Skip to main content

One of Tesla’s biggest competitors is making a phone

Display view of the Polestar Phone.
Polestar

Polestar, an electric car brand born out of the nexus between Volvo and Chinese auto giant Geely, is now offering phones, too. Through its official page on the microblogging platform Weibo, the carmaker has given us the first look at its upcoming phone bearing the Polestar insignia.

Why is an EV brand making a phone? Go ask Nio. Or maybe even Huawei and Xiaomi. But what matters here is that the Polestar Phone looks quite stunning. Now, that isn’t really surprising since Polestar CEO Thomas Ingenlath is a veteran designer himself, and it is reflected in the brand’s cars.

Just take a look at the Polestar Synergy concept, and you’ll know that this brand has a taste for aesthetics. What’s a debate for another day ia that Polestar has slowly diversified its portfolio of cars, offering everything from a sedan to a compact SUV, as it tries to eat Tesla’s EV lunch.

Glimpse of Polestar Phone.
Polestar

But another reason why the Polestar Phone looks easy on the eyes is because parent company Geely has a stake in Meizu, a Chinese smartphone brand that has consistently remained at the vanguard of beautiful smartphones. Remember the Meizu Zero, the world’s first port-less, hole-less, and button-less phone that arrived all the way back in 2019? Yeah, it’s the same Meizu.

The smartphone brand has now restricted itself to the Chinese market despite making some amazing phones over the years. I have fond memories of Flyme OS, and especially its gesture-driven, one-button software interface. Yes, there was some Apple inspiration to be seen, but Meizu’s phones in the MX-series and M-series offered terrific value for money. It was also the first brand that experimented with MediaTek’s Helio X series processors and one of the only few companies that put one of Samsung’s Exynos processors inside its phones.

The Polestar Phone: Have A Look!

Now, the real reason the Polestar Phone looks familiar is that it seems to be a rehash of the Meizu 21 Pro, a flagship still on sale in China. Th Polestar Phone features a tall 6.79-inch 120Hz OLED screen with symmetrically thin bezels and a 21:9 aspect ratio, following in the footsteps of Sony’s Xperia phones.

Under the glass shell is Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip, paired with a healthy 16GB of RAM and 1TB of peak storage. There’s an optically stabilized 50-megapixel camera at the back, sitting alongside a 13MP wide-angle camera and a 10MP telephoto snapper with 3x optical zoom output.

The IP68-certified phone offers a 5,050mAh battery that also supports 50-watt wireless charging. An ultrasonic fingerprint scanner handles authentication. The only noticeable difference here seems to be the fresh Polestar branding on the glass shell and the metallic sides.

Meizu 21 Pro smartphone.
Meizu

Polestar’s Weibo post also mentions that the phone has been developed in collaboration with the carmaker’s team in Sweden and the Meizu group in China. Of course, there’s deep integration with the car’s hardware and software baked at the heart of the Flyme OS running on the phone. More details about the phone and its asking price will be detailed at an event later this month, but don’t let your hopes of buying one get too high, even though Polestar cars are sold in the U.S. market.

Now, it’s time to keep waiting for the fabled Tesla Phone.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…
iOS 18 may fix one of my biggest issues with the iPhone
The quick settings screen in iOS 17 on the Apple iPhone 15 Plus

Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) 2024 is just a few days away, and it’s definitely going to be a big one. There’s been a lot of talk about Apple finally adding some AI smarts in iOS 18 and macOS 15 -- but AI won’t be the only new thing coming.

A new report from MacRumors suggests that Apple is overhauling the Control Center with a new design and more customization options in iOS 18. This isn’t the first time that we heard this rumor. However, it seems that multiple sources who are familiar with the matter, according to MacRumors, claim that Apple has tested a redesigned version of Control Center for iOS 18.

Read more
Oppo pledges to bring AI to all its phones, even cheap ones
Opening the folded Oppo Find N2 Flip.

Oppo Find N2 Flip Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Oppo says it won't reserve its generative AI tools just for its expensive phones, and aims to introduce AI features across its range, regardless of price.

Read more
Google is making it easier to ditch your iPhone for an Android phone
Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and iPhone 15 Pro in hand.

Switching phones is never a smooth process, even if you’re switching between two different Android phones. However, when you’re trying to switch from an iPhone to Android or vice versa, it can be extra complicated -- and you can lose data and apps that you rely on. This is especially the case with Apple-to-Android transfers because the iPhone has a much stronger ecosystem lock-in with things like iMessage, iCloud backups, and exclusive apps like Overcast and Hyperlapse.

The good news is that with its Data Transfer Tool (also called Pixel Migrate on Pixel devices), Google may be trying to mitigate some of the phone-switching problems that arise -- specifically, losing access to your Live Photos. According to an APK teardown from Android Authority, Google’s Data Transfer Tool will finally resolve the problem of migrating iOS Live Photos to Android. It will do this by converting them over as Motion Photos.

Read more