We're live with @zackjerryrig as he goes under the hood of the #OnePlus6T! https://t.co/BKYcvJ4VfN
— OnePlus (@oneplus) October 29, 2018
What makes a good phone?
In short, it depends on perspective. For the designer, possibly a mind blowing design. For the seller, I guess it’s the factor of profit. For end users – I guess I should stop trying. Universal satisfaction is way too complicated.
If you guys still insist to dig dipper, I would say perception varies with presentation. That’s why they need to maintain public relations, create adverts, start competitions, and controversies.
Consumers want reviews before buying a product, say a smartphone. People are craving for ‘personal recommendations’ in the world of crafted reviews. A new genre of tech reviewers are here to guide them, interact with them, and cherry pick the best model – all with a ‘personal touch’.
Phone makers jump on the bandwagon, and start collaborating with these people. Send free review/development units, take them overseas to attend launch parties, arrange public teardowns…. these are nice sugarcoats on the primitive need to boost acceptance towards wider audience.
Oh yes, and there are leaks and associated scandals! The chain of trust is never secure, and vulnerabilities are everywhere. Curiosity is an elementary desire, and it needs food to grow more.
LG is one of those few OEMs who are associated with Android since the beginning. Google produced handful of Nexus phones in collaboration with LG, including the legendary Nexus 5. LG’s own flagship G series used to have a huge fan followings.
Well, the present LG is nothing but the shadow of the past. They are not present in top five global smartphone vendors for a while and less likely to come back soon. Their last few flagships failed to draw the spotlights and the South Korean company faced critical financial backslash with their mobile division.
When people feel internal restructurings are not enough, they choose to play Russian roulette. Even if they know their secrets are out, they keep denying it. Bring up more evidences – sure, start a drama!
What really happened
The CAD renders of LG G8 ThinQ were leaked publicly, courtesy to famous leakster Steve H.McFly AKA @OnLeaks and 91mobiles.
[Exclusive]: #LG G8 renders and 360-degree video https://t.co/5HtAObeUOi
— 91mobiles (@91mobiles) January 17, 2019
Kenneth ‘Ken’ Hong, head of global corporate communications of LG Electronics, satirically denied the authenticity of the renders & called them ‘speculative’.
Calm down. It's only a speculative rendering. https://t.co/zF4sCpPZbW
— Ken Hong (@visitken) January 18, 2019
David Ruddock, managing editor of Android Police, claimed that they saw the phone themselves. The amount of differences between the physical version against the renders should be very much limited.
https://twitter.com/RDRv3/status/1086306973333647360
Artem Russakovskii, founder of Android Police joined the conversation and asked OnLeaks to comment. OnLeaks presented a bag full of old LG related leaks which were proven accurate. Tim Wrobel, senior editor of Droid Life was part of the same thread.
@OnLeaks Your comments?
— Artem Russakovskii (@ArtemR) January 18, 2019
Well... What about a little look back at all my previous LG "speculations"?... 😜 https://t.co/N2mIxKXVIm + https://t.co/z5Tb0Y2MWY + https://t.co/1mKy8GVHYM + https://t.co/uSEWZJ4sf0 + https://t.co/A0drjktPTa + https://t.co/rVdDyMjZfn + https://t.co/kIrdHMVSvE
— Steve H.McFly (@OnLeaks) January 18, 2019
I'm here for this
— Tim Wrobel (@Timotato) January 18, 2019
Hong continued to poke OnLeaks about the accuracy:
Never questioned your past. Just this one tweet.
— Ken Hong (@visitken) January 18, 2019
Well, you're not 100 percent anymore.
— Ken Hong (@visitken) January 18, 2019
Now XDA published the press renders of the same phone which matched with the previous leak. OnLeaks returned a solid reply supported by this development. Ken immediately unfollowed him.
Well, if @xdadevelopers renders are legit, this would be the first time a leaker knew a manufacturer plans even before its own PR Head... 😂 https://t.co/uuLEnDAdZ9
— Steve H.McFly (@OnLeaks) January 25, 2019
Guess who just unfollowed me... 😅 pic.twitter.com/qdS4C5eikR
— Steve H.McFly (@OnLeaks) January 26, 2019
More publications and leaksters joined the party.
what a time to be alive!
— Android Headlines (@Androidheadline) January 25, 2019
At least the first time we know of lol
— Ishan Agarwal (@ishanagarwal24) January 25, 2019
https://twitter.com/RDRv3/status/1086309459876409344
Remember when HTC trolled everyone years ago and ended up releasing a completely different design in the end compared to the leak? I don't remember which phone it was, but it does happen. Maybe @urbanstrata remembers.
— Artem Russakovskii (@ArtemR) January 18, 2019
https://twitter.com/urbanstrata/status/1086339962037985281
Keep on trying to attract as much focus as they can, and the mass will eventually follow. Hook up an imaginary carrot in front of them, so they can expect at least a portion of them will ride in the hype train.
My response: Just wait until MWC... https://t.co/YbpkA1YtiM
— Ken Hong (@visitken) January 28, 2019
Tweeting the same speculative image a second time doesn't make it any more accurate than the first time... https://t.co/TRfifrWwo5
— Ken Hong (@visitken) January 29, 2019
Allow me to slide back to the perspective part. There is always a motive behind the preparation phase of a perspective.
https://twitter.com/RDRv3/status/1086305846017966080
No ulterior motive, David. As a PR rep, setting the record straight is not going out of my way. https://t.co/4jJealYwtT
— Ken Hong (@visitken) January 19, 2019
A new dog sometimes needs to learn an old trick. ?
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