pcmag.comWow Factor Of course, the wow factor of a foldable display is best experienced when it’s, well, folded. You could use a part-folded Horseshoe Bend in several orientations, including opening it like a book and displaying two separate apps side by side, or using it like a conventional laptop with the lower half displaying a virtual onscreen touchpad and keyboard, and the top half displaying the main screen content.For all of this to work smoothly, however, software innovation is required. Microsoft is working on a version of Windows 10 called Windows 10X that will enable foldable-screen PCs to recognize and adapt to the folding screen and its orientation, but it’s still under development. Lenovo has created its own stopgap measure in the meantime, which does enable these sorts of orientations. As for Horseshoe Bend, Intel showed it off in full-screen mode during the demo, with a single app window taking up the entire folded display, as well as in a keyboard-overlaid-on-the-screen mode.The other orientation, though, is fully flat with a physical keyboard, like so...

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