Article 5TR9C Samsung shows off foldable laptop, tablet, and smartphone concepts at CES

Samsung shows off foldable laptop, tablet, and smartphone concepts at CES

by
Ron Amadeo
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5TR9C)

Samsung has been leading the charge toward foldable smartphones for almost three years now, but the future of the company's foldable ambitions have always been on display at trade shows, going all the way back to 2008. With three versions of the Galaxy Z Fold (and two smaller Z Flips) under the conglomerate's belt, Samsung's Display division has shown up to CES with a plethora of prototypes detailing what it thinks the future of foldables will look like. For whatever reason, Samsung produced official hands-on videos of these devices but isn't hosting them anywhere, but there are some mirrors on YouTube from Abhijeet Mishra (1, 2, 3, 4).

These aren't from the "Galaxy" division (that would be Samsung Mobile), and they aren't fully featured devices. But Samsung Display's technology has been a driving enabler behind the Galaxy Fold line of devices. Now, the display division wants to tackle even bigger and more complicated form factors.

The tri-fold Flex S" and Flex G" concepts
  • 7-980x747.jpg

    With a tri-fold design like this, a single display can power the phone and tablet screens. (Be warned: the inner parts of these galleries have big, 20MB gifs.) [credit: Samsung ]

If one fold works on the Galaxy Z Fold, then surely two folds will be even better. The first concept, the "Flex S," folds up in an "S" shape (It's more like a "Z" but "S" has way better Samsung branding synergy). This gives you a visible front display when the device is closed and a wide aspect ratio when open. The Flex S comes in phone and tablet versions. The commercial Galaxy Fold needs a totally separate screen to have a front display, while the Flex S only needs a single screen. The Huawei Mate X tried a single-screen design with only one fold, but that meant the entire device was a display when closed, and there was no "safe" side to place on the table. The Flex S works around that problem with the second fold.

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