From CNET…..
I used the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 for a week as a replacement for my phone and my work laptop. Though apps like Slack aren’t exactly optimized for the new $1,800 foldable, the phone proved more than capable of handling the majority of my daily tasks. But it did have its quirks.
For example, Zoom calls over the main screen’s under-display camera were awkward, and not because of the poor image quality. Truth is, most people on the call had no idea I was on the Galaxy Z Fold 5 aside from the strange camera angle, which looked up my nose (unless I put the phone on a pile of cookbooks).
Last year’s Galaxy Z Fold 4 had the same issue when I reviewed it. I share all this because it’s easy to dismiss the Z Fold 5 as a minor upgrade. Yes, it’s definitely an incremental improvement, but it’s a tweak to an already solid and well-established foldable: the Z Fold 4. And when the Z Fold 4 came out last year, it proved how far ahead Samsung was in terms of phones that fold open into a tablet.
The problem is that the Z Fold 5 keeps not only the Z Fold 4 features I enjoyed, but also most of its shortcomings, like that poorly placed low resolution under-display camera. When the Z Fold 5 has its screen bent at a 90 degree angle, the hidden camera sits off to the left side of the screen, which is really only good for checking out my nose hair situation (luckily that’s pretty tidy).
The other problem is that over the past year, competitors like Google launched their own versions of the Fold, or teased them, like OnePlus has. In my tests, Google’s Pixel Fold had better cameras than the Z Fold 4, though it didn’t beat Samsung’s device overall as “this is as good as it gets right now” for foldables. And that’s where the new Galaxy Z Fold 5 comes in.
It doesn’t bring sweeping design changes but instead tries to improve on the Z Fold 4 in three areas: durability, battery life and cameras. And the Galaxy Z Fold 5 gets two out of those three right… mostly…..
image…CNET