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posted by martyb on Sunday July 26 2020, @04:55AM   Printer-friendly

Your next smartphone will be a lot harder to scratch:

It takes about two years for Corning to develop each new generation of Gorilla Glass, the resilient material that graces a critical mass of smartphones. That process has for several update cycles focused on protecting screens against drops, fending off shatters and cracks by boosting what's known as compressive strength. The newly announced Gorilla Glass Victus, though, gives equal weight to preventing scratches. That's harder than it sounds and more useful than you'd think.

[...] There's also the fact that making glass that's both scratch and drop resistant is, well, hard. The manufacture of glass is often a game of compromise, which you can see most clearly in the quest for durable foldable phones: the stronger it is, the less it can bend. In this case, getting those two properties to play nice is less a direct contradiction than it is a process of reinvention.

Phone screens had previously been designed to resist drops, but with consumers upgrading their phones less frequently scratch-resistance has grown in importance.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 27 2020, @07:17AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 27 2020, @07:17AM (#1027004)

    It's more likely because people move manufacturing to China to save money. Unless they opt to do the QA and pay for high quality components.