Home  ›  News  ›

FCC Reveals Photos of Possible Nexus Made by LG

Article Comments  4  

Sep 12, 2013, 9:10 AM   by Eric M. Zeman
updated Sep 12, 2013, 9:19 AM

Documents seen on the Federal Communications Commission web site provide the clearest look yet at what could be a new Google Nexus phone made by LG. LG submitted a "class 2 permissive change" for a variant of Verizon's LG G2 for "some hardware changes (antenna/PCB adjustments)" to the device. Such changes are typical close to the release of new phones. However, the photos that accompany the class 2 permissive change show what appears to be an entirely different device. The new device resembles the shape and design language of the Nexus 4, but has a larger camera design that is plainly visible on the back surface.

FCC »

Article 

 

view article organized across multiple pages

About the author, Eric M. Zeman:

Eric has been covering the mobile telecommunications industry for 17 years at various print and online publications. He studied at Rutgers Newark and University of Kentucky, and has a degree in writing. He likes playing guitar, attending concerts, listening to music, and driving sports cars.

more news about:

Verizon
LG
Google
 

Comments

This forum is closed.

This forum is closed.

Deez Nutz

Sep 12, 2013, 8:06 PM

Where are these pictures you're showing?

I've looked through the FCC filing you link to and cannot find any of these pictures you have posted....In one of the pics it actually says d820 on the back of the phone and doesn't reference anything to the 980. Everything about the 980 on the web references the G2 and not a Nexus 5.
Nexus 4 = Optimus G
Nexus 5 = G2?
Jellz

Sep 12, 2013, 10:24 AM

LG again?

Come on Google, let's see a Motorola Nexus phone!
um...Moto X.
 
 
Page  1  of 1

Subscribe to news & reviews with RSS Follow @phonescoop on Threads Follow @phonescoop on Mastodon Phone Scoop on Facebook Follow on Instagram

 

Playwire

All content Copyright 2001-2024 Phone Factor, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Content on this site may not be copied or republished without formal permission.