what is it, how does it work, and more
What is Nothing Phone (1) Glyph Interface?
The Nothing Phone (1)’s Glyph Interface houses five lightning strips, which according to Youtuber Marques Brownlee, have over 900 LEDs. The Glyph Interface system in the Nothing Phone (1)’s setting menu controls these LEDs, but more on it later. The LEDs on the back will either glow simultaneously or independently to let the user know who’s calling or the battery charging indication.
How does Nothing Phone (1) Glyph Interface work?
As mentioned above, the Glyph Interface system in the Nothing Phone (1) setting menu allows the user to control and customise the LEDs on the back. The user can tweak the brightness of the LEDs and set the customised ringtone of an individual person, and the lightning strips will sync with the ringtones.
The menu also allows you to use the Flip-to-Glyph feature that only works when the Nothing Phone (1) is flipped upside down. It pulses the lights to indicate notifications or an incoming call. The LEDs also show you wireless charging engagements and how much the battery is charged, but you’ll have to wiggle the phone a bit.
Further, the Nothing Phone (1) Glyph Interface can also be scheduled to turn on or off at a particular time of the day or set to silent mode with lights-only notifications for deeper focus. Nothing says, “these are just the introductory features, and more customisation will come via software updates.”
Nothing Phone (1) specifications (expected)
Nothing Phone (1) is said to come with a 120Hz OLED panel, which will get its juice from an octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G+ processor. It will likely run on Android 12-based Nothing OS out of the box. Nothing Phone (1) could come with a 4,500mAh battery that supports 45W fast charging. The handset has a dual rear camera setup and a left-aligned selfie shooter at the front.
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