The device is similar to Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Fold in that it lets you view content on a full-sized panel or two separate displays when folded. When closed, the device has the same footprint as a 13.3-inch laptop.
Horseshoe Bend flexible OLED display
The main difference between the X1 Fold and Horseshoe Bend is that Intel’s concept has a larger 17.3-inch OLED display. That panel has a 3:2 aspect ratio, which gives users more vertical real estate to read documents or see content on websites.
Horseshoe Bend and Tiger Lake
The Horseshoe Bend concept Intel showed on stage was running its upcoming Tiger Lake processor. The platform includes Xe graphics architecture that enables HD performance gaming on integrated GPUs. Intel ran a Warframe demo at its press conference. The frame rates weren’t perfect but the demo showed that the game was playable on integrated graphics.
What this means for laptops
Horseshoe Bend is a concept that will never find its way into retail stores. Instead, it was created to show what laptop makers are capable of creating with Intel hardware. If 13-inch foldable PCs like the ThinkPad X1 fold or Dell’s Concept Ori catch on, then it will only be a matter of time before manufacturers offer a variety of display sizes in the foldable form factor.