Bangkok Post

BENDING THE RULES

Foldable phones are here. Do we really want them?

- BRIAN X. CHEN NYT

Your next smartphone may flip open to reveal its screen and fold up when you are ready to put it away — just like the oldschool clamshell phones from the 1990s.

The question is: Is that something we even want anymore?

Tech companies like Samsung, Motorola and Huawei sure hope so. Many of us realised a few years ago that the smartphone­s we had were already very good — and their successors were only slightly better — so we have been holding on to our phones longer and longer before upgrading. That hurts those companies’ bottom lines.

So in an effort to come up with something new and exciting that will make us spend our dollars, phone-makers are bombarding us with so-called foldables. They include Samsung’s US$1,380 (43,000 baht) Galaxy Z Flip and Lenovo’s $1,500 Motorola Razr.

There’s something off about all of this. For years, tech companies experiment­ed with new phone designs driven partly by consumer surveys, which brought us handsets with bigger screens, longer battery life and sharper cameras — things we really wanted. But folding phones are not something most of us have asked for.

And unlike past bleeding-edge innovation­s, the few foldables unveiled so far have had major problems. Samsung’s first foldable phone, the Galaxy Fold, which it released last year, broke within days of use by tech reviewers. According to early reviews, the new Motorola Razr suffers from poor battery life and a fussy hinge.

“It’s a solution looking for a problem,” said Paolo Pescatore, a technology analyst for PP Foresight. “That’s my worry for a lot of these technologi­es that are fast-tracked into people’s hands. There’s no demand, so why rush it?” So are foldables a passing fad or here to stay? Folding screen technology is certainly fascinatin­g and worth keeping an eye on. But the consensus among consumer technology experts I talked to was that you and I should probably wait for the devices to mature before even considerin­g buying one. Here’s why.

HOW FOLDABLES WORK

The new foldables are arriving in many different shapes and forms.

Some devices, like the Galaxy Fold and Huawei’s Mate X, have two screens. When you unfold them, you get a tablet with a roomy screen. Once it’s shut, you have a second outer touch screen to type away at.

Other devices, like Samsung’s Z Flip and Lenovo’s Motorola Razr, open to reveal a standard-size touch screen. When the phone is folded up, a miniature screen in the outer shell shows notificati­ons or app previews.

Larger bendable devices are also coming, like Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Fold, which is set for release this year. It has a bigger bendable screen so it can function as a tablet computer that folds up like a book. The Lenovo device measures 13.3 inches unfolded.

All of these gadgets rely on a hinge, which introduces a moving part to a smartphone. It’s another component, other than the screen, that could break.

THE PROS

The main benefit of a foldable phone is that you can enjoy a big screen that takes up less space in your pocket.

Um, that’s about it.

THERE ARE MOSTLY CONS

Foldables come with many downsides.

Foldable gadgets rely on flexible OLED, a display technology that is much thinner than traditiona­l screen panels. Gadget-makers have used flexible OLED for years to make our phones and smartwatch­es slimmer. The Apple Watch, for example, uses a flexible display, but it is not bendable because it is covered by robust sapphire crystal.

To make gadgets bend, you have to sacrifice some hardness. The flexible displays of foldables are generally covered by a plastic layer, which can be scratched up or penetrated more easily than the tough glass protecting traditiona­l phone displays. (Samsung said its Z Flip uses an ultrathin, foldable glass that would let you fold and unfold your phone 200,000 times.)

“If you take a ballpoint pen and you push really hard on the iPhone screen, it’ll be fine,” said Kyle Wiens, chief executive of iFixit, a company that provides instructio­ns and parts to repair gadgets. “If you do the same thing on the foldable displays, you’ll kill it.”

In theory, the clamshell designs of the Z Flip and the Razr offer a partial solution to the durability problem. That’s because the main screens are not exposed when folded up. Yet if you drop the phones while using them — say, when you are walking and texting and trip over something — you will have a problem.

“There’s no protecting the foldable display in a real-world environmen­t the way that consumers treat their smartphone­s,” said Raymond Soneira, founder of DisplayMat­e, who advises tech companies on screen technology.

Foldables also have a design flaw. In general, when they are unfolded, the screen has a visible crease — an eyesore compared with the seamless displays on our smartphone­s and tablets.

Last but not least, it remains to be seen whether the mechanical hinges of folding phones will survive the test of time.

The biggest downside of foldables may have nothing to do with the technology: the price. The devices range from about $1,400 to more than $2,400.

For most people, that’s a deal breaker: You can get a zippy smartphone with a great camera, like Google’s Pixel 3A, for about $400.

SO WHERE DOES THAT LEAVE US?

It’s too early to tell whether foldable phones will succeed. In a few years, the technology will probably become cheaper and more robust.

At that point, will you want one?

It’s a solution looking for a problem. There’s no demand, so why rush it?

 ??  ?? Samsung unveiled its second folding smartphone, the Z Flip, last Tuesday.
Samsung unveiled its second folding smartphone, the Z Flip, last Tuesday.
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