The Samsung Galaxy S30 and Galaxy Z Fold3 Would End with the Galaxy Note

It is clear that the evolution of technology has implied great improvements in the mobile telephony market, but it has also revealed the odd problem within the catalogs of some brands. This could have as its main repercussion the disappearance of a family as classic as that of the Samsung Galaxy Note .

To find out the reason for this possible decision of the brand would have to travel a couple of years to the past. Long ago it was very easy to distinguish the Galaxy S family from the Galaxy Note due to the classic design of our mobile phones. The Galaxy S are powerful and smaller models and the Galaxy Note are powerful, larger phones with S-Pen, focused on productivity. The same would happen with the Huawei P and Huawei Mate.

Samsung Galaxy S30 and Galaxy Z Fold3 Would End with the Galaxy Note

However, the adoption of borderless mobile formats, without notch and a greater use of the screen has caused the size of the two families to be equal. Today the Galaxy S20 and Note 20, for example, have almost the same tamale and the only thing that distinguishes them – broadly speaking – is the S-Pen.

For this reason there are rumors that Samsung could choose to remove the Galaxy Note from its catalog.

Goodbye Galaxy Note, hello Galaxy Fold

A new leak originating in South Korea suggests Samsung will radically change its premium device offerings. With the S20, Samsung released three variants (S20, S20 +, and S20 Ultra). Meanwhile, the Note20 came with two variants: the Note20 and the Note20 Ultra. According to the report from The Elec Korea, the successor to the Galaxy S20, known as the Galaxy S30 , will come with an S Pen , but only in the Ultra variant.

Due to this, speculation has emerged that Samsung would discontinue the Galaxy Note line and instead launch a Galaxy Z Fold3 with S-Pen. In this way, the folding family would succeed the old Samsung phablets and the S-Pen would reach both families.

Samsung has the capacity to produce 600,000 folding screens per month and plans to develop one million folding screens per month by the end of the year. Samsung may not sell as many foldable devices as there are devices in the Galaxy Note family, but the high markup on foldable devices could make up for the lower number of units sold.

We will have the definitive clue to the disappearance of the Note family in February to see if Samsung finally adds S-Pen support to its Galaxy S30 . That would be the final nail in the coffin of the firm’s top-of-the-line range.

Source>Ishan Agarwal