Pockets are only part of the reason I want a smaller phone in my life.
- A history of the folding phone
- Galaxy Z Flip vs. Moto RAZR
- Why your next phone should be a foldable
- Why your next phone shouldn't be a foldable
- Our phones are our most important fashion accessory
- The clamshell foldable is the new 'small' phone
- All the differences between foldable devices
- Should you buy a foldable phone in 2020?
When presented with the option, I always choose the smaller phone. I know I'm in the minority, on my last upgrade my girlfriend and I went into the shop at the same time and she stared at me in confusion when I intentionally chose less screen and a smaller battery. The reason for this is pretty simple, I like walking around and using my phone with one hand. Not that awkward one-handed thing where your pinky holds the bottom edge while you swipe on the keyboard thing either, actually being able to reach every part of the screen with your thumb while holding the display with one hand.
My colleague Ara Wagoner recently hailed foldables as the solution for those of us who want smaller phones, and honestly I don't see it. Folding these phones in half may solve one of the problems caused by the current crop of phones, but these clever little things are not yet there in solving all of my problems.
I want to take a moment to highlight something Ara said in her editorial, because it really is important.
...this foldable gives you the functionality of a Galaxy S20+ with the portability of a Gameboy Advance SP. Clamshells give us a screen big enough for binge-watching Hulu in bed, but a profile tiny enough to actually fit in those pathetic excuses for pockets that they put on women's jeans and jackets.
I fully agree, lady pockets are embarrassing at best and flat-out lies at worst. Unless the thing you're wearing has been designed by someone who cares (shout out to Katie Elhoffer) you can bet those pockets aren't going to hold your phone. But not every woman wants to see a cottage industry of lady pocket-friendly accessories form in order to solve this partciular problem. My friend and PCMag columnist Jill Duffy summed it up nicely on Twitter not long ago.
While I can't speak for all women, let me say the pockets are the problem, not the phone
— Jill E Duffy (@jilleduffy) January 28, 2020
Folding a long phone in half is a neat trick, and the things Samsung is doing with the software on the Galaxy Z Flip is clever for sure, but at some point I'm going to want to actually open this phone up all the way and use it like I would any other phone, and when that happens I'll be back to having a phone I can only sort of use with one hand. In fact, I'd argue if you were to decrease the screen height on the Z Flip by exactly the same size as the hinge, you'd have something pretty damn close to what I'd call the perfect sized phone.
While I am personally incredibly excited with all of the experimentation, I'm not ready to call and of these foldables a viable solution.
It's also important to point out this clamshell design is one of three different designs in the foldable space we've seen so far. The experimentation happening with these form factors is exciting, but the industry hasn't settled on a form factor writ large for all to enjoy, if it ever does. Folding as a concept still makes phones thicker in parts, and requires a lot of extra space for the physical hinge to do its thing, both of which get in the way of a phone being smaller. So while I am personally incredibly excited with all of the experimentation, I'm not ready to call and of these foldables a viable solution to this admittedly niche complaint of mine.
The bigger question, from my perspective? If Samsung is able to make a phone as impressive as the Z Flip with admittedly lesser specs without compromising on daily performance and feature set, why isn't there a cheap, small phone based on this exact same platform?
Finally foldable functionality
Samsung Galaxy Z Flip
At long last, a phone that fits in women's pockets.
The Galaxy Z Flip takes a modern smartphone shape and lets you fold it in half. It's expensive to be sure, and you'll still feel the crease, but this is the first foldable to actually feel like an actual complete product and not a beta test.
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