![]() Open it up, and you'd get the 7.9-inch iPad interface. Otherwise the 4.7-inch iPhone 8 or iPhone 9 or whatever the next entry-level iPhone is called - that interface would be perfect. I mean, if it really has be kept super teeny tiny. On the outside, you'd present the 4-inch iPhone interface, the one found on the iPhone SE. ![]() Software-wise, I think a Galaxy Fold book-type Apple foldable would actually be one of the simplest to implement. It folds like a book, with a small screen outside and a big screen inside. And that all got the Fold a crapton of attention. The Samsung Galaxy Fold is the best-known example, because it got a big, flashy announcement, then shipped, then broke, then halted, then refactored, then shipped again. First are essentially foldable tablets - tablets that fold down into phones. Ok, so, there are currently two main types of foldables on the market. And should be, at least until foldables aren't just subjectively novel for people who routinely go through a dozen phones a year, but truly become objectively better for people who need the best phone possible for several years.Īnd those are two very, very different markets. Most people, the vast majority of people, are still buying far more reasonably priced, robustly specced slab phones. They're mostly a second, third, even fourth or more device - this year! - for the small, affluent, industry-insider market Samsung and a few other companies have realized they can target, using foldables, as just the fastest way to separate us from our money. Way more interesting than the so damn always boring slab phones we've all been subjected to for the last decade and a half.īut, they're also not really usable as anyone's only device right now either. ![]() We few nerds are buying them because they're subjectively the most novel devices right now. ![]()
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