Samsung wowed the smartphone industry with the first mainstream foldable screen, accompanied by a nearly $2,000 price tag.
Samsung
Electronics Co Ltd has wowed the smartphone industry with the
first mainstream foldable screen, accompanied by a nearly $2,000
price tag that generated heated debate as to whether it may prove too
expensive to revive slumping sales.
The
South Korean tech giant unveiled the Galaxy
Fold which resembles a conventional smartphone, but which opens
like a book to reveal a second display the size of a small tablet at
18.5 cm (7.3 inches). It will go on sale on April 26.
At
its launch event in San Francisco on Wednesday, Samsung upped the
surprise factor by briefing analysts and journalists on widely
anticipated aspects ahead of time, such as 5G versions of its
existing top-end Galaxy S phones.
The
unveiling of the foldable device came as a shock to many in the
auditorium.
"I
am blown away," said Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights &
Strategy, adding the phone could help Samsung rejuvenate its mobile
business, whose lead is under attack from China's Huawei Technologies
Co Ltd.
"I
believe you can innovate your way out of a mature market," he
said, noting that when Apple Inc launched the iPhone in 2007, most
industry watchers believed the market had matured for $100 "candy
bar" phones without touch screens.
Bob
O'Donnell of TECHanalysis Research said the work Samsung had done
with Facebook Inc, Alphabet Inc's Google and Microsoft Corp to adapt
applications to the new screen was important.
He
said though Samsung had teased the folding phone before, "to see
it in action, to see the software – I was like, Wow.
It's
hugely important that the software experience be good." The
phone, which can operate three apps simultaneously and boasts six
cameras, also challenges the notion of what a phone can cost,
debuting at nearly twice the price of current top-of-the-line models
from Apple and Samsung itself.
"Due
to price, it's likely to be sold mainly to early adopters. Prices are
key to expanding sales," said former Samsung mobile executive
Kim Yong-serk, who is now a professor at Sungkyunkwan University in
Korea.
"It
will help Samsung burnish an image as an innovative company, but it
is unlikely to be profitable. I expect Apple to wait say for one year
and come up with foldable phones with more features, as they did with
the smartwatch," he said.
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