The After Math: Nokia puts PureView into the Lumia 1020 and there's a whole lot of gold
Welcome to The After Math, where we attempt to summarize this week's tech news through numbers, decimal places and percentages.
Welcome to this week's After Math, with Nokia and T-Mobile both holding New York-based events for their future plans. The US carrier continued to roll out its Magenta-hued LTE service across America, while Nokia finally revealed the long-rumored (and often-leaked) Lumia 1020, which brings its high-megapixel-count sensors to its Lumia line -- a true PureView Windows Phone. All this in numerot (that's Finnish for numbers), right after the break.
Maximum photo resolution on the Lumia 1020: 38 megapixels
Maximum photo resolution on Nokia's first phone with a built-in camera: 0.3 megapixels
Size of the Lumia 1020's image sensor: 1/1.5 inch
Size of the image sensor from 2010's Nokia N8: 1/1.83 inch
Number of 4.5-inch phones launched by Nokia in the last year: 4
Value of a gold bar: Around $528,000
Number of gold bars stored in the Bank of England: 400,000
Amount offered by Samsung to developers to help populate Tizen's app store: $4 million
That amount in gold bars: Fewer than 8
Handset sales in the next three years, according to T-Mobile CEO John Legere: Sh**loads
Number of potential customers covered by T-Mobile's LTE network: 157 million
Number of potential customers covered by AT&T's LTE network: more than 292 million
Number of potential customers covered by Verizon's LTE network: around 298 million (Over 90 percent of US population)