Daxdi now accepts payments with Bitcoin

Unihertz Announces Credit Card-Sized Jelly 2 Android Smartphone

(Photo by Unihertz)

Back in February, Unihertz announced its tiny Atom XL rugged smartphone complete with a 4-inch display, now the company is set to launch another, even smaller Android phone.

As Liliputing reports, it's called the Jelly 2, and as the name suggests, it's actually a follow-up to the Jelly smartphone launched back in 2017.

The Jelly had a 2.45-inch display, a resolution of just 340-by-432 pixels, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, and a 950mAh battery.

It was an Android handset, though, running Android 7.0.

Daxdi reviewed the Pro version of that phone and wasn't too impressed.

The Jelly 2 aims to improve in all areas over the original.

The screen size increases slightly to 3-inches, but the resolution jumps to 480-by-854 pixels.

The battery life more than doubles to 2,000mAh, there's 6GB of RAM, 128GB of storage, and it runs Android 10.

For cameras, it has a 8MP front-facing and 16MP rear camera (the original has 2MP and 8MP respectively).

Everything about this smartphone is set to be tiny, including the price, which is expected to be just $129.

Unihertz says the Jelly 2 is a 4G globally unlocked handset with dual SIM card slots, support for NFC, and includes a fingerprint reader.

You can also increase the amount of storage available because somehow there's a microSD card slot squeezed into the tiny frame.

At the heart of the Jelly 2 is an octa-core Helio P60 processor complete with Mali-G73 MP3 GPU, which hopefully results in a speedy experience.

Recommended by Our Editors

If you'd like a Jelly 2, then sign-up on the Unihertz website to be informed when the Kickstarter begins next month.

The $129 price tag is early-bird pricing only, suggesting there will be a set number of units in the Kickstarter qualifying for that price, after which, it will increase.

(Photo by Unihertz)

Back in February, Unihertz announced its tiny Atom XL rugged smartphone complete with a 4-inch display, now the company is set to launch another, even smaller Android phone.

As Liliputing reports, it's called the Jelly 2, and as the name suggests, it's actually a follow-up to the Jelly smartphone launched back in 2017.

The Jelly had a 2.45-inch display, a resolution of just 340-by-432 pixels, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, and a 950mAh battery.

It was an Android handset, though, running Android 7.0.

Daxdi reviewed the Pro version of that phone and wasn't too impressed.

The Jelly 2 aims to improve in all areas over the original.

The screen size increases slightly to 3-inches, but the resolution jumps to 480-by-854 pixels.

The battery life more than doubles to 2,000mAh, there's 6GB of RAM, 128GB of storage, and it runs Android 10.

For cameras, it has a 8MP front-facing and 16MP rear camera (the original has 2MP and 8MP respectively).

Everything about this smartphone is set to be tiny, including the price, which is expected to be just $129.

Unihertz says the Jelly 2 is a 4G globally unlocked handset with dual SIM card slots, support for NFC, and includes a fingerprint reader.

You can also increase the amount of storage available because somehow there's a microSD card slot squeezed into the tiny frame.

At the heart of the Jelly 2 is an octa-core Helio P60 processor complete with Mali-G73 MP3 GPU, which hopefully results in a speedy experience.

Recommended by Our Editors

If you'd like a Jelly 2, then sign-up on the Unihertz website to be informed when the Kickstarter begins next month.

The $129 price tag is early-bird pricing only, suggesting there will be a set number of units in the Kickstarter qualifying for that price, after which, it will increase.

PakaPuka

pakapuka.com Cookies

At pakapuka.com we use cookies (technical and profile cookies, both our own and third-party) to provide you with a better online experience and to send you personalized online commercial messages according to your preferences. If you select continue or access any content on our website without customizing your choices, you agree to the use of cookies.

For more information about our cookie policy and how to reject cookies

access here.

Preferences

Continue