Cross Platform Mobile Applications

Archive for April, 2008

More on mobile screen size trends

I recently wrote about screen size trends and the trend is clear: 240 x 320 (aka QVGA) is the new baseline screen size, both for feature phones and smartphones. Smaller screen sizes like 176 x 220 is disappearing and the 128 x 160 size is pushed down into basic phones.

QVGA will be the new small size, but it is not clear what the new dominant large screen size will be, or if there is going to be any.

What is pretty clear is the trend towards widescreen and landscape orientation for high-end phones. QVGA and larger phones are getting automatic screen rotation. Landscape is often preferred for media consumption and handheld movie consumption has been “promising” for quite some time. Just to be clear, the reason I’m exited is because the phones above makes it possible to design for a wide screen. I’m aware that many or most of the standard functions in most of the phones above are intended for vertical use.

The primary design objective for the iPhone (in my opinion) was to make the optimal video iPod. When you have 70% marked share you need to grow into new markets. Several new phones from other manufacturers seem to have the similar design objectives.

I have compared some available and coming devices that could represent a trend. LG and Samsung seems to be partial to the 400 x 240 screen size. They have released several devices with this screen size the last year or so. Nokia has recently tipped their hand with the Nokia Tube. The name obviously refers to a video use-case. At MWC in Barcelona in February they showed a demo that ran on a 360 x 640 screen. This gives a 16:9 resolution, the same as HDTV. 640 x 360 is also called QHD for “Quarter HD”.

The Sony Ericsson Xperia has been developed for the US market specifically. It runs WinMob 6.1 on a 800 x 600 screen, a resolution not supported in any official Microsoft documentation, but I guess Microsoft saw fit to go the extra mile in this case :-) The Xperia has an extreme resolution, it has more pixels on 3 inches that a good ole VGA desktop screen. I’m not sure that the Xperia exact screen size and resolution represents a trend, is kind of an extreme case. But it underscores the general high-end widescreen trend.

Pixel dimensions and aspect ratios

I used 9 as lowest common denominator for ease of comparison.

Physical screen size

Most of the devices uses 3–3.5 inch screens, something that does not leave much space for a keyboard. The phones are either clamshell or pure touch. They are also fairly similar in physical size.

Gestures, pixels and bandwidth

After years of designing for really small screens and always in portrait orientation, these devices sure feels like drowning in pixels. I absolutely expect to see some great and innovative user interfaces coming out of gestures, pixels and bandwidth!

[Note:] No mention of Motorola here, for the simple reason that I have no idea what they are up to.

Computas goes mobile with mBricks

Oslo, Monday, 21st April 2008 – Computas, a leading Norwegian consulting company today announced a partnership agreement with the Norwegian technology provider mBricks. The agreement enables Computas to offer user friendly mobile applications to customers and paves the way for new and useful mobile applications for enterprises and organisations.

‘Employees do not any longer spend all their time in front of their PC screens’ says Trond Eilertsen, Managing Director of Computas. ‘On the contrary, they expect access to enterprise systems from regular mobile phones. And that’s what we will offer now.’

mBricks’ Managing Director Svein Therkelsen adds ‘There is a clear trend, people’s use of mobile phones are increasingly more advanced. Computas represents an exciting customer segment that has already put in use advanced technology to share knowledge. From now on they have access to a new channel, and I am convinced that they will take advantage of it.’

About Computas:
Computas AS is a Norwegian software services company, established in 1985. The company business idea is to create added value for organizations by providing services, solutions and products to optimize the organizations’ usage of knowledge. Computas’ services cover a
wide range of software solutions and consulting services. For further information please visit www.computas.no

Mobile screen size trends

My colleagues have put a lot of work into the device database (we work with WURFL data and contribute back as well as we can). I took the opportunity to take a closer look at screen size trends. The data I have covers about 400 different device models sold from 2005 to today.

This shows the the most significant screen sizes, from the smallest to the largest. I have added a couple of upcoming phones as well, they are the ones with the dotted lines.

Over the years the relative screen size difference has increased. The difference between the smallest (128 x 128) and the largest (800 x 480) is now a factor of 23. That means the largest screen is 23 times bigger than the smallest one.

You can see that the smaller screens have a portrait orientation and the large screens have a landscape orientation. Between them are the phones that can change orientation, they can work in both landscape and portrait. 240 x 320 is the dominant screen size overall.

Resolution

I did a rough dpi (ppi to be exact) calculation for some popular phone models. The pixel density actually increases when the pixel count increases. The screens are not only getting bigger, they are getting sharper at the same time.

There is an upper limit to what dpi is meaningful. At a certain density, the eye can no longer see any difference. If the specs are correct, the upcoming Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 will have a pixel density of 298. That is the highest I’ve seen on a mobile phone yet. The human eye can resolve about 340 dpi at one foot viewing distance IIRC, but tests show that most people don’t see much difference between a 150 and a 300 dpi image. So 298 dpi should be plenty.

Unfortunately, for LCD screens, increased pixel density doesn’t give us more brightness. More brightness makes the screen easier to read outdoors and is more important than resolution from a usability perspective. OLED displays will help with this, but we are drifting off topic.

Yes, a grand total of 26 different screen sizes. I only counted phones that had a color screen, ran Java and had a browser.

As you can see, just a handful of variants makes up the majority of phones. Lets take a look at them:

It is obvious that 240 x 320 (also called QVGA) is on a roll. It is by far the most common and it is growing rapidly. If you develop, this should be your target screen size.

When you develop, you primarily need to worry about the width of the screen. For most practical purposes, the height takes care of itself. I have lumped together 176 x 208 and 176 x 220 for this graph. There is still a lot of them in the market, but their numbers have been decreasing since January 2007. In 18 months this screen size may be out of the market. Nokia haven’t launched a phone with this screen size in 1,5 years. I have also lumped together 128 x 128 and 128 x 160.

Phone screen sizes has had a tendency to come in pairs. Each manufacturer had their own variation on large-screen high-end models and small-screen low-end” models.

Manufacturer small screen big screen
Sony Ericsson 128 x 160 176 x 220
Nokia 128 x 128 176 x 208
Samsung 128 x 160 176 x 220
Siemens 130 x 130 132 x 176

Individual variations is disappearing, the trend is:

Manufacturer small screen big screen
Everybody+dog: 240 x 320 ?

The majority of odd-sized screens are disappearing. No phones with the above screen sizes have been introduced for at least 4 quarters.

The dead and dying are partly BenQ-Siemens (who has left the market), partly the old Sony Ericsson P-series and partly the Nokia hires versions: E60/70 and N80/90.

The odd ones

What about the other ones, the not so popular, but not dying? These are the ones that do you in.

Fashion phones:
128×220 Samsung F210
240×400 LG favorite. Prada and Viewty.
Handheld touchscreens of the iPhone variety:
240×440 Various Palm and HP
240×480 LG KF700
Typical Palm/Blackberry form factor. US enterprise with portrait or square displays:
240×240 Samsung F210
240×260 Blackberry Pearl 8100
320×240 Various
320×320 Palm and Samsung
Clamshell:
640×480 HTC X7500, Qtek 9000, etc.
800×352 Nokia E90 Communicator
800×400 Sony Ericsson Xperia X1

Future

What will be the dominant screen sizes in the future? Well, the 128 width screen sizes are moving down from feature phones to basic phones and there are very few manufacturers that still uses 176 width screens. It looks like 240 x 320 is the new base line.

What will the dominant large screen size be? Let’s hope there will be one. Right now there are a lot of different ones, every manufacturer has their own and I can’t see a clear trend. The two hottest form factors right now is the handheld touch screens (ala iPhone) and the QWERTY clamshell (ala HTC).

For the handhelds, the 320 x 480 iPhone size is a possibility. It has an ok resolution for a 3,5 inch size. The Nokia “Tube” phone will have a 360 x 640 size (my estimate) and is another possibility.

For the clamshell form factor, 640 x 480 screen size would be my bet.

About the data

The launch date and the selection of phones are from the Norwegian market, but should be relevant at least throughout EMEA. The Norwegian market is not very different from most other European markets. It’s GSM only, the majority of handsets are sold with 12 month operator binding. Sony Ericsson, Nokia and Samsung are market leaders. Motorola is weak, HTC is up and coming in the enterprise market. The data includes the iPhone even though it has no official distribution. There is quite a bit of “black” iPhone imports.

The data includes all the 400 different phone models sold in the Norwegian market from 2005 to 2008. I’ve given them four quarters of life time past the quarter they were introduced. That means an average of 14,5 months. This might be a little short.

I have left out basic phones. Only phones that has a color screen, support for java and a browser are included.

Reliable sales figures for each individual device is not available, so the data is not weighted on popularity. But I don’t think popularity would give a very different conclusion. I’ve checked “top ten” lists where available and none of the “odd” screen sizes seem to be big sellers.

Note: all sizes are written as width x height. So a 240 x 320 screen is portrait while a 320 x 240 screen is landscape.

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