Nokia CEO makes world's first 'immersive' phone call
Nokia CEO Pekka Lundmark made a phone call using a new technology called "immersive audio and video" that improves the quality of a call with three-dimensional sound, making interactions more lifelike, the company said on Monday.
"We have demonstrated the future of voice calls," said Lundmark, whom was also present in the room when the first 2G call was made in 1991
Current smartphone calls are monophonic that compresses audio elements together and sound flatter and less detailed, but the new technology will bring 3D audio in which a caller will hear everything as if they were there with the other person
"It is the biggest leap forward in the live voice calling experience since the introduction of monophonic telephony audio used in smartphones and PCs today," said Jenni Lukander, president of Nokia Technologies.
The call was held with Stefan Lindström, Finland's Ambassador of Digitalisation and New Technologies.
"This is now becoming standardised ... so the network providers, chipset manufacturers, handset manufacturers can begin to implement it in their products," Lukander said in an interview.
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