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Have you ever thought to yourself 'I totally wish my phone could fold in half'?
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If so, join the club.
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And if not, now all the wildest dreams you've never had are coming true with the world's
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first foldable phone you can actually buy.
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It's called the FlexPai from a company called Royole.
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It's literally the first phone with a foldable screen that's commercially available.
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Yeah, Samsung did have one once upon a time, but they still haven't gotten around to actually
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releasing the Galaxy Fold yet.
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So I'll believe it when I see it and can actually buy one.
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Inside the box is whatever this is.
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And here is the FlexPai with some instructions on how to fold and unfold the phone written
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on the outer covering.
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Honestly, I think it looks pretty cool.
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It feels solid and heavy.
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I held one of these for the first time at CES this year.
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But obviously, since that was a demo unit and not my own personal device, I wasn't going
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to try to see what happens when it's bent both directions.
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Today though, this one here is all mine, and there's no one here to stop us.
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Let's get started.
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[Intro]
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Right out of the box there are some confidence diminishing instructions that flash across
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the screen, like 'only charge the phone with the device unfolded.'
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And then look here at this massive list of instructions: don't drop it, keep the surface
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dry and clean, please avoid sharp or pointed objects....uh huh, got it, sure thing.
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And right below that, it keeps going on to say no screen protectors are allowed, and
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the phone can't be opened if the temperature is below freezing.
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It also looks like the side of the phone is super magnetic.
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This is going to be fun.
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Opening and closing the phone automatically changes how the apps are displayed on the
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screen.
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Magnets are the thing that holds the phone shut in the closed position with a very satisfyingly
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hard click.
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The magnets will definitely keep the phone from flopping open on its own.
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The hinge of the phone here in the center is covered with a very dark blue rubberish
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material and held in place by a series of hex screws.
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It takes up a good portion of the back panel real estate.
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It looks like one of those wrinkly dogs, or even a slinky that can be bent back and forth.
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Good luck slapping a dbrand skin on this one.
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When it does snap closed, it leaves just enough room inside for a pencil to clip into the
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gap between the back halves.
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Might be a perfect spot for a future stylus...just saying.
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The two back panels have a subtle shimmer that we see on most smartphones these days
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- low key, and it doesn't really draw attention to itself...well, besides the fact that it
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folds in half.
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That's a minor detail of course.
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You can see how reflective and shiny the screen is as well.
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The scratch test is going to be super interesting.
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The weird thing to me though is that the screen is always going to be exposed on the outside
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of the phone – always.
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The whole thing is just there...vulnerable.
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The whole system functions like an Android tablet, but then has the ability to fold closed
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to be the size of a phone.
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It also has memory enough to remember which app was open on which side of the phone each
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time you flip it around.
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It also has a little center options bar in the fold of the phone.
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Honestly, it looks pretty slick.
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Yeah, the thing is a bit thick, but if it's durable, I could totally see myself using
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one of these.
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Trying to think of logical reasons of why I would actually ever need a foldable phone
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though.
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It would probably mostly be just watching movies and YouTube since, you know, I spend
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a lot of time on YouTube.
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This Flexi-boy can watch videos in full screen mode while the phone is folded.
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And it can also watch full screen videos in the unfolded mode.
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Honestly, pretty darn cool.
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A company called Asurion did a study one time and found that people check their phones on
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average about 80 times a day.
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And judging by the amount of people I see texting and driving, I believe that number.
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Royole says on their website that this phone is good for over 200,000 folds.
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So if we're unfolding this FlexPai 80 times a day, under perfect conditions of course,
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this phone would last almost 7 whole years.
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That's pretty fantastic considering that the Galaxy fold lasted about 7 whole days.
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Remember this thing is available to buy right now for a cool $1,300 dollars.
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Let's see what we get for that.
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Inside the box we get a SIM card removal tool and a microfiber cloth, some USB-C braided
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headphones, and a USB-C power cable, and a branded power brick.
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There's no case or screen protectors inside the box.
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That's interesting.
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Now that we know everything is working properly, let's start with the scratch test.
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Knowing what we know about the laws of physics, it's pretty safe to say that the screen is
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not going to be made from glass, since glass is glass and glass does not bend.
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The surface of the FlexPai has to be made from a flexible optically clear plastic.
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The hardness level of that plastic though is up for debate.
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In this particular case we see that the level 2 pick leaves no marks on the screen.
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But the level 3 pick, as it's applied to the surface of the flattened phone, starts leaving
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indented grooves all along the whole surface of the display.
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This is why there were warnings when I first turned on the phone.
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The FlexPai gets permanently damaged at a very soft Mohs level 3.
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This is the main reason having a screen on the outside of the fold is a bad idea.
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When it's in your pocket, both sides of the screen are rubbing up against the sides of
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your pocket.
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And again, when it's folded on a table, one screen side will always be touching something
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hard.
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There is no safe zone.
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Watch as my fingernail can also damage the screen permanently.
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This thing is going to get pretty wrecked with every day use – especially since screen
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protectors are not allowed.
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Samsung's implementation of having the screen fold up inside the phone is hypothetically
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the better of the two methods since the closed fold protects the plastic screen.
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But, you know, their phone also only lasted a week.
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So you win some, and you lose some.
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Checking out the top of the FlexPai, moving from the plastic layer up to the top panel,
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there's a definite ridge.
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And that panel is made from glass.
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My razor is doing no damage to the surface of that at least.
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The internal magnet is also pulling my razor all over the place.
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Even holding up my pry tool with its own magical magnetic strength.
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It's super strong.
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Probably because that hinge won't let the phone stay closed without it.
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A little trick I learned from Marquez with this magnet paper.
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We can see the large rectangular magnet right dead center inside the glass panel.
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We can also see the two bottom loud speakers in the center of each half.
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And over there in the bottom corner is the vibration motor, also made from magnets.
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There's another large rectangular magnet on the other side of the phone that will keep
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things shut.
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Pretty darn cool.
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We'll take a look at the insides of the FlexPai during the teardown...you know, if it survives
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the rest of this durability test.
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There is a dual tone LED flash alongside the dual camera lenses.
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A 16 megapixel normal camera is paired up with a 20 megapixel telephoto camera.
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No complaints here.
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Having multiple cameras that offer different perspectives is really the way to go.
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That's one of the things I'm looking forward to when I finally upgrade my personal Galaxy
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S8 Plus.
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With so many sides to analyze, this might take a minute.
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The bottom right quadrant has a loudspeaker grill.
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The bottom has the power button, volume up button, fingerprint scanner, and the volume
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down button, in that exact order.
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The fingerprint scanner chilling here in the middle is in a weird spot, but I'm not judging.
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Even after scratching up the surface of the scanner, it was still able to read and recognize
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my fingerprint nearly every single time.
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The bottom left quadrant has a whole lot of nothing...except more metal.
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The hinge portion is where things start to get interesting, and we'll talk more about
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this in a second.
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But Royole has literally trademarked the name Cicada Wing as the name for this thing.
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True story: a cicada is a super gross bug, and I have no idea why in the world they would
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choose that to brand their phone with.
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I give Apple a hard time about a lot of things, but at least they don't name their phone parts
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after bugs.
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The rubber portion has little air pockets in it to allow the flexing between the hinge
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segments.
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The rubber wrinkles sit over the little voids in the hinge...kind of like when Grandma pulls
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your cheek.
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It's all kinds of squishy.
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The top left quadrant has more metal, along with a USB-C charging port and a SIM card
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tray.
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It's really nice of Royole to include an SD card slot.
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Adding movies and media to the large screen will be super easy.
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The top of the phone has more metal and a few plastic antenna lines.
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Honestly, the more I see, the more I like.
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It's a really super fun phone.
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Checking the back panels where we would normally see glass, this Flexi-boy has large plastic
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rectangles.
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The phone is heavy enough that initially I thought the panels were made of glass, but
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it is not.
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My razor blade's making short work of the surface which is actually really good news
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for us because now I get to tell you more about this vial little cicada bug that Royole
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is so proudly naming their phone after.
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No, I don't care about most bugs...they don't bother me, I don't bother them.
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But cicadas are in a realm all of their own.
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These cousins of crickets swarm out of ground every 13 years.
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Then they shed their crunchy potato chip skin like a snake, grow wings on either side of
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their body, and then cicadas make an incredibly loud incessant noise by vibrating membranes
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on their abdomen.
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[Cicada sounds] That's more annoying than any sound I've ever made.
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Then the cicadas go lay their eggs in tree branches, which kills the branch, making it
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fall to the ground where the baby bugs can crawl out into the ground and wait for another
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13 years before they can pop out and start the whole process all over again.
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This is a true story.
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The cicada wings are slightly separated from one another like the folds of this phone,
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so I can kind of see why they're named after each other.
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But still...gross.
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The bug should be burned.
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Nailed that transition.
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The 7.8 inch 1920 x 1440 flexible display lasted about 5 seconds under the heat from
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my flame.
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The screen is so thin there's no insulating layer over the pixels to absorb the heat like
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we see on glass phones.
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The flame directly burns the pixels, literally destroying them to the point of no return
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in 5 seconds.
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Makes me wonder if impacts or pressure points might do the same to individual pixels, especially
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since if the folded phone accidentally drops, no matter how it falls, it's going to hit
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the screen area.
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It'll be interesting to see how this phone progresses into the wild as more people own
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it.
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Now it's time for the bend test.
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When bending from the front, we get a nice uniform fold along the center of the device,
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with a satisfying click at the end as the magnets latch together.
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The screen still rotates to face whatever side is active at the moment.
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Opening the phone up, we see no permanent kinks or cracks in the frame, thankfully,
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or this would be pretty awkward since that's the way the phone's supposed to bend.
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Alright, here's a few more times now, and you know, just from the front because I'm
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kind of legit nervous and I feel pretty bad about what might happen next.
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I've been curious if a tight pants pocket might be able to collapse or crush the folded
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phone since it has the large gap in the frame.
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It's kind of just asking for trouble.
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With a full palm grip and 100% effort trying to crush the phone single handedly – nothing
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happens.
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The hinge is intact and the phone is still totally operational.
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The hardware is going to be uncrushable by the pocket of your skinny jeans.
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My fingers do not hurt the pixels either, so I'm glad for that.
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But what happens if the phone is laid flat and grandma sits on it?
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Well, to be honest, it actually flexes quite a bit in the wrong direction with no damage.
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Going from the flat 180 degrees all the way to a 270 degree three-quarter circle before
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the hinge finally snapped in half, breaking at two points.
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But the phone itself is still turned on and functional, even after bending in the complete
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opposite and wrong direction.
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The FlexPai swings both ways.
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Even with that crack in the hinge, it still folds shut normally.
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And then when bending back out the wrong direction again, we can see how paper thin the display
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really is.
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Royole is currently putting the same display technology on t-shirts and hats for about
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$900 each.
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I do think we gotta be honest here for a second.
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This thing is lasting a lot longer than we all thought it would.
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Look how tight this fold gets.
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Flexible screen technology is pretty amazing.
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I can literally bend this FlexPai any way I want and it's still functioning.
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My mind is blown.
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I don't even really know what to do with myself right now.
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This thing survived longer than the iPad Pro.
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Thumbs up for that.
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Royole might have just single-handedly made my bend test irrelevant with this invincible
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foldable display...well, until this happened anyway.
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One wrong fold at an angle pinched the screen in a way that finally cracked it right down
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the center.
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Apparently the display can only be folded along one plane, which makes sense.
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The structure of the phone hinge got demolished in the first bend, so there wasn't anything
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there to support the screen from behind.
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The large gentle curve of that hinge made each folding movement easier on the screen.
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Even though we've seen the display can handle much tighter creases, having that gentle fold
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I'm sure preserves longevity.
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That one long crack along the center finally did kill the touch sensitivity of the phone
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as well.
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But either way, the Royole FlexPai put up a really good fight and I'm downright impressed.
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I'm a huge fan of this new flexible innovation.
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Even now in the beginning stages, where it's not totally useful, I think that with normal