Samsung Creates Phone With Curved Display 219
iONiUM writes "Samsung today unveiled the Galaxy Round phone with a curved 5.7" display. It comes with a hefty $1,000 USD price tag. This is a follow-up to the 55" curved TVs it began selling in June, and is most likely an intermediate form in the development of fold-able phones. Considering the recent LG announcement of mass OLED flexible screen production, it seems we are getting close to flexible phones. One question I wonder: will Apple follow suit? So far there has been no indication they are even attempting flexible/bendable screens."
Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Easier to hold.
You have surely noticed your hand is not totally flat.
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Also easier to put in your pocket, a normal 5.7 inch screen would jut out more, whereas this would follow the curve of your leg.
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this would follow the curve of your leg.
Whose leg?
Won't it rock if you try to use it on a table?
Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
It curves around your moobs.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Funny)
It curves around your moobs.
Once they are big enough you can just tuck the phone under one of them... those that consider themselves more fashion conscious may want to get a spacer for the other moob so there is no "out of balance" or "left turn signal" look. Also note that using a vibrate setting while doing this may cause inappropriate giggling...
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It curves around your moobs.
Once they are big enough you can just tuck the phone under one of them...
Won't putting it under your boob prevent the signal from getting through?
Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
It curves around your moobs.
Once they are big enough you can just tuck the phone under one of them...
Won't putting it under your boob prevent the signal from getting through?
Fat does not interfere with cellular frequencies... if it did there would be zero cell reception in places like board rooms, banks, and most importantly... Congress...
Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
Mostly just iPhone users. But of course, that's because they've been holding it wrong.
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Those aren't mutually exclusive categories.
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Actually my number one complaint about Samsung phones is the slippery back that makes them hard to grip. HTC have some kind of rubber-like plastic that gives up plenty of grip. I always fit a minimal "shell" case for this reason.
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People seldom complain that something isn't good enough, if it's the best they've experienced so far.
But, once they've tried something better, they'll seldom want to go back. (That what makes it a game changer.)
(Curious to see if this will be the game changer they're expecting it to be.)
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I have to imagine that any significant curve on a screen that small would end up looking sort of weird, though.
At somewhere in the 24-30 inch range (for monitors, larger for TVs that you are expected to sit further away from) I can see curvature as being a good thing, so that all parts of the screen are roughly equidistant from your face, rather than the edges requiring refocusing as you move your eyes around; but that won't be at play on a phone. If they keep it subtle
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At somewhere in the 24-30 inch range (for monitors, larger for TVs that you are expected to sit further away from) I can see curvature as being a good thing, so that all parts of the screen are roughly equidistant from your face, rather than the edges requiring refocusing as you move your eyes around.
Samsung also makes a curved 55" OLED TV, I think. It's a bit silly - not everyone sits at the same distance, so the curve is arbitrary. I think these things are curved for the same reason: as a social signal that you own a new, high-end product.
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Re:Why? (Score:4, Funny)
Easier to hold.
And carry. Heck, even a whiskey flask is curved.
You have surely noticed your hand is not totally flat.
Nor any other parts of your body. Except, of course, my washboard abs. hahaha - yeah.
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A flask for carrying liquor is curved because it is known as a "hip flask" designed to be carried in a back pocket or along the hip where the body has a natural curve so as to allow it to be carried with more comfort and discretion than might be achieved with a purely rectilinear container.
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Hip flasks are a lot bigger. If hip flasks were only a couple of inches wide they wouldn't need the curve.
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I for one would have to use it to really know whether it's good or not.
Maybe easier to use when holding it in your hand, it will be harder to use when you put it on a table. Hard to say which one is the more important. The design of the rear can of course easily prevent tumbling.
Also I wonder how your eyes deal with looking at a curved screen, and wether they do anything about distortion due to pixels appearing to be narrower towards the edges where it curves up (is this even noticable?).
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Maybe easier to use when holding it in your hand, it will be harder to use when you put it on a table.
You're having trouble using a flat phone in your hand?
I'd like to be able to tap the screen when it's on a table without it rocking.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Most people use the phone in their hand more than place on a flat surface. I don't think they're marketing this as a suitable-for-every-single-goddamn-person phone so much as a suitable-for-people-that-this-would-work-for phone.
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For instance, this mobile is probably not suitable for me because I do use my device while sitting on a flat surface (table, bar, etc...) quite often.
Because we all know curved objects can't possibly sit on a flat surface?
Basically I think its a pointless change, for change sake, And I've never had a problem holding a flat phone in my hand.
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It doesn't have keys. Its a touch screen.
They actually use that to their advantage. See the Video on this page.. [androidcentral.com]
While tapping on the screen you don't need to push hard enough to rock the phone.
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Weirdly enough, the side of my head isn't very curved.
Hard to see, hard to listen to. Look on the bright side though: It's banana shaped to fit nicely in my chimp-hand.
Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
For a 55" screen - the reason is clear - if you're sitting fairly close to it - the edges are noticably further away from you.
For a 5.5" screen - the most obvious reason would be to protect the screen.
If, instead of a flat phone, you have one with a light curve on it - it will somewhat protect the screen from scratches due to laying it down wrong.
I could also see that certain ways of holding it it would make long swipes easier.
(With the thumb only)
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the edges are noticably further away from you
Conceptually?
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What, what were we talking about?
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I think we've all arrived at a very special place. Spiritually, ecumenically, grammatically.
-- Jack Sparrow
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> For a 55" screen - the reason is clear - if you're sitting fairly close
> to it - the edges are noticably further away from you.
Yeah, but we're used to seeing flat rectangles from far away. Does it EVER bother you that the edges of the screen appear to be a slightly different height than the height at the center? I'm sitting 20" away from my 30" screen at work and I don't even notice it. Does it ever bother you when you're at your friend's house, watching their TV from a non-ideal seat, and the whole
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As far as I can tell, it's a problem in search of a solution
You meant a solution in search of a problem.
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> For a 55" screen - the reason is clear - if you're sitting fairly close
> to it - the edges are noticably further away from you.
Yeah, but we're used to seeing flat rectangles from far away. Does it EVER bother you that the edges of the screen appear to be a slightly different height than the height at the center?
Maybe you remember the time that CRT screens were not flat, but bulging out: this to keep the distance between the cathode ray source (at the back) the same whether the beam went to a far edge or the mid front. It was basically part of a sphere. Even when sitting rather close, you wouldn't see the image bulging towards you: your brain corrects for that just fine.
Then the flat-square CRT appeared, and things got interesting. Those used to an old, bulging one would suddenly see a flat one as bulging in. I exp
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For a 55" screen - the reason is clear - if you're sitting fairly close to it - the edges are noticably further away from you.
It'll happen with any size screen. In fact, it's happening right now on my 13" laptop screen from which I am about a foot away. I'll get over, though.
The curved screen stuff is a PR gimmick--that's why they're pricing the gear so high--they're not expecting most people to buy it. They're expecting people to talk about it. Looks like it's succeeding.
Re: Why? (Score:2)
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It's amusing that you think the tight jeans and raw denim fad that goes with it are exclusive to women. Also, what troglodyte carries a phone in their ass pocket?
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No glare on a curved screen maybe?
Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
And how does TFA make the leap from curved glass (which is nothing new and quite run of the mill in so many other daily applications) to zomg, Samsung is going to have a foldable phone in 18 months? Wtf?
Article smells a bit of sockpuppeted/astroturfed vaporware with the aim of getting people to forego competing purchases they're contemplating in the near term.
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In their defense a screen is more than just a piece of glass. My phone has had curved glass for quite a few years already but a flat screen.
I never thought curving a screen to be that difficult though. I always understood they were quite flimsy and held in place to protect from damage. That we've always held them flat and not curved had less to do with one being difficult and more to do with "why the hell would I want a curved display?"
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Afaik (part of) the display is made out of silicon, which means it can't be bent without breaking the circuit etched into it. These polymer screens are much more flexible, and folding/rolling up the screen is certainly within reach of such materials.
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Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
The CRTs were convex, the samsung phones are concave.
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OLED TVs are concave too.
Not sure I like it.
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What possible reason is there for this?
It's going to come handy when you're stranded with a tropical island without matches.
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What possible reason is there for this?
The curvature helps with glare as well. Slightly tipping the device can eliminate glare from (for instance) overhead lighting while still maintaining a reasonably straight-on viewing angle.
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What possible reason is there for this?
Samsung's consumer electronics strategy seems to be: "Let's try every damn thing we can think of, and see what sells!"
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I get this feeling that Samsung's using this sort of thing as a way to drum up business for their display components side. Rather than just banging out a reference device and showing it to device makers (and competitors), they're going the extra few steps to crank out a finished device and put it on the market.
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Most phones these days have a glass screen. You essentially need sand to scratch it. Maybe pushing against car keys can leave a mark. I've got a galaxy III and I haven't used a screen protector or case. I keep it in my pocket and the screen doesn't have a mark on it besides fingerprints.
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You're not likely to scratch them with keys in the way your angry ex-girlfriend would key your car. ...it's more the rubbing together of things in pockets that contain small amounts of sand and dirt and dust - small abrasives, more than big sharp things.
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Also, probably shatter a LOT more.
To paraphrase Phil... (Score:2)
Can't innovate, my ass.
Lawsuit incoming (Score:4, Informative)
You Have It Backwards (Score:5, Funny)
One question I wonder: will Apple follow suit?
Sorry, but you have that process backwards...
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Will Apple suit follow?
A more interesting demo shown... (Score:2)
...had the display flowing over the edge of the phone's sides so you could place a phone on a table and have only the edge display info.
Bucket list (Score:3)
[x] play games on phone ...
[x] use internet on phone
[x] take pictures with phone
[x]
[ ] bend phone
[ ] break phone
[ ] use phone to actually call people
lulsy (Score:2)
One question I wonder: will Apple follow suit? So far there has been no indication they are even attempting flexible/bendable screens."
Your google-fu is weak [pcmag.com], submitter. Apple is indeed looking at this technology and have filed several patents. Samsung though beat them to market; but it's a pyrric victory at a $1000 price tag.
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More like Apple will file a patent suit and claim Samsung stole it from them thus getting an import ban. We all know how those always work out in Apple's favor.
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A flexible or bendable screen is different from a screen that comes pre-curved and doesn't flex at all, I reckon.
I fail to see the point of this curved screen, honestly. Maybe it's better if you carry a large phone in your pocket?
Sometimes it's not worth being first. They may as well have come to market with a phone that's covered in mushrooms, or one that drips motor oil. This is pretty random stuff, here.
But maybe they'll prove me wrong once they actually reveal how it works.
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Why Google it when you can Slashdot it?
Have other people do the work for you, and get lots of comments on it that are even worse thought out than your original query sorry submission.
So... (Score:2)
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Gimmick (Score:3, Interesting)
What is this besides a gimmick? How does a curved screen make anything better? Is there anyone out there who ever said, "this would be much better if only the screen were curved?" Answers are "nothing," "it doesn't," and "no."
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A dozen posters above you have already mentioned that our hands and pockets are curved.
That makes your answers, "A design improvement," "It's more ergonomic," and "scores of people who were involved in the testing of this phone."
Also, please don't order one. More for the people who do.
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Well it seems that Samsung finally managed to copy Apple Reality Distortion field.
A screen, curved like my hands, I need one now.
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Re:Gimmick (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know about you, but my thumb is a fixed length, and it pivots at a joint. As such, if I have my hand at a fixed location on a flat surface, my thumb can only touch about a thumb's length of that surface. If the surface were curved, however, my thumb could touch much more of the surface area, since more of it would be within reach of my thumb. That would also allow the screen to be larger (and thus have more content) without sacrificing the convenience of being usable with one hand.
But that's just me. Maybe you're just a regular Inspector Gadget with telescoping thumbs and whatnot.
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My answers are "durability", "see below", and "yes". Unlike you, I also have reasons.
Google's Nexus S had a curved screen ages ago. I had one, and it was great - it meant if my phone was placed face down, the screen never made contact with the surface, so there was less chance of scratching. It meant that if it was dropped, there was little chance the screen would be subject to direct impact, meaning less chance of cracking - my phone hit our tiled floors a couple of times, with no harm done.
Apple? (Score:3, Interesting)
Off-topic rant first: It seems that user experience is no longer top priority at Apple. Why on earth did they screw the user experience for iPhone 4 and older models? The redesign of iOS 7, what a mess. It is inconsistent, mostly pointless, buggy, but worst of all it slows my phone down so much that scrolling has become jerky in any app. I remember playing with an Android Samsung phone a couple of years ago, and dismissed it mainly because of the sluggish user interface. Now my iPhone is like that. Good heavens.
On-topic: Apple is no longer trend-setting but trend-following. Will they also come with bigger screens? Bigger displays? Better cameras? Sensors that actually work for gaming? You know, the stuff that other phones already have? Who knows, follow the trend, Apple...
But personally I think a curved phone is a bit of a gimmick and Apple will not follow it.
I really hope they get their shit together and start making inspiring phones that have the best software, hardware, design and most importantly the best user-experience of any other phone. You know, like in the old days. But I'm not holding my breath. Sigh.
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But personally I think a curved phone is a bit of a gimmick and Apple will not follow it.
If this is a gimmick, then Apple is likely to follow it (then claim they came up with the idea) because gimmicks is all Apple does.
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Apple does this with all their old hardware. They either declare your hardware obsolete
I'm fine with this. Hardware keeps improving. Software changes to take advantage of this. Sooner or later, I'll want to upgrade.
or make the OS perform so badly on it that you declare it obsolete on your own.
There really needs to be consumer protection against this kind of thing. Apple has made a habit of pushing upgrades to devices that really can't handle it. Explaining to people why they shouldn't tap "Yes" when the phone repeatedly wants to upgrade, because it will permanently break their device, is not a battle that you can win. Not until it's too late, anyway.
From what I've heard
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So downgrade to iOS 6 and quit whining. Nobody forced you to upgrade to iOS 7 in the first place.
Apparently, you can't [readwrite.com].
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iPhone 4 user who likes iOS 7 here...
rather than a foldable display (Score:3)
Rather than a foldable display, I'd rather have a display that can simple be pulled to a larger size or pushed to a smaller size (small enough to hide). This will, of course, require some much more innovative technology. But I think we will have it by 2050.
More difficult to hold properly (Score:2)
Most people don't hold their phones properly, this won't help. The optimal for a sub-Phablet is the Index twist method, but with the curve suggested by this new design, your fingers won't be able to form properly or will cramp up, so it's back to the "standard" non-ergonomic way. Perhaps some variant of the pinky-curl/ring twist method used to properly hold a phablet could be modified, but looking at the numbers, I suspect only about 30% of most users will have hands the right size to use that hold.
Obviousl
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Hah, called it (Score:2)
Boosh! [slashdot.org]
Apple (Score:2)
Samsung is already infringing. The iSteve dreamed about this once. Besides, everyone know that only Apple can innovate!
My Galaxy Nexus has a curved screen (Score:2)
and it came out of Samsung about 2 years ago.
No Shit, Sherlock (Score:2)
They made the Nexus S what, over three years ago?
A curved version of Galaxy Note 3? (Score:2)
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Yeah, but the iPhone 3Gs had a curved back. Certainly this curved phone violates some Apple design IP. *rolls eyes*
My question is: If Apple can get a design patent on rounded corners, can Samsung get one on curved faces?
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My answer is: Apple doesn't have a design patent on rounded corners and never claimed to have one. (And Gore never claimed he was the inventor of the Internet, either.)
Re:"Apple, Apple, Apple"! (Score:4, Insightful)
My answer is: Apple doesn't have a design patent on rounded corners and never claimed to have one
D670,286 [google.com]. Dotted lines are not part of the claimed patent. The only solid lines in that patent are: 1 rectangle with rounded corners. 1 rectangle inside the rounded one for the screen.
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(And Gore never claimed he was the inventor of the Internet, either.)
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I'm not his biggest fan, but he doesn't get the credit he deserves for his role in the creation of the Internet we all use and enjoy.
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Sure. Why not
And Apple already has curved glass patents.
http://www.patentlyapple.com/patently-apple/2013/08/apple-granted-37-patents-today-covering-a-projection-system-curved-glass-macbooks-with-cellular-antennas-much-more.html [patentlyapple.com]
http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/25/apple-patents-a-method-to-refine-curved-glass/ [engadget.com]
http://mashable.com/2013/10/02/apple-patent-glass-cylinder/ [mashable.com]
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Actually, Samsung needs to do this because they already have marketshare. They have something like 90% marketshare of Android phones. Android itself outsells iOS by at least 3:1 so Samsung moves at least three times
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