The "phablet" phenomenon is taking the mobile world by storm.
Manufacturers
at the world's biggest mobile fair in Barcelona, Spain released a slew
of outsized smartphones that can barely fit in one hand and tablets that
have shrunk dramatically.
Further blurring the lines between
smartphone and tablet, a selection of the latest tablets can be used as
phones, albeit somewhat awkwardly.
At the February 25-28 World
Mobile Congress, the Ascend Mate by Chinese manufacturer Huawei, the
world's number three smartphone manufacturer, was the champion with a
vast six-inch screen.
Not far behind in the smartphone screen real
estate contest, rival Chinese handset maker ZTE released its Grand Memo
boasting a 5.7-inch display.
South Korean giant LG trailed with its Optimus Pro, at 5.5 inches.
"It's
a growing trend, especially in Asia, and a lot of these phones are
favoured by women, women who don't have to worry putting it into their
pockets, they carry it in their purse," said Ken Hong, communications
director at LG.
More than 120 million tablets were sold worldwide
in 2012, up 50 percent from the previous year, and shipments of
smartphones are predicted to hit one billion this year according to
global consultants Deloitte.
But the size of tablets is shrinking.
The
Samsung Galaxy Note 8, released just ahead of the congress, trimmed its
screen to eight inches to compete with Apple's new iPad mini.
Taiwan's Asus has managed to marry the two devices.
Asus
showed off the Padfone Infinity, a five-inch, high-definition screen
smartphone that can harness the latest superfast fourth-generation
wireless network and which slots into 10.1-inch tablet.
The
smartphones of 2013 have to be fast, too, however, as the 4G network,
also known as Long Term Evolution, or LTE, expands worldwide.
China's Huawei unveiled a new mobile at the show, the Ascend P2, which it claims is the fastest in the world.
Sharp-cornered
and thinner than a pencil at 8.4 mm, the company said it can achieve
speeds of 150 Mbps, fast enough to download a two-hour high-definition
movie in less than five minutes.
The mobile, which has a more
modest 4.7-inch, high definition screen, is powered by a 1.5 GHz
quad-core processor and is able to use LTE networks.
Huawei held 5.3 percent of the market in the fourth quarter of 2012.
That
is still well behind Samsung and Apple which held more than 50 percent
of the sales combined 29.0 percent for Samsung and 22.1 percent for
Apple.
If you can't be the biggest, smallest or fastest, there is another way to the hearts of mobile phone consumers.
Finnish manufacturer Nokia, once the leader of the mobile phone world, tried to lure shoppers with lower prices.
Nokia
released two Windows Phone-operated smartphones the Lumia 520 and 720
to be offered with pre-tax price tags of 139 euros ($189) and 249 euros
respectively.
But Nokia also offered the Nokia 105, the kind of
mobile handset people use mostly for making telephone calls, for just 15
euros.

MWC 2013 in pictures