Skip to main content

Get ready to roll: Samsung patents show flexible, foldable phones and tablets

galaxy x
Samsung's Project Valley foldable phone
Filing a patent doesn’t necessarily mean a product will come to fruition, but new Samsung patents show foldable devices that certainly would be cool to see in real life.

It seems like we hear Samsung’s foldable and rollable screens will arrive on commercial devices just about every year, but now the company could be getting closer to making it happen. The patents include a scrollable tube, a foldable smartphone, and a bendable book-like device.

Recommended Videos

The first patent discovered by Patently Mobile, depicts a scrollable tube that can be rolled out by grabbing the tab. The flexible display may be an OLED or a flexible LCD that uses a plastic film, rather than a glass substrate. Instead of pulling out the display, the patent shows an alternative method of pressing a button or icon on the side of the scroll to open the display with the desired app. So if you press the dialer icon or button on the scroll, presumably the display will open directly with the dialer app onscreen.

Other patents include a foldable smartphone and a device that opens off-center, so that users can use the tab on the left to open and see their favorite apps immediately, which is similar to the scrollable tube. The final foldable patent shows a device that resembles a book, using a hinge-like system. The front cover is a display, and opening the device makes it into a sort of tablet. The device appears bendable, but the patent offers no other information.

Samsung has been working on flexible displays for many years. The company showed off its first efforts at CES 2013 and revealed its first foldable phone prototype in a private meeting at CES 2014. Since, then we’ve heard several rumors that the foldable devices will debut as early as 2016. Another recent patent filing showed that the company is looking to implement force touch technology into its devices.

The patents could be for the company’s upcoming rumored flexible smartphone, codenamed Project Valley (or Project V), which may debut as early as January 2016 and could make an appearance at CES 2016. The patent applications were filed in the U.S. in May and published earlier this month. They were initially filed in South Korea in 2014.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
It’s almost 2025, and it’s time to end the Android vs. iPhone debate
A photo showing the back of the Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max, Huawei Pura 70 Ultra, Google Pixel 3a, Google Pixel 9 Pro, Huawei P30 Pro, and the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra.

I had the iPhone 11 for over four years. It was the first iPhone I owned. It stayed with me through the COVID-19 pandemic and two overseas trips — one to Hawaii and the other to Spain.

When the time came to upgrade, it was only natural for my entire family to want to get their hands on the iPhone 16. I, on the other hand, wanted to get the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6. However, that didn't happen — and the reason why is infuriating.
A very real (and very annoying) issue

Read more
The Samsung Galaxy A16 sets a new record for budget Android phones
Galaxy A16 banner Samsung

We've known that Samsung's next lineup of budget phones was on the way, especially after all of the information that leaked last week. Now, we have confirmation on several elements of the phone, but the most important of them all is the incredible (and unheard of) six years of security patches the Galaxy A16 5G will receive from launch. That means it will be fully up to date until October 31, 2030.

We reported on this possibility a couple of weeks ago, but now it's confirmed — and that's a big deal. Many budget phones only receive two years of security patches post-launch. The Galaxy A16 5G's six years of support puts it only one year behind Samsung's flagship models in the Galaxy S24 series. For a phone as cheap as the Galaxy A16, that's incredible.

Read more
Samsung’s next Android phone may get an annoying price hike
Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Mint Green color along with a Samsung notebook and a cermaic bowl with lemons.

We've got bad news for fans of the Samsung FE lineup: The next of these budget-focused phones might receive a price hike with the launch of the Galaxy S24 FE.

According to SmartPrix, the Galaxy S24 FE will launch at $649 in the United States, putting it at $50 more than the Galaxy S23 FE. Leaker @OnLeaks reports that the 128GB base model S24 FE will start at $649, while the higher-end 256GB version will be $709.

Read more