logo
Return of the flip phone: does Apple's new foldable iPhone signal a new era in design?

Return of the flip phone: does Apple's new foldable iPhone signal a new era in design?

The Guardian14 hours ago
Back in 2005, nothing felt more high-powered and sophisticated than ending a call by snapping shut a clamshell flip phone.
Now, two decades since they hit peak popularity, they're back – with Apple rumoured to be working on its first ever flip phone.
Little is known about how the new device will look. It could more closely resemble Samsung's Flip design – closer to a 2000s-style clamshell phone – or its Fold, more like a foldable iPad.
The rectangular tablet has been a mainstay of phone design for the last 15 years, but could Apple betting on the flip phone be a sign that's about to change?
Tech experts told the Guardian that the new product launch probably reflected the fact that people now mostly use their phones to access the internet, rather than laptops or tablets, and are looking for a device that optimises that experience.
'Apple and all other smartphone makers are somewhat stymied by the fact the smartphone has become somewhat of a boring category – it's absolutely essential in people's daily lives, but it no longer has the excitement of the next big thing,' said Ben Wood, an analyst at the tech consultancy CCS Insight.
This is why Apple has been reaching for new designs that can get people talking – for example, the ultra-thin iPhone, expected to be launched in September.
He thinks Apple is entering the foldable market because other companies have experimented first. Samsung's initial Galaxy Fold designs were bedevilled by screen problems, but the Galaxy Fold 7 is expected to represent the 'next generation' of foldable phones.
'Apple is rarely first to anything – it's not typically a company that dives in with both feet – it likes to take its time, see how it can refine and optimise it, and deliver the best, most reliable experience, then it jumps,' Wood said.
He noted that Samsung's flip phone has proven more popular than the fold model 'because it's cheaper and has captured imagination of the population who like the idea of having something different from everyone else'.
Sign up to TechScape
A weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our lives
after newsletter promotion
But he thinks that Apple producing a foldable mini-tablet has the most potential to 'move the needle', by giving people the opportunity to unfold a larger screen where they can easily watch videos, show off photos and browse documents when working remotely.
Margarita Panayiotou, a tech researcher at the University of Manchester, said academic research had identified that people prefer bigger screens for browsing and gaming. This, combined with the fact that young people, especially, tend to use smartphones to go online, suggests that the foldable design could offer an ideal compromise.
Prof Ben Carter, who researches how smartphones impact our lives at King's College London, agreed that video watching is 'one of the wins' for foldable phones, especially since videos constitute a growing proportion of the content that people consume. Foldable phones can have larger screens, and can also be propped up for easier viewing.
He thought there could be mental health benefits to a design resembling a 'mini-laptop that you can close down', because his research shows that disabling notifications is highly effective in reducing screen time and tackling smartphone addiction.
If the screen is not visible, it removes the 'variable reward scheme' – the same process by which gambling addiction works, whereby not knowing when you will receive a reward makes something more compelling. 'If you can switch it off, more like a laptop, that distraction has gone,' he said, though he noted there is not yet evidence that people are using foldable phones in this way.
This might be especially beneficial for children, who receive on average over 200 notifications a day – though the high price point of foldable phones makes it unlikely that many will have access to them until their parents pass on secondhand models several years after launch.
Prof David Ellis, the chair of behavioural science at the University of Bath, added that other draws include the fact that screens are better protected and fit into a smaller pocket, as well as the 'sense of nostalgia that comes with a flip phone'.
But he added that it might not be the gamechanger people are expecting: Apple doesn't have a '100% success rate – the Vision Pro [headset] has been a spectacular failure'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Traditional Mobile Banking Apps Are Reaching Their Limits and How Agentic UI Will Replace Them: By Paul Shumsky
Why Traditional Mobile Banking Apps Are Reaching Their Limits and How Agentic UI Will Replace Them: By Paul Shumsky

Finextra

timean hour ago

  • Finextra

Why Traditional Mobile Banking Apps Are Reaching Their Limits and How Agentic UI Will Replace Them: By Paul Shumsky

Every major shift in digital banking has started with a problem that could no longer be ignored. Moving from branches to online banking addressed the need for convenience. The move from online to mobile banking apps gave customers access to their finances anywhere and anytime. Now a new challenge is emerging. Even the best mobile banking apps are beginning to show their limits. Neobanks like Revolut and Nubank have set the standard for modern design and strong user experience. Yet as they expand into super apps offering trading, insurance, travel bookings and shopping, the trade-off becomes clear. Each new product competes for space on the screen. Menus get deeper, journeys get longer and customers struggle to find the value that drew them in. This is not a problem that affects only challengers. Traditional banks face it too. When more becomes too much To keep things manageable, many banks have split their offerings into separate apps. One for personal banking. One for businesses. Another for young customers. Another for wealth and investments. This approach makes each app less cluttered, but it creates a new problem: fragmentation. Customers need multiple logins, must switch between different designs, and face inconsistent experiences. It is also expensive. Separate apps require separate development teams, separate technology platforms and separate infrastructure. That is duplication of cost without duplication of value. The next breakthrough will not be about creating more apps or adding more menu tabs. It will be about creating a single intelligent experience that recognises each customer, understands the products they use and knows how to make their life easier. Personalisation that means something Banks often talk about personalisation in terms of letting customers change colours, switch to dark mode or rearrange widgets. In reality that is not personalisation. Studies consistently show that the vast majority of customers never change default settings. True personalisation is proactive. It guides customers through their financial journeys and anticipates what they will need next. A small business owner logging in on payroll day should see cash flow projections and quick-pay links before anything else. A frequent traveller should see currency exchange, travel insurance and lounge access in the weeks before a trip. Enter agentic UI Agentic UI represents the next step in the evolution of mobile banking. It is a conversational, adaptive, AI-powered interface that learns from each customer's profile, behaviour and context in real time. Instead of navigating static menus, customers interact with an intelligent agent. The interface adapts to who is using it, when they are using it and why they have come. This is the type of experience that Finpace helps financial institutions bring to life. With the right integration, one app can serve every customer segment and every product line without compromising on simplicity or clarity. Benefits for customers and for the business For customers, Agentic UI means fewer clicks, faster answers and the feeling that their bank truly understands them. For the bank, it brings higher engagement because customers do not have to search for value, lower support costs because there are fewer 'how do I…' queries, reduced technology spend by removing the need for multiple apps, and faster launches of new products because they can be introduced contextually to the right customers. Platforms like Finpace, Kasisto, Personetics, and Glia are already making these capabilities possible today. Finpace focuses on unifying multiple product lines into a single adaptive banking app, Kasisto enables natural language conversations that feel human, Personetics powers hyperpersonalized recommendations and goal-based journeys, and Glia integrates real-time AI assistance into the customer's digital session. Together, they are proving that Agentic UI is not a distant vision but an achievable standard for forward-thinking financial institutions. Learning from other industries Other industries have already moved in this direction. Netflix recommends what to watch without asking. Google Maps adjusts travel time based on live traffic. These are systems that adapt to the user, not the other way around. Banking can work the same way. The difference is that financial journeys are more complex, more regulated and often more sensitive. Agentic UI, enabled by platforms like Finpace, can make those journeys simple, relevant and compliant without losing the personal touch. The road ahead The case for Agentic UI is becoming stronger every day. As super apps grow and traditional banks seek to unify their offerings, one adaptive app that delivers the right experience to the right customer at the right time is becoming the logical next step. Those who start exploring this now will have a clear advantage, not only in customer satisfaction but also in cost efficiency and time to market.

Return of the flip phone: does Apple's foldable iPhone signal a new era in design?
Return of the flip phone: does Apple's foldable iPhone signal a new era in design?

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Return of the flip phone: does Apple's foldable iPhone signal a new era in design?

Back in 2005, nothing felt more high-powered and sophisticated than ending a call by snapping shut a clamshell flip phone. Now, two decades since they hit peak popularity, they're back – with Apple rumoured to be working on its first ever flip phone. Little is known about how it will look. It could resemble Samsung's Flip design – closer to a 2000s-style clamshell phone – or its Fold, more like a foldable iPad. A JPMorgan report has suggested that the first foldable iPhone will be revealed in September 2026, priced at $1,999 (£1,474), and will likely expand a foldable phone market expected to reach 19m units in 2025. The rectangular tablet has been a mainstay of phone design for the last 15 years, but could Apple betting on the flip phone be a sign that's about to change? Tech experts said the new product launch probably reflected the fact that people now mostly access the internet on their phones, rather than laptops or tablets, and are looking for a device that optimises that experience – but the high price point suggests it will remain a premium product. 'Apple and all other smartphone makers are somewhat stymied by the fact the smartphone has become somewhat of a boring category – it's absolutely essential in people's daily lives, but it no longer has the excitement of the next big thing,' said Ben Wood, an analyst at the tech consultancy CCS Insight. This is why Apple has been reaching for new designs that can get people talking – for example, the ultra-thin iPhone, expected to be launched in September. Wood thinks Apple is entering the foldable market because other companies have experimented first. Samsung's initial Galaxy Fold designs were bedevilled by screen problems, but next week's Galaxy Flip and Fold 7 triple release, featuring slimmer designs and bigger screens, is expected to represent the 'next generation' of foldable phones, which Samsung will be hoping reverses the flatlining sales in 2024. 'Apple is rarely first to anything – it's not typically a company that dives in with both feet – it likes to take its time, see how it can refine and optimise it, and deliver the best, most reliable experience, then it jumps,' Wood said. He noted that Samsung's flip phone has been more popular than the fold model 'because it's cheaper and has captured imagination of the population who like the idea of having something different from everyone else'. Sign up to TechScape A weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our lives after newsletter promotion But he thinks that Apple producing a foldable mini-tablet has the most potential to 'move the needle' by giving people the opportunity to unfold a larger screen where they can easily watch videos, show off photos and browse documents when working remotely. Margarita Panayiotou, a tech researcher at the University of Manchester, said academic research had identified that people prefer bigger screens for browsing and gaming. This, combined with the fact that young people, especially, tend to use smartphones to go online, suggests that the foldable design could offer an ideal compromise for future consumers. Prof Ben Carter, who researches how smartphones impact our lives at King's College London, agreed that video watching was 'one of the wins' for foldable phones, especially since videos constitute a growing proportion of the content that people consume. Foldable phones can have larger screens and can also be propped up for easier viewing. He thought there could be mental health benefits to a design resembling a 'mini-laptop that you can close down'. His research shows that disabling notifications is highly effective in reducing screen time and tackling smartphone addiction. If the screen is not visible, it removes the 'variable reward scheme' – the same process by which gambling addiction works, whereby not knowing when you will receive a reward makes something more compelling. 'If you can switch it off, more like a laptop, that distraction has gone,' he said, though he noted there waws not yet evidence that people are using foldable phones in this way. This might be especially beneficial for children, who receive on average more than 200 notifications a day – though the high price point of foldable phones makes it unlikely that many will have access to them until their parents pass on secondhand models several years after launch. Prof David Ellis, the chair of behavioural science at the University of Bath, said that other draws include the fact that screens are better protected and fit into a smaller pocket, as well as the 'sense of nostalgia that comes with a flip phone'. But he added that it might not be the gamechanger people are expecting: Apple doesn't have a '100% success rate – the Vision Pro [headset] has been a spectacular failure'.

High-Performance Silverado, Tahoe, and Escalade Packages to Hit Dealers Soon
High-Performance Silverado, Tahoe, and Escalade Packages to Hit Dealers Soon

Auto Blog

time3 hours ago

  • Auto Blog

High-Performance Silverado, Tahoe, and Escalade Packages to Hit Dealers Soon

By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. Stellantis has finally shown what a midsize Ram Dakota might look like—but this one's not for the U.S. For the first time in North America, BMW will display Andy Warhol's 1979 M1 Art Car and Julie Mehretu's M Hybrid V8 Art Car side-by-side at Monterey Car Week. The announcement from Honda's luxury brand is a shift from its prior commitment to EVs made in 2021. Partnership Will Focus On Full-Size Trucks Holley, a prominent manufacturer of speed parts like its ubiquitous carburetors, and Callaway Cars, best known for its modified Corvettes, are teaming up to 'develop and launch a line of performance packages for GM trucks and SUVs,' the companies said in a press release. Holley and Callaway didn't say when the first of these performance packages would be available, though. The partnership will combine Callaway's engineering expertise with Holley's sales and marketing infrastructure to 'reach even more enthusiasts with turnkey, dealer-approved solutions,' the release said. The 'dealer-approved' part is key, as being able to buy these performance packages through dealerships—perhaps already installed on a new vehicle—will streamline things significantly for car buyers. Plans Cover Multiple GM Brands Source: GMC By providing your email address, you agree that it may be used pursuant to Arena Group's Privacy Policy. We may receive compensation. Performance packages will be offered for full-size pickups and SUVs such as the Chevrolet Silverado, Tahoe, and Suburban, the GMC Sierra and Yukon, and the Cadillac Escalade, as well as the Corvette. That's pretty similar to the range of models Callaway already covers with its performance upgrades. Multiple versions will be available at different prices, 'up to premium-level Pinnacle versions,' the release said, but without any details on what content would be included. In addition to tie-ins with dealerships, the two companies plan to offer direct-to-consumer sales, with Callaway handling the former and Holley handling the latter. Building Up The Callaway Brand Source: Cadillac By leveraging Holley's corporate footprint, the partnership could put the Callaway name in front of more eyeballs. Founded in 1977, Callaway Cars was founded by Reeves Callaway, the son of the founder of the Callaway Golf brand. The Connecticut-based company initially focused on BMW and a handful of other brands, but has become most famous as a prolific modifier of Corvettes, with standouts like the 254-mph SledgeHammer and the AeroWagon shooting brake. Autoblog Newsletter Autoblog brings you car news; expert reviews and exciting pictures and video. Research and compare vehicles, too. Sign up or sign in with Google Facebook Microsoft Apple By signing up I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy . You may unsubscribe from email communication at anytime. Even with the expanded focus on trucks and SUVs, Callaway will remain committed to the Corvette. A new Callaway Performance Center in Bowling Green, Kentucky, will expand the company's operations in the 'Vette's hometown, allowing it to 'increase production capacity and enable broader availability of dealer-backed solutions for customers.' While it's a venerable name in the automotive aftermarket, Callaway faces plenty of competition from the likes Shelby and Hennessey when it comes to turnkey performance upgrades for modern Detroit Three machinery. This partnership with Holley could give Callaway a boost—and give customers more options for vehicle modifications. About the Author Stephen Edelstein View Profile

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store