12 PCWorld APRIL 2019
NEWS 3 OBSTACLES FOLDING PHONES MUST OVERCOME
- BATTERY LIFE
We’ve reached a point with
contemporary phones where
we’re pretty much able to leave
our chargers at home, but
folding phones could take a step
back. Bigger displays use more
power, but the folding phones’
batteries haven’t scaled to fit.
Granted, the batteries they
have are beefy—4,380mAh on
the Fold and 4,500mAH on the
Mate X. The 6.6-inch Galaxy S
5G (go.pcworld.com/sg5g) has a 4,500mAh
battery, however, and that only needs to power
a mere 6.7-inch display. Let’s not forget the
additional power strains of switching screens,
sensors, and 5G on these bleeding-edge
folding phones.
Huawei has built 55W SuperCharge into
the Mate X, and Samsung allows for wireless
charging on the Galaxy Fold. Nevertheless,
anyone hoping for a day of use out of either
phone before charging is going to be
disappointed. Despite costing thousands of
dollars, these new folding phones might very
well turn us into “wall-huggers” (go.pcworld.
com/wlhg) again. - USER EXPERIENCE
My biggest concern with folding phones has less
to do with design, fragility, or even longevity, and
more to do with the real-world benefit. We might
all want to run and see one as soon as they end
up in stores, but my question is: Are they really
giving us the best of both worlds?
With the Samsung version, you’re going from
a 6.4-inch display in the Galaxy S10 to a 4.6-inch
one in the Fold (when closed). And on the inside,
you get a 7.3-inch display, which is only about a
half-inch bigger than the S10 5G’s. The Mate X is
a little better with an 8-inch display, but the
outside screen already offers a full six-inch
workspace. So you’re really only gaining 2 inches
by opening it, which isn’t really worth it in most
situations. Huawei even admitted that they
expect people will use it closed most of the day.
Samsung’s triple-multitasking is a more
promising innovation for folding phones, but
there needs to be a real reason to jump from the
small screen to a big one. We don’t pick up a
tablet because we want a little more screen—we
use one because it offers a better experience for
getting things done. I’m not sure we can say the
same yet for folding phones.
The Mate X is certainly bigger when opened, but are we really
gaining that much over a flaship phablet?