Samsung finally showed off its new foldable smartphone, the $1,980 Galaxy Fold
Samsung on Wednesday announced more details about its foldable smartphone, called the Galaxy Fold. At Samsung's Unpacked event, we finally saw what the Galaxy Fold will look like, having only seen the device in the shadows when the company announced its existence in November.
The device will use a "7nm" processor and include 12 GB of RAM and 512 GB of internal storage. Oddly enough, there is no microSD slot or headphone jack despite the device's size. Galaxy Fold will include six cameras.
See also: The Galaxy Fold makes no sense as a consumer device yet
With the Galaxy Fold, you spend big to get access to the beta test. The glimpses I got, brief though they were, during Samsung's live presentation of the Fold in London gave me reason to be wary. First and foremost, the inner display of the device never seems to fold out to be perfectly flat. Light reflections glinting off its surface in the presenter's hand exposed a slight ridge in the middle, a spine where the hinge resides and disturbs the flat plane. The left and right wings of the opened Galaxy Fold also reflected light at different angles. I know from my experience with the Royole Flexpai, the first foldable phone, just how hard it is to combine folding and flatness in one device. Judgment should be reserved until we've had a chance to hold one in our hands, but my first impression is that the Fold doesn't always have a perfect, undisturbed 7.3-inch tablet surface. It's a compromise.
Galaxy Fold will amaze you. Here's why you won't buy one
Also at Reuters, Bloomberg, and Wccftech.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Friday February 22 2019, @03:31AM (5 children)
Can't believe it's not in the summary, to repeat: I read on another site that the announced price for the fold is $1980.
The car I drive to work in cost just a little more than $1980 to purchase, and unlike the last 3 cell phones in our house, our cars don't pack it in with a "throw me away, I'm not worth fixing" defect after 2 years or less. Not to mention the fact that a car is 2500+lbs of manufactured steel, plastic, glass and rubber, while the new fold phone certainly weighs less than a pound.
You can argue that the "intellectual property" that goes into making a phone is what you're paying for, but 99% of that is copied from last year's model.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Friday February 22 2019, @03:39AM
O.K. O.K. - it's right there in the top line of the summary, still worth repeating and ranting about.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://news.stanford.edu/2023/02/17/will-russia-ukraine-war-end
(Score: 2) by takyon on Friday February 22 2019, @04:08AM
It's not fair to compare your used car to a luxury smartphone.
Not flagship, luxury.
The Samsung Galaxy Fold isn’t for you [venturebeat.com]
The Galaxy Fold makes no sense as a consumer device yet [theverge.com]
A select group of people will essentially pay to have the privilege of being beta testers for this form factor. Samsung will apply the lessons they learn going forward, and this kind of device will work a lot better and be a lot cheaper in 2021+.
We can complain about the price, but the fact that foldable smartphones actually exist now means that we will see people begin to review, test, and adopt them. Maybe you'll be able to try one out at a Samsung store or something.
I like the concept. We can see some clear limitations with the imperfect flatness, and we can imagine that there could be more problems after folding it and unfolding it thousands of times. Most of the electronics inside the devices are not bendy, which is why it folds in the middle rather than being a big, floppy rectangle that could be cupped in your hands. But the idea of having a smartphone in your pocket and being able to significantly expand the screen size is a sound one, as long as it can fit in your pocket when folded (something that reviewers should be able to measure with a ruler).
One thing I wondered: what if you get a call in tablet mode? My take is that the software should pick up the call the instant you fold it. Or you could use speaker phone.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 22 2019, @07:14AM (1 child)
Can you make a phone call with your car? Connect to the internet? Put you put the car in your pocket? I have a banana that costs less than your car. The banana never has mechanical issues.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 22 2019, @10:53AM
I can answer all of your questions with "it depends on how high I am".
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 22 2019, @06:24PM
Running a chip fab to make those state of the art 7nm feature size electronics is not cheap. Neither is running a factory to assemble the circuit boards using those chips. Most of what you're paying for in such a device is not the "intellectual property" that goes into making it or even the cost of the raw materials (though they do constitute a not-insignificant fraction), but the expense needed to run the machinery used to make the components and assemble it into the finished product.