The operating system lets you slice up the screen in inventive and useful ways. One app can take up the whole of the left side of the screen, while another app takes up the top right area, with a third filling in the remaining bottom right of the display. You can also add several small "pop up view" apps that float around the screen, although this starts getting confusing and messy with more than three or four apps.
There are still drawbacks with the folding display, though. In very bright environments, it's harder to see. And the crease that runs down the centre of the screen shows up when you're viewing something dark. And one issue from the first model remains: The screen can pick up dents from fingernails. Over several months or a year of use, that's likely to bother customers. Samsung has said this is an inherent characteristic of its foldable phone design and offers a $149.99 screen replacement within the first year.
The Fold is not water or dust resistant, practical features that most high-end smartphones offer these days. And if it's near a magnet, the screen sometimes switches off. The box is loaded up with warnings, such as being careful with the screen.
Rather than a polished device for the masses, the Fold seems to be a showcase for Samsung's vision of the future of mobile computing. More of a "beta" test product, not a blockbuster. The company is already working on future versions of the Fold that will hopefully be cheaper, sturdier and have a much better external screen.
-Bloomberg