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Gorilla Glass-Maker Plans To Produce Glass Suitable For Folding iPhones (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: According to Wired, glass-maker Corning is "working on ultrathin, bendable glass that's 0.1 millimeters thick and can bend to a 5 millimeter radius" that may be usable for smartphone displays within two years. Corning produces Gorilla Glass used in Apple's iPhones, as well as in phones made by other manufacturers like LG, Asus, OnePlus, Nokia, Samsung, and more. Developing Gorilla Glass that can bend or fold like the materials used for the Samsung Galaxy Fold display or other foldable phone concepts could address some shortcomings endemic to these early designs.

The folding phones you see in headlines and gadget blog galleries today rely on plastic polymers that may scratch easier or have other undesirable properties. Generally, smartphone-makers that have announced foldable phones have not allowed us to test-drive these phones, which is otherwise normal practice for traditional smartphone product unveilings. That may be primarily because the software is not there yet, but it could also be that the companies anticipate negative reactions to the plastic displays, which have not been standard in flagship phones for a decade. [...] John Bayne, Corning's head of Gorilla Glass, and another expert Wired spoke with believe that Corning (or a competitor like ACG) will have foldable glass ready for use in foldable smartphones within a couple of years. But it's a difficult journey. "We have glasses we've sampled to customers, and they're functional," Bayne told Wired. "But they're not quite meeting all the requirements. People either want better performance against a drop event or a tighter bend radius. We can give them one or the other; the key is to give them both."

78 comments

  1. Glass Suitable For Folding iPhones? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Glass Suitable For Folding iPhones unitl it meets the gorilla glass breaker. Just wait until creimer sits on one of these phone to find out.

    1. Re:Glass Suitable For Folding iPhones? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chris is a genius. He complains about low quality views and you then promote his links all over Slashdot.

    2. Re:Glass Suitable For Folding iPhones? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True! Chris is a genius and a really nice person!

      He is also a good friend of mine and a precious collaborator in our LGBT community,

      I am still trying to convince him to come out of the closet but this has to be his own decision.

      As for myself, I did my coming out many years ago:
      https://www.washingtonblade.co...

      -Liz DeRoche
      The signing lizards

    3. Re:Glass Suitable For Folding iPhones? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Chris is not a pedophile, he must be gay. Nice interview, though.

  2. Best technology used for garbage by DogDude · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Gorilla Glass" is a really cool technology. Maybe we could have a discussion about using it for something other than people's personal entertainment addiction gadgets? I can't think of a more inane and ultimately useless use for such an amazing technology.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:Best technology used for garbage by DalM · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sure Corning would be happy to talk with you about using their product in the much less inane and useless products that you produce.

    2. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Freischutz · · Score: 1

      "Gorilla Glass" is a really cool technology. Maybe we could have a discussion about using it for something other than people's personal entertainment addiction gadgets? I can't think of a more inane and ultimately useless use for such an amazing technology.

      Like making a giant domed gorilla glass safe space for Apple conspiracy theorists?

    3. Re:Best technology used for garbage by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think we have been jaded because Smart phones are so commonly used, that we really don't realize how Amazing technology it it.
      Thinking back 20 years ago.
      A Cell phone just did calls, If you had the premium model it would support Digial Phone Service, and you would be able to Text (expensively) and have features like a contact list.
      Your PC or laptop would have a Wired Internet Connection (If you were on the cutting edge, or in college or worked for a big company) you would have an Ethernet connection, however most people would connect with a modem (56k)
      Crazy Expensive Addons for your PC would be a Web Cam that can display 320x200 or a fancy one at 640x480 resolution. If you wanted a GPS be ready to shell out Thousands of dollars, and need custom Windows Only software that plugs into your serial port that will allow you to upload maps to it.
      Touch Screens were one finger only and you often had to press like the dickens to get it to respond.
      PDAs at the time, may have a color display, but no internet access, they were high tech notepads, and pocket planners.

      So now over the course of my day, I can access information whenever I want. When Exposed to a term that I haven't heard before, I can look it up. For example I was looking at job openings, and I saw a lot of Jobs open for a "Full Stack Developer" I never was exposed to that term before, So I looked it up, and realized it was the type of work that I have been doing for the past 20 years. Even searching for the job openings I had my phone. I am lost, I can pull out the Map app, and see where to go. I need a flashlight, I have a flashlight, I need to magnify something, I can take the camera app and Zoom in.

      It is easy to be jaded, because nearly everyone has a smartphone now. And often it is used as a toy to play a game, or to gossip with classmates. And we are mostly exposed to small updates over time in software and hardware. Getting a new feature, that we currently don't know how to implement, then gradually over time becoming an important feature.

      Yes we may be using Gorilla Glass in some non-consumer technology too. Bust just become something is common and often used for silly things, doesn't mean it is a bad technology.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    4. Re:Best technology used for garbage by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I can't think of a more inane and ultimately useless use for such an amazing technology

      he typed, fingers darting across the keyboard so he could get first post on Slashdot.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:Best technology used for garbage by avandesande · · Score: 1

      I wish they would innovate and make a rigid phone that will fit in my pocket

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    6. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chemically strengthened glass was invented so laser-guided missiles with glass nose-cones could fly through airborne sand at supersonic speed.

    7. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jimmy stuck his arm up creimer's ass?

    8. Re:Best technology used for garbage by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      I can't think of a more inane and ultimately useless use for such an amazing technology.

      What makes you say that? The only use case for gorilla glass is a surface that is um thick. If you had any other use than a display on a thin gadget you'd use something stronger like one of the many traditional toughened glass processes.

    9. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guy who formerly worked at Corning here: Gorilla glass (not by that name, but pre-stressed glass structures) predate smart phones by decades. The original use of Gorilla glass was protective screens for locomotive headlamps. A similarly stressed glass construct is the basis of pyrex, used in both lab glassware and home cookware and tableware (I've got a set of Corningware dishes that Corning used to give out as service awards. Twenty years old, and not a chip or a scratch on them. The Crate and Barrel dishes my wife bought years later look terrible.) It's used in hundreds of industrial applications and processes you've never heard of, so although the most common consumer interaction is via smart phones and hardened displays, we're not wasting that technology.

    10. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for this. Do people that easily forget life before iPhones? Love them or hate them the iPhone changed the way people live from both a big picture standpoint and at a very granular level. The most general and specific notation of this is the idea that ANYTHING the phone can do you can do at any time, anywhere. That is/was the key innovation.

      Some examples:
      The PC allowed you to easily comparison shop. iPhone allows you to comparison shop in a store or anywhere.
      The PC allowed you to instantly transmit mail. iPhone allows you to transmit mail anywhere.
      The PC allowed you to look up driving directions. iPhone allows you to receive driving directions anywhere.

      This ultimately means that 1) people don't need to return to a central location like a home, office, computer lab, etc in order to "get things done on a computer". 2) People don't have to plan their weeks, days, hours or even minutes. You now can just do what you want when you want. When I was a student you would "get home" and see all your e-mail that came in throughout the day. The difference in how you can run your life based on that small difference is gigantic.

      The iPhone took everything that the awesome PC could do (which is amazing in its own right) and allowed you to do those things anywhere and at anytime.

    11. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything was better before apple ruined tech.

    12. Re:Best technology used for garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corning's Pyrex was Borosilicate glass, which has near zero thermal expansion, so it'll go from freezer to oven. It is quite different from chemically strengthened glass, which is hard AF on the surface, invented by Corning for missile nosecones. Corning sold the Pyrex brand long ago, and the new owners put the Pyrex label on cheap soda-lime glass that performs terribly.

  3. #metoo public relations for the investors by angularbanjo · · Score: 1

    Judging by the sheer number of blogs and news sites that have picked up this story, they've certainly gotten a yooge amount of PR out of just telling people that they might one day do something.

    1. Re:#metoo public relations for the investors by green1 · · Score: 1

      Corning is scared. Right now they have a monopoly on phone screens, and increasingly on the backs of phones as well. If someone dares make a phone without gorilla glass on both sides, and it sells well, people might realize what a horrible product glass is for use on devices that risk ever being dropped. If that happens, sales of gorilla glass will plummet.

      Glass is a very poor material for a phone screen, and is positively inexcusable on the back of a phone, but Corning has done well in the pr department.

    2. Re:#metoo public relations for the investors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corning is scared. Right now they have a monopoly on phone screens, and increasingly on the backs of phones as well. If someone dares make a phone without gorilla glass on both sides, and it sells well, people might realize what a horrible product glass is for use on devices that risk ever being dropped. If that happens, sales of gorilla glass will plummet.

      Glass is a very poor material for a phone screen, and is positively inexcusable on the back of a phone, but Corning has done well in the pr department.

      So tell us what you would use?

      Plastic? Would that work as well with touchscreens- and would it not "feel cheap"?

    3. Re: #metoo public relations for the investors by Code+Herder · · Score: 1

      I dont know about that, my first smartphone was an android with a plastic screen. I had to put a plastic screen protector on it after two days because it was already scratched. It also didnt feel as nice to the touch when using it, it made the screen tacky. It definitely wasnt as nice as my current phone with last gen gorilla glass. It used to be thst gorilla glass would get tons of small scratches that you could see when you tilted your phone in the light. My current one is still almost pristine after a year. I have to tilt it just right with a strong light to spot 2-3 scratches.

    4. Re:#metoo public relations for the investors by green1 · · Score: 1

      My earlier phones all had plastic touchscreens, felt fine, never cracked. They also had plastic or metal backs, also felt fine, and never cracked.

    5. Re: #metoo public relations for the investors by green1 · · Score: 1

      It's true that with a gorilla glass screen you don't need a screen protector, but it seems the vast majority of phones have screen protectors on them anyway (being that it is now 100% required to have a full case on all new phones, the screen protector tends to happen anyway) And with a screen protector on, you can't feel the difference between glass or plastic screens.

      That said, all my earlier phones had plastic screens, none had screen protectors or cases, and none had any problem. Better yet, you can get plastics to be matte, which makes it hundreds of times easier to read, no glare!

  4. Foldable/Rollable Vertical rather than Horizontal by mykepredko · · Score: 2

    I guess having a cell phone that opens like a paperback book increases usability/viewing area but is anybody looking at turning something the size of a USB thumb drive into a full sized cell phone by unrolling it in the vertical ("Y") direction?

    In a lot of ways, that would be a lot more interesting to me - have something small that I can just use as a phone with a minimal screen for seeing who's calling and select a number to call and expand when I need to access other features/apps on the device.

  5. What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by mykepredko · · Score: 1

    What is a less inane and useless application for this amazing technology?

    1. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by olsmeister · · Score: 2

      Screen protectors?

    2. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by olsmeister · · Score: 1

      Actually, maybe there *are* some interesting possibilities...

    3. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by geekmux · · Score: 1

      What is a less inane and useless application for this amazing technology?

      As a member of the four-eyed community, I can certainly think of at least one rather obvious one.

      Try opening your eyes to the world around you. Helps to not to be so shortsighted next time.

    4. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      I think the poster is just annoyed on how Computing Technology has reached popularity with the common folks. No longer the day of "Computer Wiz kids" who knew how to use a computer, write simple programs, and set the Time on the VCR. Back in the 1980's and 1990's while were were called Nerds and Geeks as an insult, we were able to do stuff that the normal people couldn't do, this made us feel special and powerful in our own ways. Now most of this stuff is common and no big deal. It now seems what made us Special is no longer special.

      Having grown up as a "Computer Wiz Kid" I understand the feeling, however as being an adult, and working with other former "Computer Wiz Kids" I realize my expertise helps me do my work, however it shouldn't define who I am, and my personal self worth, is separate to what I can and cannot do on a computer that others can.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    5. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      What is a less inane and useless application for this amazing technology?

      As a member of the four-eyed community, I can certainly think of at least one rather obvious one.

      Try opening your eyes to the world around you. Helps to not to be so shortsighted next time.

      Could you just imagine glasses that can automatically adjust to where you are looking? I like my varifocals, but weird enoough, the can give neck strain because you have to hold your head in the sweet spot. I forgot what I was missing until I got prescription computer glasses that focus exactly at the distance from my eyeballs to my computer screen. Tack sharp, and I can move my head around. My neck thanks me.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    6. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by geekmux · · Score: 1

      I think the poster is just annoyed on how Computing Technology has reached popularity with the common folks...

      Uh, no not quite. The parent is rather annoyed because we've taken a cool technology and pretty much limited it to one kind of disposable electronics.

      It's like inventing Teflon and then deciding to only make non-stick windshield wipers with it. Somewhat useful, but in the big picture basically an utter waste of the technology.

    7. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      The parent is rather annoyed because we've taken a cool technology and pretty much limited it

      Except that there is no "limit". If he, or you, have another application, Corning will be happy to talk to you. There are other companies, including Schott and AGC, that also make scratch resistant glass. Go for it.

      to one kind of disposable electronics.

      ... that is used daily by four billion people, in many cases greatly improving their economic well-being.

    8. Re:What would you like to use Gorilla Glass for? by boristdog · · Score: 1

      Wait, there are non-stick windshield wipers?

      *goes to google*

  6. i thought all materials problems were solved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    by 3d printing and private space exploration

  7. Headline missed the story, again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real story is that those $2000 phones aren’t made from glass. No one in their right mind would want this shit. Considering how phones are used, they’ll be scratched beyond usefulness in a week.

    1. Re:Headline missed the story, again by green1 · · Score: 1

      Before glass screens, phones lasted a long time and without any case needed. Now with glass on both sides of every phone, everyone needs a case, and half the phones you see have at least one corner of them cracked and shattered, the lifespan of a phone has also dropped dramatically while prices soar.

      The sooner we kill off the all glass phone the better!

    2. Re:Headline missed the story, again by tsqr · · Score: 1

      half the phones you see have at least one corner of them cracked and shattered

      That feels like a gross overstatement. I've seen a lot of kids out and about with cracked iPhone screens. What I haven't noticed is a similar number of adults with cracked screens. Maybe they're more careful, or maybe they're better able to afford to get their phones repaired. Personally, I've never cracked a screen, and I've never dropped my phone outdoors. Guess I've just been lucky.

    3. Re:Headline missed the story, again by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Before glass screens, phones lasted a long time and without any case needed. Now with glass on both sides of every phone, everyone needs a case, and half the phones you see have at least one corner of them cracked and shattered, the lifespan of a phone has also dropped dramatically while prices soar.

      I have yet to see a screen that a young person can't destroy. So this will simply give them multiple screens to mess up.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    4. Re:Headline missed the story, again by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Or maybe their parents give their old phones to their kids and grandparents, which is exactly what happens in my large extended family that lives all over the US?

      Think of that Geico commercial about the young son getting Beige Betty that his older sister had, when she gets a new car herself.

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  8. follow the leader by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey kids, I swear there was a time where Samsung copied apple, you've got to believe me.

    While foldable devices are obviously a great step forward and have insane potential, it's hilarious to see the Courageous Company innovating so hard on the heels of Samsung, who are absolutely crushing it in recent years.

    And Samsung used to have such ugly hardware and software, bizarro

    1. Re:follow the leader by dohzer · · Score: 1

      When did Apple even get a folding phone?!

  9. Re:Foldable/Rollable Vertical rather than Horizont by green1 · · Score: 1

    It's being worked on. Rollable phones have been a staple of science fiction for years, and several companies are trying to get there. These foldable phones are the first step. The technology just isn't quite there yet to go further, but all the big names know that if they can find a way, rollable phones will make them a pile of money. Give it time.

  10. Or the obvious by MrDiablerie · · Score: 1

    Or here's a thought Corning, come up with glass that will last for the life of the phone instead of breaking so easily. I care less about a folding phone and more about a phone I can use without a gigantic case.

    1. Re:Or the obvious by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Or here's a thought Corning, come up with glass that will last for the life of the phone instead of breaking so easily. I care less about a folding phone and more about a phone I can use without a gigantic case.

      I have a lifeproof waterproof case for my iPhone 7 that isn't a lot bigger than the phone (unlike the one for my old iPhone 5. Not cheap, but I do enough stuff at and on the ocean that anything needs protection. I cringe when I see people at the beach, using their phones in the surf, often getting them submerged.

      While in an ideal world, there would be no need for such a thing, but that little computer that people use to access their Facebook is still a little computer with some sensitive stuff in it.

      And most people don't give a thought to the abuse they put their phones through. And it shows. I doubt there is any tech that will keep them from destroying their phones. Instead of blaming the manufacturer because they dropped their phone from the third floor of the hotel, it hit the concrete and bounced into the pool, and "the fsckin' thing don't work now!", maybe take care of the thing.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  11. Re:Foldable/Rollable Vertical rather than Horizont by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    While an interesting idea. The question is by rolling it in the Y direction, what problem are you going to solve.
    The standard Cell phone size, seems about right to fit into pockets. While current tablets which are more useful with extra screen space, cannot fit in your pocket, causing people to not use them as much as their phone due to lack of portability. So the folding a tablet in half to fit the phone dimensions solves a problem.

    Let us redefine progress to mean just because we can do a things, doesn't mean we must do that thing.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  12. âoe"But they're not quite meeting all the req by Ukab+the+Great · · Score: 1

    I appreciate them being transparent about their glass.

  13. Unbreakable glass, 0.1mm thick... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    If it's transparent enough and available in large enough panes, I'd have a use for it.

    Plus, it should be easy to clean. That would be a bonus.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:Unbreakable glass, 0.1mm thick... by caseih · · Score: 1

      Nothing Cornell has made up until now has been unbreakable, judging by all the cracked glass fronts and backs I've seen out there. I doubt this new glass will be "unbreakable" either. Although being flexible it might be less prone to crack less as it it can bend and flex.

    2. Re:Unbreakable glass, 0.1mm thick... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      A few cracks and splinters flaking off don't matter for the purpose I have in mind. Actually, they might work in favor of the intended application.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  14. Re:Foldable/Rollable Vertical rather than Horizont by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    I guess having a cell phone that opens like a paperback book increases usability/viewing area but is anybody looking at turning something the size of a USB thumb drive into a full sized cell phone by unrolling it in the vertical ("Y") direction?

    In a lot of ways, that would be a lot more interesting to me - have something small that I can just use as a phone with a minimal screen for seeing who's calling and select a number to call and expand when I need to access other features/apps on the device.

    Call me when we have subdermal implants for our phones, and internal retinal "screen" projection inside our eyes.

    This so called high tech stuff today is so lame and primitive.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  15. Re:âoe"But they're not quite meeting all the by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 0

    I appreciate them being transparent about their glass.

    I can see right through your agenda.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  16. Folding the display on the outside of the phone by mark_reh · · Score: 1

    is going to expose the glass to all the abrasive stuff in your pocket/bag. The fold area is going to suffer the greatest wear. How many micro scratches acting as stress risers will it take before it breaks, with sharp edges waiting for your hand?

    Folding phones is a dumb idea that no one -except phone makers- wants. Now a folding phone with a notch, that's something else entirely. I WANT one of those!

    1. Re:Folding the display on the outside of the phone by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Unless the wear and tear and scratches is a feature (forces customers to replace phones more quickly), not a bug (lets customers keep phones longer and then we have to let them replace batteries that degrade over time).

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  17. The solution is obvious... by neo-mkrey · · Score: 1

    transparent aluminum

  18. Bad hyphen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gorilla Glass-Maker
    It's a gorilla that makes glass?

  19. Not sure if this is the solution but by DrXym · · Score: 1

    It should have been obvious as soon as we saw these bendy screens that they would feel horrible, accumulate scratches and probably distort / crease too. Not sure I trust a bendy glass layer any more though - I'll let someone else discover what it's like to pick slivers of it out their face if they bend their phone open and it shatters.

  20. Re:Foldable/Rollable Vertical rather than Horizont by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

    I guess having a cell phone that opens like a paperback book increases usability/viewing area but is anybody looking at turning something the size of a USB thumb drive into a full sized cell phone by unrolling it in the vertical ("Y") direction?

    Not with the current bending radius. Rolling would be more feasible.

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  21. What about Samsung design? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Folding the display on the outside of the phone is going to expose the glass to all the abrasive stuff in your pocket/bag.

    Yes, true.

    So doesn't the Samsung idea seem good? A simple durable display on the outside, and the more delicate screens folded against each other for protection?

    That can mean protection for the folding area as well.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:What about Samsung design? by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Folding the display on the outside of the phone is going to expose the glass to all the abrasive stuff in your pocket/bag.

      Yes, true.

      So doesn't the Samsung idea seem good? A simple durable display on the outside, and the more delicate screens folded against each other for protection?

      That can mean protection for the folding area as well.

      But the screen(s) aren't folded against each other, they only touch at the outer edge. IOW they don't fold in as much as they bend about as much that a ball point refill will fall right through.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    2. Re:What about Samsung design? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      It still seems like even with a gap, nothing in your pocket can rub against the screens since they are protecting each other. In fact I feel a bit better about the screens not touching, as I was wondering if a bit of dust or sand got in there when you closed it if that would cause issues... with the screens physically separated some small amount, and nothing able to exert pressure on them, it does not seem like they could be damaged while in the pocket.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  22. Red Planet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The heck with folding, we need a roll up screen like they had in the 2000 movie "Red Planet". Way cooler.

  23. Foldable smartphone displays are fucking retarded by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, really....who the fuck needs this other than for showing off and bragging rights? Tell me one instance where a foldable smartphone display is an absolute necessity over current flat displays. You want a bigger screen, use a fucking tablet or laptop or a ginormous smartphone. Fuck. Come on, people. Fuck.

  24. Solution looking for a Problem by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    I really feel like we have the engineers (ooh, shiny!) leading the process here, not the marketing (what problems do our customers have?) teams.

    Who really needs a foldable iPhone when you can instead make a flip phone?

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  25. I'm not gonna be an early adopter of this tech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll confess that I'm not sure what a folding phone can do for me that my ordinary one doesn't. My main concern is how many times it can be folded, what the MTBF is, how many pixels die in the fold. Where I live it gets really cold, so how might this thing do, taken from a warm pocket and subjected to temps below zero. A conditional maybe, but only after these things have been used widely, for >3yrs., and proven they're flexible/durable enuff to last at least as long as the *$^@ battery. A battery that must be reasonably easy to replace, unlike my current S8 that's junk when the battery inevitably gives up.

  26. I, for one,... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome our new Plexiglass overlords.

  27. Schott produced this for years already by ffkom · · Score: 1

    Good morning, Corning! Your competitor Schott Glass has been selling such flexible, ultra-thin glasses since 2016. See also: https://www.us.schott.com/adva...

  28. Glasses For Gorillas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not use Gorilla Glass to make glasses for gorillas? Sheesh, I have to come up with all the cool ideas around here!