Foldable smartphones have reached their fifth major generation, as heralded by Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip 5 and Fold 5, and...
Foldable smartphones have reached their fifth major generation, as heralded by Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip 5 and Fold 5...
For me it's definitely the durability concerns. I've valued my phone's water and dust resistance since getting an ip67 phone years and years ago. My brother had a flip and a grain of sand in his pocket got under the display; when he closed the phone the display died. And they expect me to pay more for the privilege.
I respect your opinion, but for me is it hardly a gimmick. I don't need a tablet in my bag to view websites that aren't compatible with mobile layouts, I have a tablet in my pocket whenever I want. Sure it's not for everyone, just like iPhones vs Android, but the form factor of foldables absolutely solves the needs of some customers and I'm grateful there's a line of products out there that fits my needs.
It took me a week or so to get used to the form factor but since then I can't imagine going back to a slab. Different strokes for different folks.
I work with a lot of crappy websites and embedded systems. I can't always carry a laptop, so a mobile device fits my use case very well. I also use my large screen to do split screen with two apps open at once, it makes taking notes and observations from videos and documentation a breeze.