Forget curved displays. With the introduction of a new flexible phone prototype, users can literally make the smartphone bend to their will.
Unveiled Tuesday at the 2013 Human Factors in Computing Systems conference in Paris, France, Human Media Lab's "MorePhone" changes shape and lets users choose specific movement configurations based on the caller or type of message.
Created by researchers at Queen's University in Ontario, Canada, the concept is unlike traditional smartphones because of its thinness and type of display.
The phone's screen is composed of flexible plastic and connected to shape-memory alloy wires. These wires can contract and bend based on electronic signals and are able to reform to the device's original shape. Thus, a user can program the phone to bend at a specific corner to signify a certain caller or distinguish between email and text messages.
Human Media Lab Director Roel Vertegaal, who developed the concept, also pointed out the benefit of how the phone can alert users with a silent notification.
"One of the problems with current silent forms of notification is that users often miss notifications when not holding their phone," Vertegaal said in a statement. "With MorePhone, they can leave their smartphone on the table and observe visual shape changes when someone is trying to contact them.”
As The Verge notes, the surface design is markedly similar to LG's flexible e-paper display -- though LG's product is much larger than a typical phone screen.
MorePhone is not the only shape-shifting phone concept being presented at the Association for Computing Machinery's annual conference this year. Researchers led by Anne Roudaut of the University of Bristol in the U.K also unveiled six working prototypes, called "Morphees," that also perform a similar function, changing shape based on user preferences.
While MorePhone is just a prototype, Vertegaal estimates the design will be ready for mass production in five to 10 years.
Watch a video demonstration of how the MorePhone changes shape (above), or see photos of the prototype in the gallery below. (All images courtesy of Human Media Lab.)
Source: huffingtonpost