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Galaxy Fold: Living with the screen crease, notch and air gap – CNET

by The Editor
April 27, 2019
in Science
0
Galaxy Fold: Living with the screen crease, notch and air gap     – CNET

The entire reason that the Galaxy Fold exists is because of the screen. Unlike other phones, where screens are an afterthought to camera quality and battery life, Samsung designed the entire phone around the fact that its display bends in half. The perils of foldable phone design are sucking up all the oxygen in the room, after five early production Galaxy Fold review units experienced major problems. That's important, but so is the Fold's screen on a working model like mine.

Before the Galaxy Fold screens started breaking, it was the plastic crease running down the center of the Fold that caused the most hand-wringing. How bad did it really look? Would it worsen over time? Creasegate threatened to take down the Fold and its ilk before foldable phones ever really got started.

Let's also remember the notch. The thick thumb-shaped cut-out housing two front-facing cameras and two sensors inspired sneers when Samsung first showed off the Fold prototype in late February. Onlookers fretted that it looked cheap and would get in the way.

Now playing: Watch this: Our Galaxy Fold didn't break. Here's what's good and…

10:12

People also had words about the air gap, the little loop of open space at the Fold's hinge end that's wider than the end where the screen sides snap shut.

Having used the Fold every day for over a week, I wanted to address three of your biggest concerns and share what they're really like. Let's start with the crease.

The crease isn't as bad as it seems

The second you open the phone, you'll notice the crease. It dips in a little and catches the light. I noticed it most on white or black screens, but when you're immersed in something — a movie, an article, a game — the crease becomes much less in-your-face. That's partly because you stop concentrating on it so intently, and partly because it's less apparent as pixels light up and change.

You can also feel the crease, or more accurately, the hinge beneath it, when you run your finger down or across the screen. Sensing its presence isn't the same as the crease disrupting or distracting me from what I'm doing. That never happened to me, but I wouldn't rule out the possibility that it could be a drag in some specific scenarios.

galaxy-fold-3

You try bending a phone without making a crease.

Angela Lang/CNET

Just remember it's there because this is where the Fold folds over. I'm not sure how you'd have a foldable phone without a seam, at least not with the materials we have now. Can you imagine a piece of glass folding in half and then unfolding? I can't.

Other foldable designs such as the Huawei Mate X, which puts the foldable screen on the outside of the device, have the opposite issue — not a "crease" but a bulge. I liken it to the skin around your knee or elbow. A foldable screen is a joint.

Creases and bulges don't feel elegant or premium, but they're inevitable at this point. The only solution to this that I could foresee is a futuristic material that rearranges molecules as you open and close the device.

Now playing: Watch this: People try the Galaxy Fold for the first time

5:50

The air gap is related to the crease

Another thing the Fold doesn't do well is close perfectly flat. There's an air gap on the end closest to the hinge and that's because… the plastic screen doesn't totally stack on top of itself. Perhaps that really does cause the plastic to snap.

I didn't find that the gap made the Fold too awkward to stick in my pocket or purse. It's barely a large enough space to insert a credit card. When I did put one it, and then another, they held in place, but mostly because the Fold's magnetic edges kept it there. I wouldn't be able to slide in a pen. A bobby pin, maybe, but don't do that — you wouldn't want to scratch the plastic display.

Huawei boasts that its Mate X lies flat because of its superior "Falcon" hinge, but there's some clever engineering there, too. The Mate X has a swoop on the side and "asymmetrical" screen lengths. It also gives you a grip to hold the phone, but that's a design workaround to place the battery, cameras and other rigid electronics in an unmoving part. Still, it could very well be a good solution. We'll see when we spend more than 5 minutes with that foldable phone.

OK, the notch is a problem

Unlike the other screen concerns, I actually think Samsung could have designed around the notch. It's thick, bulbous and takes up more space than it really needs to considering that it's only holding two camera lenses and two (stacked) sensors. Hold the Fold up to the light and you see a lot of dead space off to the right.

When you watch videos and play games, the notch slopes out onto the screen. You won't lose a crucial scene or moment, since the activity takes place in the center of the display and not on the edges, but there's really no need for the notch to be so big.

Read More – Source

cnet

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The entire reason that the Galaxy Fold exists is because of the screen. Unlike other phones, where screens are an afterthought to camera quality and battery life, Samsung designed the entire phone around the fact that its display bends in half. The perils of foldable phone design are sucking up all the oxygen in the room, after five early production Galaxy Fold review units experienced major problems. That's important, but so is the Fold's screen on a working model like mine.

Before the Galaxy Fold screens started breaking, it was the plastic crease running down the center of the Fold that caused the most hand-wringing. How bad did it really look? Would it worsen over time? Creasegate threatened to take down the Fold and its ilk before foldable phones ever really got started.

Let's also remember the notch. The thick thumb-shaped cut-out housing two front-facing cameras and two sensors inspired sneers when Samsung first showed off the Fold prototype in late February. Onlookers fretted that it looked cheap and would get in the way.

Now playing: Watch this: Our Galaxy Fold didn't break. Here's what's good and…

10:12

People also had words about the air gap, the little loop of open space at the Fold's hinge end that's wider than the end where the screen sides snap shut.

Having used the Fold every day for over a week, I wanted to address three of your biggest concerns and share what they're really like. Let's start with the crease.

The crease isn't as bad as it seems

The second you open the phone, you'll notice the crease. It dips in a little and catches the light. I noticed it most on white or black screens, but when you're immersed in something — a movie, an article, a game — the crease becomes much less in-your-face. That's partly because you stop concentrating on it so intently, and partly because it's less apparent as pixels light up and change.

You can also feel the crease, or more accurately, the hinge beneath it, when you run your finger down or across the screen. Sensing its presence isn't the same as the crease disrupting or distracting me from what I'm doing. That never happened to me, but I wouldn't rule out the possibility that it could be a drag in some specific scenarios.

galaxy-fold-3

You try bending a phone without making a crease.

Angela Lang/CNET

Just remember it's there because this is where the Fold folds over. I'm not sure how you'd have a foldable phone without a seam, at least not with the materials we have now. Can you imagine a piece of glass folding in half and then unfolding? I can't.

Other foldable designs such as the Huawei Mate X, which puts the foldable screen on the outside of the device, have the opposite issue — not a "crease" but a bulge. I liken it to the skin around your knee or elbow. A foldable screen is a joint.

Creases and bulges don't feel elegant or premium, but they're inevitable at this point. The only solution to this that I could foresee is a futuristic material that rearranges molecules as you open and close the device.

Now playing: Watch this: People try the Galaxy Fold for the first time

5:50

The air gap is related to the crease

Another thing the Fold doesn't do well is close perfectly flat. There's an air gap on the end closest to the hinge and that's because… the plastic screen doesn't totally stack on top of itself. Perhaps that really does cause the plastic to snap.

I didn't find that the gap made the Fold too awkward to stick in my pocket or purse. It's barely a large enough space to insert a credit card. When I did put one it, and then another, they held in place, but mostly because the Fold's magnetic edges kept it there. I wouldn't be able to slide in a pen. A bobby pin, maybe, but don't do that — you wouldn't want to scratch the plastic display.

Huawei boasts that its Mate X lies flat because of its superior "Falcon" hinge, but there's some clever engineering there, too. The Mate X has a swoop on the side and "asymmetrical" screen lengths. It also gives you a grip to hold the phone, but that's a design workaround to place the battery, cameras and other rigid electronics in an unmoving part. Still, it could very well be a good solution. We'll see when we spend more than 5 minutes with that foldable phone.

OK, the notch is a problem

Unlike the other screen concerns, I actually think Samsung could have designed around the notch. It's thick, bulbous and takes up more space than it really needs to considering that it's only holding two camera lenses and two (stacked) sensors. Hold the Fold up to the light and you see a lot of dead space off to the right.

When you watch videos and play games, the notch slopes out onto the screen. You won't lose a crucial scene or moment, since the activity takes place in the center of the display and not on the edges, but there's really no need for the notch to be so big.

Read More – Source

cnet

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