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Corning Unveils Gorilla Glass 5, Can Survive Drops 'Up To 80% Of The Time' (theverge.com) 111

An anonymous reader writes from a report via The Verge: Corning has unveiled their new Gorilla Glass 5, which should make its way to high-end smartphones and other electronic devices later this year and into 2017. Gorilla Glass 5 is designed to improve drop performance from devices that are dropped onto rough surfaces from waist heigh to shoulder height. Corning says it can survive up to 80 percent of the time when dropped from 1.6 meters. For comparison, Gorilla Glass 4, which was released in the fall of 2014, was marketed as being twice as tough as the previous version and twice as likely to survive drops onto uneven surfaces from about a meter high. Some things to note include the fact that in Corning's tests, the 80 percent survival rate was with pieces of glass that were 0.6mm thick -- Corning now makes glass as thin as 0.4mm. Depending on how thin manufacturers want the glass in their devices, the durability results may vary. Also, most of demos consisted of dropping the glass face down, rather than on its side or corner. Corning's vice president and general manger John Bayne said if the glass is dropped in such a way, it's going to depend on the overall design of the phone, not just the glass. Gorilla Glass 5 is currently in production, though the company says we'll hear more about it "in the next few months." There's no word as to whether or not the glass will be ready in time for the wave of devices expected this fall.
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Corning Unveils Gorilla Glass 5, Can Survive Drops 'Up To 80% Of The Time'

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  • sigh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 21, 2016 @06:07AM (#52552575)

    The "For comparison" does not allow you to make a comparison...
    Also what does "up to 80%" mean?

    • 80% of Newton's Law?
    • Also what does "up to 80%" mean?

      it means "some value less than, but definitely not greater than, 80%"

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      Also what does "up to 80%" mean?

      Altogether it mean that "sometimes it will survive the fall!"

    • Re:sigh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @06:58AM (#52552711)

      Basically it means "on one out of 5 drops, it's guaranteed to break. For the other 4, you may have hope."

      • by Eloking ( 877834 )

        Basically it means "on one out of 5 drops, it's guaranteed to break. For the other 4, you may have hope."

        Do you know what 80% mean? It doesn't mean "1 out of 5 drop is a 100% break chance, and the other 4 out of 5 are 50% break chance".

        Of course, that figure are for 0.6mm and I'm guessing manufacturer will prefer the 0.4mm which, oddly, doesn't have it's how survivability statistic.

    • what does "up to 80%" mean?

      It means it's 80% if you drop it into a royal goose feather pillow. 0% otherwise.

    • It means, maybe

      The alternate hypothesis was (rho) < 0.80
    • I expect it means the glass had broke 1 time out of every 5 attempts.

      • by cdrudge ( 68377 )

        I have less optimistic expectations.

        Corning could test samples in batches of 5 sheets. One test, 4 of the samples did not break, 1 did. 80% survival rate as you said you'd expect. Other batches of 5 sheets, all samples broke at a rate less than 80%. As long as all 5 tests don't survive, Corning gets to say that it survives "up to 80%" since it never survived 5 of 5. Weasel words like "up to" are wonderful for marketing.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      It means that the glass survives during the first 80% of the fall. Which mean it is able to stand 0g for at least 0.5s.

    • The "For comparison" does not allow you to make a comparison...

      twice as tough as the previous version and twice as likely to survive drops onto uneven surfaces from about a meter high.

      Twice as tough compared to the previous version.

  • Comparability (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 21, 2016 @06:18AM (#52552615)

    Corning says it can survive up to 80 percent of the time when dropped from 1.6 meters. For comparison, Gorilla Glass 4, which was released in the fall of 2014, was marketed as being twice as tough as the previous version and twice as likely to survive drops onto uneven surfaces from about a meter high.

    How is that "for comparison"? There is absolutely nothing there that can be compared.

  • Alternatively.. (Score:2, Insightful)

    This glass will break 20%+ of the time. Fixed it.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      *At Least* 20% of the time, sometimes more.

    • This glass will break 20%+ of the time. Fixed it.

      You fixed the broken glass, thus bringing the survival rate to 100%?

  • Gorilla Glass 5 is designed to improve drop performance from devices that are dropped onto rough surfaces from waist heigh to shoulder height.

    So it prevents breakage if you're standing on your head then?

  • This is crazy! Everyone knows that the iPhone screen replacement industry employs thousands of workers throughout the world. Corning makes more glass because of it. Apple sells more new iPhones. Nowhere in this story do I see anyone defending the rights of the workers who fix broken glass.

    If Corning really cared about the lowly worker, they would make glass that broke even easier. This could create thousands of new jobs and return the West to the worker utopia that it once was!

  • If you drop a phone face-first on a flat surface then the bezel will hit first and the force will be spread out across the entire bezel. If you drop a phone corner-first on a flat surface then all the force has to be distributed from that one corner, and I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of it went through the screen.

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      If you drop a phone face-first on a flat surface then the bezel will hit first and the force will be spread out across the entire bezel. If you drop a phone corner-first on a flat surface then all the force has to be distributed from that one corner, and I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of it went through the screen.

      Well. Good for them their name isn't Cornering Gorilla Glass then now isn't it?

      "Super shatter-proof glass 5, only breaks ever second-fourth time!" (Here I wanted to account for less precise falls ..)

  • What I read is "As little as 0%"
  • Ah a tech advance brings out all the fucktards disappointed that it still isn't good enough to prevent them from breaking their phones when they do stupid things with them.

    All I have to say is good job Corning at improving your product. Now back to the lab, there is more work to do, or better yet find some dude name Scotty and ask him about that transparent aluminum stuff.

  • Thinner glass breaks more easily, and probably new versions of things are still overall slightly better than previous versions.

  • Just add Armor (Score:4, Insightful)

    by lapm ( 750202 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @08:34AM (#52553123)
    Funny, phones are so fragile now days that we need to add extra armor just to keep it going... How about actually build that phone properly in first place?
    • I've wondered this myself and thought about it a bit.

      My conclusions were:
      1.a. People like to decorate their phones as they see fit (proper armor would make cases that much larger)
      1.b. The ability to decorate a phone using after market cases is important to the phone manufacturer since more people are likely to buy a phone if they can dress it up as they would like.
      2. Aftermarket products have varying levels of protection, the consumer can choose what suits them (a woman with her phone in her purse all of

  • by danbob999 ( 2490674 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @09:20AM (#52553383)

    The main problem is that too much phone manufacturers pandered to those who value form over function by making phones in heavy metal. These phones are denser and have more chances to break when they reach the ground. Plastic can bend and absorbs some shock. Metal will transmit the shock to the display and other components. Plastic phones are much better, but some reviewers decided they "felt cheap" (whatever that means).

    A lite plastic phone with gorilla glass has high survivability to drops. Just don't make it in metal.

    • I agree that modern plastics may be better than metal, but regardless of what the phone materials, you can put them in a case made out of whatever you want!
      • When you put a case on it, it's better if the phone is as light as possible so again plastic is better when you have a case. Since it's also better when you don't, phones should never be made of metal.

        • phones should never be made of metal

          And yet the most durable phones on the market are. Stay away from overly broad generalisations and stick to specifics like ultra thin large phones with large crackable surfaces, with no buffer and no bezel protecting shattering components should never be made of metal if durability is your number one concern. It makes much more sense.

          • phones should never be made of metal

            And yet the most durable phones on the market are.

            Most high end phones are. I expect a $1000 phone to be more durable than a cheap $100 one.
            Yet, the $1000 phone would be even more durable if it was not made in metal.

    • by Shatrat ( 855151 )

      According to an article I read yesterday, when the Nokia (Non-Microsoft) phones come out in 6 months or so they will be based on polycarbonate frames.

      • Yeah of course plastic phones still exist. There is still a trend in the high end phone market to switch to metal for no good reason.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • How does this compare to sapphire crystal? If unfavorably, why are we still talking about it?

  • And for the 20%+ of the time that it breaks, there's Gorilla Glue

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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