According to Digitimes
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We have seen how for some time now, manufacturers or rather, some of them, have turned to launch devices with flexible screens Samsung with the Galaxy Fold, Huawei with the Mate X or Motorola with the new Razr are the best known examples. Phones with flexible screens that, however, are seeing how their arrival on the market is delayed
Flexible displays still have a ways to go. A technology that is still very green, so much so that Microsoft has opted for folding screens for the Surface Neo and the Surface Duo that avoid the system of flexible panels and hinges that is causing so much talk.And Intel may have thought the same, which could slow down this type of device
Flexible and with Windows 10X
According to Digitimes, the firm is considering delaying the launch of devices with flexible screens. If we have seen proposals like Lenovo's, it seems that to see Intel laptops with flexible screen, we will still have to wait.
According to the American media, it is more than possible that Intel will cancel plans and not show a 17-inch laptop with a flexible screen at CES 2020 in Las Vegas that starts in a few days. The reasons are caused by supply problems with this type of screens
They are expensive to produce and the demand is still not fully covered, which causes a considerable waiting list. But along with this handicap the other stumbling block found at Intel has a name: Windows 10X.
Microsoft&39;s operating system to be able to interact on devices with two screens (flexible or folding) and an adapted interface would be an immature operating system for IntelA system that is still in development and that may mean that we will not see more Intel products apart from the already known prototypes."
According to MSPU, we would have to wait for 2020 to pass, to find out about Intel's laptops based on dual and flexible screens with Windows 10X. Give time for both flexible screens to become democratized, to improve their performance and for Windows 10X to be a stable and competent system.
Source | Digitimes