Folding phones are saving us from several years of boring slabs

I’m sick of the specs race. Make my phone fun.

samsung-galaxy-z-flip-vs-galaxy-s20.jpg?

fold-life-graphic.png

  • A history of the folding phone
  • Galaxy Z Flip vs. Moto RAZR
  • Why your next phone should be a foldable
  • Why your next phone shouldn’t be a foldable
  • Our phones are our most important fashion accessory
  • The clamshell foldable is the new ‘small’ phone
  • Foldables aren’t the ‘small’ phone you want (yet)
  • All the differences between foldable devices
  • Should you buy a foldable phone in 2020?
  • Are foldable phones the next big thing?
  • Folding phones are saving us from several years of boring slabs

My obsession with making phones do things phones “weren’t meant to do” started in my teens, when I showed all of my friends how to load full lenth movies onto their internal storage in class. I was always the phone nerd, I knew what phones everyone in TV shows and movies were using, and a few of my friends threatened to stop watching things with me if I didn’t stop pointing them out. Did you know there was a period of time on the CW where all of the villans in every show had an iPhone, and all of the main charcters had Android phones? Yeah, I notice weird shit like that.

And if I’m honest, that’s probably why I’m so excited about foldable phones. Things are about to get weird in the phone world, and that means bland slabs of glass are not going to be enough to grab my attention.

samsung-galaxy-fold-vs-motorola-razr-and

If it wasn’t clear from the bit in the paragraph above this one, I’m not really talking to the general consumer with this editorial. I am rarely excited by the phone that is the most popular, and not because I think of myself as some agent of couterculture or something. The things I value in a phone aren’t usually the things most folks look for, and that’s a good thing. There should always be an affordable, reliable, consistently good experience for me to recommend to my friends and family who need something that will be a good pocket computer for a couple of years and need very little maintenance. These are great phones, they’re just not particularly exciting.

Foldable phones, at least the ones we’ve seen so far, do an amazing job addressing niches. I’ve seen people use a Galaxy Fold and a small keyboard for all of their work instead of needing to toss a Chromebook into a bag. The Galaxy Z Flip is a multitasking powerhouse, due entirely to its unique design and the software accompanying it. The Moto Razr… exists. They aren’t all winners. The point is these are not phones I would recommend to my younger sister, who really only uses her phone for Instagram and texting and a few other simple things. But for me, these phones explore a more meaningful way to be entirely mobile and that is genuinely exciting.

Folding phones might just be an experiment, but I haven’t felt the urge to bust out a credit card like this in a long time and that’s not nothing.

It’s not just the mechanics of the phone folding that excites me, either. this technology is going to enable a lot of clever things in the not-so-distant future. Vehicle dashboards that unfold when you’re parked to give you a bigger screen to work with, or better curved displays in smaller personal gadgets. These displays will open the door to a lot of new opportunities, as well as make the concept of a secondary display on a phone seem more standard.

While all of this is happening in the public, there’s still a regulatory body trying to figure out the best way to make a standard for storing your driver’s license electronically. It’s entirely possible that a low power secondary display which can store the barcode from your ID and display it even when the phone is dead becomes a part of that standard because of the breakthroughs being made in this space right now. There are so many opporunities for this stepping stone of a phone folding in half to become something bigger.

royole-flexpai-foldable-phone-9.jpg?itok

There may come a point where folding phones become mainstream, the Z Flip is certainly turning heads in unexpected places across the internet right now. These phones may also be dubbed unneccesary and join pop-up front-facing cameras and Tango sensors in the heap of tech that time forgets. And honestly, I’m okay with that too. Every couple of years manufacturers put their experiments in the public eye, and we get delightful little bits of weirdness like a phone with no ports at all or a phone with a second e-ink display on the back.

Folding phones might just be an experiment, and not every manufacturer seems to really know what to do with these things just yet, but I haven’t felt the urge to bust out a credit card like this in a long time and that’s not nothing.

Finally foldable functionality

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip

samsung-galaxy-z-flip-cropped-open.png?i

$1380 at Samsung

At long last, a phone that fits in women’s pockets.

The Galaxy Z Flip takes a modern smartphone shape and lets you fold it in half. It’s expensive to be sure, and you’ll still feel the crease, but this is the first foldable to actually feel like an actual complete product and not a beta test.

Related posts

Latest posts

You can now have secret chats with Google’s Gemini in incognito mode

You can now try out a limited version of Google's Gemini AI model without signing in or signing up for a Google account.

Nvidia’s new model brings humanoid robotics a step closer to reality

Nvidia announced it is releasing a new open source foundation model for humanoid robotics.

Microsoft might make your PC specs easier to understand

A potential new feature has been spotted in the latest Windows 11 preview build that explains device specifications with a handy FAQ.

Microsoft warns users Windows 10 support ends soon, these are your options

Microsoft is moving forward with its plan to retire Windows 10 this year. Some users are now receiving emails about it.

This AI app boosts my productivity in a way that Apple Intelligence can’t

I need a transcription tool to help with my interviews, but Apple Intelligence can’t recognize speakers. Fortunately, the MacWhisper app has just stepped up.

The Dell G16 gaming laptop with RTX 4060 is under $1,000 with this deal

The Dell G16 gaming laptop with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 graphics card and 16GB of RAM is on sale from Dell at $300 off, dropping its price below $1,000.

Can the RX 9070 compete with the 5070 Ti?

The RX 9070 was designed as more of an RTX 5070 competitor, but it can actually compete and even sometimes beat the more-expensive RTX 5070 Ti.

This powerful Lenovo ThinkPad laptop is 50% off, but not for long

The Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 7 Mobile Workstation, a very powerful laptop that can handle a professional's workload, is on sale at 50% off its estimated value.

More evidence suggests iPhone 17 Air will borrow this Pixel design cue

There have been no end of rumours surrounding the iPhone 17 Air – or iPhone 17 Slim as it has also been called – and the latest adds some fuel to an existing fire. Previous reports have suggested the slimmer iPhone 17 model will feature a camera module that spans the width of the device, […]

Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE leak bares it all, and it’s bad news

Samsung’s upcoming Fan Edition tablets might deliver a double whammy of bad surprises with a decidedly mid-range Exynos silicon and a higher asking price.