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GAMIR3DH, 2 hours agoIt gets scratched, something that doesn’t happen during regular use. Unlesd you got long … moreReally, you are scratching glass with your fingernail? Do you have sharpened titanium nails or are just full of bs??

this fold display technology still getting perfected and its so expensive now, meh I’ll wait until foldable becomes available for better price than 2k USD.

a

Socalteknique, 10 hours agoTypical Scamsung. Always waiting for Apple to become a threat for them to finally do what fans… moreApple is buying their crease free screens from Samsung.

Lurker, 3 hours agoTry scratching your glass screen with fingernail, go ahead.It gets scratched, something that doesn’t happen during regular use. Unlesd you got long nails ofcourse.

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GAMIR3DH, 12 hours agoWell, a glass screen still gets scratched by anything too so go an complain about that aswell.Try scratching your glass screen with fingernail, go ahead.

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Anonymous, 4 hours agoWorlds biggest yapperTikTok brain.

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Anonymous
qb{
4 hours ago

kdss, 8 hours agoThere is reason in your words.
But I have a different opinion.
First, I think that Samsung w… moreWorlds biggest yapper

I

Great, crease is out. Only took 8 generations. Maybe by the the 16th iteration, the screen won’t face catastrophic damagefrom a finger nail,scratches at a level 2!

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Anonymous
P2x
5 hours ago

breaking news, companies using the same display, and the same outsourced parts manufacturer, are going to introduce a technology at the same time………

T

kdss, 8 hours agoThere is reason in your words.
But I have a different opinion.
First, I think that Samsung w… moreI think you put too much stock in Samsung trying to beat Apple, especially since Apple tends to almost never do anything first, instead they refine other people’s breakthroughs and make them easier for Apple’s buyers to use.

Samsung being first also wouldn’t appeal to Apple buyers anymore than Apple doing something first appeals to most Android or Linux users. Doing something exclusively like flip/fold might, and even then it’s an uphill battle.

In general who puts much stock in such claims as their motivation for buying? Very small number/segment of consumer innovators, hardly the segment from which you expect large sales figures, let alone large migrations from sticky Apple users.

As for battery, as I mentioned before, they’re not then one to do that,

It’s also not a requirement to succeed in my scenario, as large volume sale is not the goal, but it is in yours, which alone tells me their motivation wasn’t the same.

Most importantly if Samsung was looking for wide & wild success in the Edge, then why wan’t there a marketing campaign even closs to match? There was no fanfare about it, heck I’ve seen more ads, fanfare & news segments about each of the refreshed foldables than there was about this supposed ‘we’re yelling from the rooftops we did it first’ product Edge. Look at last year’s Samsung ring marketing, that’s more what to expect at least if the Edge were intended to be a wide success IMO. It’s like even to Samsung’s marketing team it barely existed either.

Of course we both could be wrong. 🤷🏻‍♂️

Maybe in a coupla years an insider will spill the beans, it’ll be a story that gets no press and of interest to a handful of people, that’s usually how we find out the truth of these things.

PS, you mention in your reply to Anon about big companies and risk/security, the Edge product IS a risk, not making it is the safer thing to do, just keep making S25 with spec changes, the Edge is more of a risk. There’s risk and then there’s risk, and the battery thing y’all focus on is not the same risk as a new product, as mentioned/explained before.

And contrary to the statement, Apple isn’t the bigger fish, they’re equal and that’s despite, as you acknowledge, Apple spending more on marketing than pretty much all other mfrs combined,

The difference being that Apple sales also benefit Samsung immensely, some years when the profit from display sales to Apple outweighed the profits of their own mobile segment.

C

Well crease or not as long as main screen will not feature GG victus or better foldables are no for me.

k

Anonymous, 8 hours agoI mean, they’ve been the biggest smartphone maker in the world for nearly 20 years. I thi… moreI’m not saying they won’t be good. I’m more than sure of that. Samsung is not just about smartphones.

But the stupid things that the biggest companies can do when they are driven by security in their users are really big. I’m just trying to show them. And Edge shows exactly that.

And there are always bigger fish in the ocean than you. In the case of Samsung phones – Apple. That’s what I’m saying. And not because Apple phones are better. Apple is just on a different level in terms of marketing compared to everyone else combined.

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Anonymous
7@8
8 hours ago

kdss, 8 hours agoThere is reason in your words.
But I have a different opinion.
First, I think that Samsung w… moreI mean, they’ve been the biggest smartphone maker in the world for nearly 20 years. I think, they’ll be just fine despite your strange alarmism.

k

Tazman, 11 hours agoWell there is a market for it, even if it isn’t yours or mine, so that alone justifies it… moreThere is reason in your words.

But I have a different opinion.

First, I think that Samsung was too sure that they would achieve unprecedented success, whatever device they released on the market. Well, it didn’t work out exactly like that, since they even had to reduce the production of Edge, since demand did not meet their expectations.

Second, they thought that by being first, they would be able to steal customers from Apple with this product. Well, it didn’t happen. This will not happen in general, no matter what alien product they release on the market. Apple fans are so consolidated that even if they gave them an Edge as a gift, 99 percent of them would not even turn it on to look at it. Some call this a cult, for me it is more like stupidity.

Third, they definitely wanted to be first before Apple. And that’s why we got an unfinished product. And no matter how diehard Samsung fans are, they still have more sense than Apple’s and wouldn’t blindly buy something that costs as much as the Ultra, but in terms of specifications it’s below the pure S25.

Fourth, even with all its shortcomings it could have attracted a lot more customers if they had simply put a bigger battery in it, which is probably the most important requirement for people who are looking for a thin and light phone anyway. It’s definitely clear to everyone that a thin phone can only offer a big screen and a big battery. Well, Edge offered only 50 percent of TWO, which is ONE.

And the fact that they’re stopping the S+ variant because of EDGE shows how confident they are in their sales. And even from the moon everyone can see that if they had simply put at least 1 top camera on the S25+ and even on the S25, they would have broken the market with sales. But to me, they purposely keep these models so limited so that everyone can pay a little more and buy an Ultra.

Y

Why not have two motors on each side of the device that will roll outwards in order to stretch the panel & straighten out the crease? (motors will have to roll every time you unfold/fold)

It’s similar to the rolling LG TVs, except you have two motors rolling in opposite directions.

S


Socalteknique
c}7
10 hours ago

Typical Scamsung. Always waiting for Apple to become a threat for them to finally do what fans have been asking for years.

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Anonymous
rK8
11 hours ago

Anyone using current gen of foldables can tell you, crease is no longer an issue. Price is. They should release foldables for lower tier chipsets with reduced prices. Like Sn 8 Gen 1 or Snapdragon 7 $1k Fold FE.

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kdss, 12 hours agoI was joking a little with the previous comment.
Honestly, I’ve never cared about who di… moreWell there is a market for it, even if it isn’t yours or mine, so that alone justifies it’s release.

However I think I can explain a reason for the Edge to you (other than truly some people just want the thinnest phone possible [ like they might want a Zoolander smallest phone possible]). It mirrors Apple’s own reasoning for an iPhine Air in a similar time frame just before their Fold launch…

They are both large scale R&D feedback projects, leading ups to other designs… like the thinner foldables and portless phones. The later being the lesser current focus, but offers learnings for that application too.

While you can test design prototypes in the company even with a wide alpha distribution of internal devices, nothing beats a product in the wild for testing in ways you couldn’t guess/imagine, and it requires that you figure out the production/mfr challenges a concept/prototype device doesn’t.

Making these small volume niches devices that push the boundaries help them figure out the limits of their mfr process for things like stacking PCBs/components/connectors, etc to fit into the thinner space under a more ideal situation that better isolates the mis-steps and areas that need to be worked on than putting it into a cramped foldable.

It also means that you don’t risk the development/production of your successful product, and can instead have an offshoot codename project that if it fails can simply be delayed or never see the light of day, admittedly at a greater cost than just a prototype.

If they weren’t fully satisfied with their results in the production phase, you either wouldn’t have seen it come out at all, or it would’ve been spun-off into a separate quietly released niche product (like the Fold6SE) for a limited market that gets less mainstream press, as a ‘were getting close’ product that we’re not ready to have people focus on, but we do want people to use/test for us.

That we got a full product launch means they were successful through most/all of their milestones and they felt it was worthy.

IMO, that it launched quietly and before Unpacked with less fanfare to me means that it was less about screaming ” we’re thinnest first ” (especially as seen by the Fold vs Honor debate that title is contested and last a weekend depending on definition), and more about ‘we have a product that we can learn from that we think enough people might buy to make it worthwhile’.

Then they can improve on that form factors in the areas that customers say is lacking with the next model

That’s my take on it, finance & improve you R&D with a production model that can be applied to other models.

J

What I truly want Samsung to do is what LG have done before: making some dual-screen case for their S Series models