lg7 phone display screens factory

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lg7 phone display screens factory

The LG G7 ThinQ is an interesting phone that offers great sound quality, speedy software, and solid battery life. It’s a solid, if unremarkable, flagship, but it doesn’t always work as expected. We’ve been digging around to find the most commonly reported LG G7 ThinQ problems and we’ve identified possible workarounds or fixes to help you overcome them.

In December 2018, some LG G7 ThinQ owners began reporting a major issue with their handsets. After installing a software update, some European G7 ThinQ owners were no longer able to start their phones. That’s right, the G7 ThinQ is LG’s latest phone to suffer from bootlooping problems.

Start by going to Settings > Battery and make sure that Battery percentage on status bar is toggled on. Go to Settings > Display > New Second Screen and make sure it’s set to Standard. You should also go to Settings > Display > Display size and turn it all the way down to the smallest.

If none of that worked, then back up your files and try a factory reset. This will wipe your phone. Go to Settings > General > Backup & Reset > Factory Data Reset and tap Reset phone.

lg7 phone display screens factory

In this segment, they talk about the rumor that was taking a chunk out of Universal Display"s (NASDAQ: OLED) value on Monday: that Apple(NASDAQ: AAPL) is manufacturing its own microLED display screens at a "secret" facility in California. If true, the company could be losing a lot of sales to its biggest end user. How might it adapt? And for investors, is this a good time to jump ship on a stock that could take a much steeper fall if the scuttlebutt is confirmed?

Chris Hill: Shares of Universal Display are falling on the news that Apple is reportedly producing their own display screens in "a secret manufacturing facility near Apple"s headquarters in California."

Hill:It"s not a secret anymore, apparently. But, Universal Display shares down about 14% this morning. Wasn"t this always the case with Universal Display? Wasn"t this always the situation where, we looked at this company and said, "This is great. They"re doing great. And No. 1, or certainly in the top two or three in terms of risk factors, is if Apple decides to take their enormous pile of cash and start making their own display screens."

Muckerman:Absolutely. The talk lately has been about them getting into larger screens, televisions and monitors of that size. But, yeah, with their largest customer apparently switching to in-house micro-LED, which supposedly has darker blacks, brighter whites, slimmer and consumes less power, you"re hitting on all fronts there. It seems like a no-brainer for them, if it is viable technology, to roll that out. And then, LG announced that its new phone, the LG 7, going LCD instead of OLED. So, getting hit from a few different partners.

Universal Display makes their money by selling the materials for OLED and licensing their IP. And they have a decent catalog of IP, they"ve been in business for a while. But the numbers here are kind of concerning. If you look at the trail here, the chain of how this money is made, SDC is the company, they are a key customer of Universal, and SDC is essentially helping to assemble all this stuff for these phone companies. So, if you look at SDC as being a key customer of Universal, Universal, 62% of their consolidated revenue in 2017 came from SDC. Now, SDC is a very big supplier to Apple"s move to OLED screens. So, you can put two and two together there and realize that Universal is very dependent on SDC, and if SDC is doing a lot of business with Apple, now we understand why the stock is behaving the way it is, because if Apple is taking this work in house -- and this doesn"t mean they are, this means that they"re working on that possibility -- then all of the sudden, you realize that Universal has the potential to lose a big chunk of revenue. And, trailing-12-month revenue is $335 million. It"s not like it"s some big, massive company. The stock is trading at better than 50X 2018 estimates. On the flip side, it has a healthy balance sheet, it"s profitable. But, again, we"ve seen this play out before. They need to have something to go to if that Apple relationship deteriorates.

Hill:Yes, you have. But, as you said, Jason, we"ve seen this movie before, and here"s how the movie goes: the report comes out. It"s not confirmed from Apple, but the report comes out. And the stock of InvenSense or whoever else, in the case of InvenSense, it"s like, they might not be in the next iteration of the iPhone. The initial report comes out, the stock falls somewhere between 5-15%. And then somewhere down the line, it gets confirmed, and then it really takes a hit.

If you"ve owned this stock and you"ve made a nice gain and you"re seeing it down 14%, do you pull the plug right now? Or do you say, "I"m going to wait and see," knowing that at some point later in 2018, Apple could absolutely come out and say, "We"re cutting the ribbon on our now-no-longer-secret manufacturing facility," and then Universal Display"s stock really takes a hit?

Moser:Yeah, the nature of Universal Display as a stock, it"s not a stock that I look at as a "buy it and plan on holding it for a long period of time." I think it"s one you have to keep tabs on. Like you said, we"ve seen this play out before. Apple is one where you can buy and set it and forget it. Universal Display, not so. If I did own shares and was sitting on a big win there, I"d be looking at this and taking it very seriously based on the history of examples out there. I"m not telling anybody what to do, but if it were me, I more than likely would be leaning toward cutting bait and moving on.

Chris Hill has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Jason Moser owns shares of Apple. Taylor Muckerman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Ambarella, Apple, and Universal Display. The Motley Fool has the following options: long January 2020 $150 calls on Apple and short January 2020 $155 calls on Apple. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

lg7 phone display screens factory

If for some reason, none of the above steps have helped in solving the issue it is now time to take your smartphone to your dealer to have it checked. Ask an authorized technician to do a proper diagnosis, check the unit for damage etc…If your unit is still under warranty then you can proceed to make a claim with your retailer just present the needed documents for a smooth transaction with your retailer.

lg7 phone display screens factory

To bypass the G7 Thinq lock screen, we need to hard reset the phone using volume down & power keys via the recovery mode. You cannot reach the home screen without a reset when locked out.