• Plopp@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Y’all are so stuck in the old linear thinking. Be brave, expand your mind. Rubik’s cube phone when?

  • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    they can make intricate folding devices now.

    but making them repairable is somehow fucking impossible.

  • restingboredface@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    I don’t understand the folding phone thing. It feels like tech now is all about creating ridiculous features and tech companies trying to convince us that we want them while ignoring things that would actually be worthwhile like repairable phones, headphones jacks and minimal bloatware.

    • pycorax@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      It is pretty useful and convenient if your use case suits it but I don’t think that fits the majority of people. For me my Fold 6 replaced my Kindle and Surface. It’s nice to able to open it up to read ebooks and manga since opened up, it’s pretty much the dimensions of a typical book. Also makes things a lot easier when I need to remote into a PC or SSH into stuff and is a really convenient sketch pad for ideas.

      It’s also really neat that it’s not ridiculously wide like every other phone out there nowadays since I have small hands.

      My Fold 3 lasted 3 years with no issues until I traded it in so I think they’re fairly well built.

      In this case with the trifold, I personally think it’s way too big but I’m someone who’s never seen the point of tablets that were larger than 7 inches anyways. Always preferred a laptop at those sizes.

    • LiveLM@lemmy.zip
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      5 months ago

      I didn’t get it either til I came across a Galaxy Fold demo unit at the mall.
      It’s light, the expanded screen gives you lots of extra screen real estate without feeling too big or unwieldy, and when folded up you get a normal aspect ratio, at a thickness that’s comparable to other phones.

      I never really felt like a tablet would be useful for me, filling the “gap” between a laptop and a phone with essentially a ‘bigger phone’ I’d have to charge and carry always seemed silly: I’d rather just keep using my phone instead.
      But when you merge both devices into one, it works. It really is a ‘bigger phone’, with the benefit of being able to choose when you want to use the extra screen real estate without having to swap devices.

      As someone who often tries to juggle multiple tasks on a phone*, I want one.
      Shame they’re so expensive where I live. Looking at the used market, even the folds multiple generations behind are still too expensive.

      *Side note: Stock Android’s split screen implementation is shit.
      The floating windows Xiaomi and other OEMs have is light-years ahead, Google should be ashamed.

    • Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Not many people get it until they get one. I got a fold 3 when it came out and have just upgraded to a fold 6 because i just couldn’t go back. Its a better form factor for a mobile computing device. Its a phone thats also a small tablet! I gave my old one to my wife who was always averse to getting a fold and she has told me multiple times since then that its her favourite phone shes ever had.

    • Hexarei@programming.dev
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      5 months ago

      I’ve used a Z Fold 4 for two years now and it’s been the best phone I’ve ever had. Desktop versions of websites, on my phone, without feeling cramped. Two apps side by side, both roughly the size of a usual phone screen. Huge screen for retro emulation using a Bluetooth controller. All with still having a small screen for one handed use and more traditional scrolling.

      Games like Hearthstone, Gwent, Chess, Baldur’s Gate Enhanced Edition, Roller Coaster Tycoon Classic, feel way more playable.

      At this point, using any other device feels limited and cramped in ways that a big screen doesn’t.

      My only complaint has been price, and I only got mine because my company paid for it

    • reddig33@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I can actually see the value in a trifold like the one pictured. In your pocket it’s a phone. When you unfold it, it’s an iPad. You’re consolidating devices.

      That said, I’m not a fan of folding lcd screen tech used today. It creases. I’d rather see three separate bezel-less screens that magnetically join to make a larger surface.

      • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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        5 months ago

        Agreed. I have a Tab 9 next to the bed that would be great to not need. That being said, I also use it for sketching plans and as a full PC for VScode-server, and I’m pretty sure a folding phone won’t have that modularity with an attached keyboard. Bluetooth keyboard with stand may solve that, though.