Samsung's Galaxy Fold, a phone with a screen that folds together like a book, is finally hitting the U.S.
Samsung will start selling the Galaxy Fold, a phone with a screen that folds together like a book, on Friday. There will be an AT&T version as well as an unlocked version sold at Best Buy and Samsung stores.
The South Korean tech giant had put the Galaxy Fold's launch on hold for months after reviewers encountered problems with the device's innovative folding screen. Some reviewers peeled back a protective layer meant to stay on the screen, other devices flickered and turned black. The nearly $2,000 phone launched on Sept. 6 in South Korea and Sept. 18 in France, Germany and Britain, with versions for next generation 5G networks available in the latter two countries. The U.S. phone does not support 5G.
Australia Latest News, Australia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Samsung's $2,000 folding phone will launch in the US on Sept. 27 after months of delaysSamsung said on Monday it will launch the Galaxy Fold in the US on Sept. 27. The launch was delayed from April after reviewers found it broke easily. Samsung says it has fixed early problems. It will be sold unlocked and from AT&T and Best Buy.
Read more »
'The Cave Tried To Keep Us': The First-Ever Dive Inside An IcebergJill Heinerth is one of the world's most accomplished cave divers. When she and her crew explored Antarctica's B-15 iceberg, they were in danger. 'Mother Nature had given us a last warning,' she recalls. But they wanted one more dive. (onlyagamenpr)
Read more »
The U.S. isn’t even in the top 10 for best countries for retirementTop countries for retirement... 4. Ireland 3. Norway 2. Switzerland. No. 1 is not the U.S.
Read more »
This Dangerous Addiction To Cheap Money Will Depress Economies In Europe And The U.S.Addiction to cheap money becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy: a weak economy needs cheap money, which keeps the economy depressed. It is now more urgent than ever that the developed economies acknowledge that cheap money is the problem, not the solution.
Read more »
U.S. Voters Support Expanding Medicare but Not Eliminating Private Health InsuranceDemocratic candidates are presenting policy ideas that are broadly popular, including tuition-free state colleges, but other proposals—such as Medicare for All—could complicate the party’s prospects next year, the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll shows.
Read more »
Pompeo accuses former U.S. Vice President Biden of corruption over Ukraine dust-upU.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Sunday accused President Donald Trump&03...
Read more »