Categorie: Notizie

The Trump Phone exists, it’s not really ‘Made in the USA,’ and it looks like junk: surprised?

After months of press silence, speculation, and delays that had suggested a phantom project, the Trump Phone has resurfaced from the shadows.

The executives of Trump Mobile have finally granted an interview, showing what should be the device intended for the president’s supporters.

However, what emerged from this video call on Google Meet is not exactly the triumph of American engineering that had been promised, but rather a confused assembly of mid-range components, questionable design decisions and a strategic reversal on its manufacturing origin.

Trump Phone: a design that changes skin (and loses ground)

Credits: The Verge

The Trump Phone T1 has appeared radically different from the renders circulated almost a year ago shown at the opening. While the golden shell and the American flag printed on the back remain, the rest has undergone a transformation that raises more than a few eyebrows.

The ‘T1’ logo seems destined to disappear before the final launch, while the camera module, initially similar to that of an iPhone, has been replaced by a vertically oriented black oval island.

A detail not escaped by the keen eye during the presentation is the arrangement of the three lenses: they appear irregularly spaced, a symmetry error rarely forgivable even by the cheaper consumer electronics makers, let alone a product aspiring to compete with the giants.

Under the hood, grand ambitions clash with the reality of the facts. Despite executives Eric Thomas and Don Hendrickson insisting on comparing the T1 to phones that cross the $1,000 threshold, the technical specs tell a different story.

The chosen processor belongs to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 series, solid chips but unmistakably aimed at the mid-range, not flagships. With a battery of 5,000 mAh and a curved “waterfall” display of 6.78 inches (a stylistic choice many manufacturers have since abandoned), the T1 seems more like an attempt to recover warehouse funds than a modern device.

The most honest comparison would be with a device like realme 14 Pro+, which offers perhaps even better specs at a significantly lower price than Trump Mobile’s ambitions.

The myth of ‘Made in the USA’ fades away in Miami

Perhaps the most controversial aspect concerns the central promise of the original marketing campaign: the nationalist pride of U.S. production. Initially, the website proclaimed in bold letters “MADE IN THE USA“, but manufacturing reality forced the company to an embarrassing course correction.

To avoid penalties from the Federal Trade Commission, which imposes strict standards for such a label, the slogan has been changed to a more vague “American hands behind every device“.

The executives admitted that the phone is not manufactured in the United States. Most of the assembly takes place in a “favored nation” (a euphemism for saying “not China”, but not America either), while only the ‘final phase’ takes place in Miami.

This final process is not real manufacturing, but rather the assembly of the last ten components. While the company still describes fully American production as a future milestone for upcoming models, at the moment those who buy the T1 are purchasing a globally assembled phone partially in Florida, not a product of the American industry.

Delays and uncertainties surrounding the launch

The path to market has been bumpy. The phone is already six months behind schedule, a delay the leadership justifies by the decision to skip the initially planned entry-level model to instead target a more capable version.

Currently, the device has FCC certification and awaits clearance from T-Mobile, expected by mid-March.

The launch price for those who paid the deposit remains locked at $499, a figure described as “introductory”, suggesting future buyers will have to stump up a higher sum, while staying under the thousand-dollar threshold.

It remains to be seen whether the public will be willing to invest in a product that, beyond the gold paint and political branding, appears technically dated even before it hits the shelves. The wait is almost over, but the sense is that the surprise may not be positive.

Luca Zaninello

Appassionato del mondo della telefonia da sempre, da oltre un decennio si occupa di provare con mano i prodotti e di raccontare le sue esperienze al pubblico del web. Fotografo amatoriale, ha un occhio di riguardo per i cameraphone più esagerati.

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