had a 3.5-inch display; one way Android manufacturers differentiated themselves from that phone, certainly, was in screen size. While few were willing to top 4.3 inches before 2012, after New Year's Eve, every single Android superphone (save February's Droid Razr Maxx) would top 4.5 inches. Speaking of which...
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Motorola Droid Razr Maxx(04 of11)
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FEBRUARY 2012WHAT CHANGED: Battery life. Also, a willingness by the manufacturer to release an entirely new smartphone just four months after its initial release, heralding an era of incredibly truncated phone release cycles.
Weight: 5.11 ouncesDisplay: 4.30 ounces, 540 x 960 pixels, 256 ppiProcessor: dual-core, 1.2 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery: 21.6 hours, 3,300 mAhOS: Android 2.3 gingerbead (now ICS)
This isn't really a tale of Motorola setting the pace for other Android makers so much as it is Motorola upgrading its own smartphone incredibly quickly, to the chagrin of early adopters. The Razr Maxx was a bit heavier and thicker than the original -- which had just come out, remember, four months before -- and the screen, processor and OS remained constant.The battery on the Maxx, however, was so much better than the battery on the original that it's really not even worth comparing the two. The battery life on the Razr Maxx remains, by most measures, the best of any smartphone you can buy today.
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HTC One X(05 of11)
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MAY 2012WHAT CHANGED: An increase in screen size; one of the first phones with a quad-core processor, rather than a dual-core processor; shift to Android 4.0, or "Ice Cream Sandwich," rather than Android 2.3, or "Gingerbread."
Weight: 4.55 ouncesDisplay: 4.7 inches, 720 x 1,280 pixels, 312 ppiProcessor: quad-core, 1.5 GHz (international); dual-core, 1.5 GHz 1GB RAM (in America)Battery: 8.50 hours, 1,800 mAhOS: Ice Cream Sandwich
HTC's flagship phone for the first half of 2012 was the One X, widely renowned for its top-notch camera and excellent 4.7-inch screen.The One X was one of the first smartphones to have a quad-core (as opposed to dual-core) processor, though that feature was not compatible with 4G LTE in the United States; it was also one of the earliest to ship with Android Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0) rather some flavor of Android Gingerbread (2.3). The quad-core processor, the enlarged 4.70-inch screen and the terrific camera made the One X stand out (but only for about six months, until HTC released an even better One X phone).
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Samsung Galaxy S III(06 of11)
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JUNE 2012WHAT CHANGED: Bigger display; speed, touchscreen responsiveness improvements; faster processor; bigger battery.
Weight: 4.69 ouncesDisplay: 4.8 inches, 720 x 1,280, 306 ppiProcessor: quad-core, 1.4 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery: 22.50 hours, 2,100 mAhOS: Android 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich
Heralded by many as the best smartphone of the year, the Galaxy S III does not, on paper, seem too impressive. Other phones have crisper displays, faster processors, better cameras and longer battery life. The Galaxy S III, however, packaged above-average numbers for all these specs, combined with what was probably the smoothest touchscreen experience on an Android phone yet. It also packed in several intriguing, innovative apps available only from Samsung (see: Smart Stay, S Beam) and a 4.8-inch screen that was viewed as humongous for a flagship phone when it was unveiled.
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Motorola Droid Razr Maxx HD(07 of11)
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OCTOBER 2012WHAT CHANGED: Yet another Razr in 2012! Operating system updated; larger and better display.
Weight: 5.54 ouncesDisplay: 4.7 inches, 720 x 1,280, 312 ppiProcessor: dual-core, 1.5 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery: 21.00 hours, 3,300 mAhOS: Ice Cream Sandwich
Surprise! Three flagship Droid Razr phones in under a year? It happened in 2012.Motorola's Droid Razr Maxx HD does not achieve the marathon battery life of the non-HD version, per tests, though it still rates highly. The Maxx HD improves upon the Maxx in other areas, though: The screen is larger (4.7 inches vs. 4.3 inches); the display is far crisper (312 ppi vs. 256 ppi, a significant gap); and the processor is more powerful (1.5 GHz vs. 1.2 GHz).We can see the move to larger, crisper screens and bulked-up processors here; the camera on the Razr Maxx HD is also an improvement from previous generations.
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Samsung Galaxy Note II(08 of11)
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OCTOBER 2012WHAT CHANGED: Almost everything.
Weight: 6.42 ouncesDisplay: 5.55 inches, 720 x 1,280 pixels, 265 ppiProcessor: quad-core, 1.6 GHz, 2GB RAMBattery: 35 hours, 3,100 mAhOS: Android 4.1, Jelly Bean
The big get bigger. Eight months after the Note came the Note II, with a larger and more beautiful screen, a faster processor, a better battery, a more competitive camera and a newer operating system. Reviewers were impressed with its absence of touchscreen lag and improved browsing speed as well. An improvement in almost every way on the first Note, the Note II not only boosted the acceptable screen size even closer to six inches, it also shifted the perception of how fast an Android smartphone could run.The quad-core processor? The 2GB RAM? These were about to become standard on Android superphones. Less than a year before, they represented pipe dreams.
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HTC One X+(09 of11)
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NOVEMBER 2012WHAT CHANGED: Updated just six months after release of original.
Weight: 4.76 ouncesDisplay: 4.70 inches, 720 x 1,280, 312 ppiProcessor: quad-core, 1.7 GHz, 1GB RAMBattery: 2,100 mAhOS: Android 4.1, Jelly Bean
In America, the first One X came out in May. Six months later, HTC updated it with the One X+. The processor increased from dual-core to quad-core; battery life was greatly improved; and the One X+ shipped with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, rather than Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.
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HTC Droid DNA(10 of11)
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NOVEMBER 2012WHAT CHANGED: It's all about the display.
Weight: 4.87 ouncesDisplay: 5.0 inches, 1,080 x 1,920 pixels, 441 ppiProcessor: quad-core, 1.5 GHz, 2GB RAMBattery: 12.80 hours, 2,020 mAhOS: Android 4.1, Jelly Bean
The final four great Android smartphones of 2012 measured in with displays of 5.5 inches, 4.70 inches, 5.0 inches (on this, the Droid DNA) and, again, 4.70 inches. Here we can see what top-of-the-line tech specs will get you: A 5.0-inch display with 441 pixels per inch, the highest ever on a smartphone; a quad-core processor, now seemingly standard on top-tier Android devices; a battery that measures above 2,000 mAh, to ensure that 4G LTE and the oversized displays don't diminish battery life too greatly; and a version of Android that is 4.1 Jelly Bean or higher.
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LG/Google Nexus 4(11 of11)
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NOVEMBER 2012WHAT CHANGED: From one year ago, almost everything.
Weight: 4.90 ouncesDisplay: 4.7 inches, 768 x 1280 pixels, 318 ppiProcessor: quad-core, 1.5 GHz, 2GB RAMBattery: 15.30 hours, 2,100 mAhOS: Jelly Bean 4.2
The Nexus 4 -- the followup to the Galaxy Nexus, and the fourth installment of Google's Nexus series, which Google produces annually to show what an Android phone can be -- is notable mostly for including Android 4.2, which makes it the slickest and most responsive Android device to date. Otherwise, you see a lot more of what we have come to expect from Android smartphones in the latter half of 2012: weight below 5 ounces; a display in the upper-4-inch range with a ppi above 300; a quad-core processor with 2GB RAM; a battery above 2,000 mAh.Compared to the Galaxy Nexus, probably December 2011's best Android smartphone, each of these specs has been increased, amplified or advanced in a tangible, observable way. The camera: better. The display: bigger. The processor: faster. RAM: increased. Battery: longer-lasting. Those are the smartphone qualities, I think, that have been most obviously augmented over the year (as well as a manufacturer's willingness to quickly turn around a sequel). Obviously, this can translate into other, less numerical enhancements -- phones are "faster," "smoother," "more enjoyable." But if you are looking for the concrete areas of improvement, there they are.It leaves us to ponder, once again, two questions: In what ways will Android smartphones be constantly improving in 2013? And just how many Droid Razrs will Motorola release this time around?
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