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www.counterpointresearch.comFoldable Smartphone Market to See its First Decline in 2025 Before Robust Comeback in 20262024 saw the global foldable market growing at a comparatively flat annual rate of 2.9%.Samsung and OPPO’s unusually weak Q4 negatively impacted broader market dynamics.Huawei was a bright spot, as were Motorola, HONOR and Xiaomi.We are forecasting further tightness with single-digit negative growth for 2025.Order books are signaling a massive 2026 turnaround on Apple's entry and clamshell resurgence.Seoul, Beijing, Buenos Aires, Hong Kong, London, New Delhi, San Diego, Taipei, Tokyo – March 28, 2025Global foldable smartphone shipments in 2024 saw tepid growth at 2.9% YoY, according to Counterpoint Research’s latest Global Foldable Smartphone Market Forecast. Although many OEMs saw double- and triple-digit growth, the market’s overall growth was impacted by Samsung’s tough Q4 due to political instability, and OPPO cutting production of its more affordable clamshell foldables.Global Foldable Smartphone Shipment ForecastSource: Counterpoint Research Global Foldable Smartphone ForecastThis year is expected to be even tougher, with Counterpoint forecasting single-digit negative growth for the market in 2025. “I don’t see many positives this year and we are actually expecting negative growth for the segment, which will be a first,” observed Senior Analyst Jene Park. “But it is definitely not a sign of the market peaking; rather it is a sign of regrouping before 2026, which is expected to be exciting and rejuvenating for the segment with the entry of Apple and a slew of clamshells.”Counterpoint Research’s latest Foldable and Rollable Display Shipment and Technology Report supports this growth view for 2026 with the forecast of a mid-double-digit YoY growth in panel procurement. “The supply chain is telling us foldable order books are filling up further out,” said Research Director Calvin Lee. “At the moment, this doesn’t look like a market that is plateauing – it looks like a market that is about to transform. And that requires a lot of planning, hence the slight pullback this year.”BackgroundCounterpoint Technology Market Research is a global research firm specializing in products in the TMT (technology, media and telecom) industry. It services major technology and financial firms with a mix of monthly reports, customized projects and detailed analyses of the mobile and technology markets. Its key analysts are seasoned experts in the high-tech industry.Follow Counterpoint Researchpress@counterpointresearch.com

Why is America Intentionally Destroying its Global Influence?

youtube.com/watch?v=0f0vuCycOT

Paul Warburg, creator behind The Icarus Project illustrating the ignorance, wrong path forward and wrong decisions the current Trump administration are taking with their current policy. America in decline by weak leadership with no vision... erratic and plain wrong, estranging long term allies...

TLDR: Cassandra letting you know to expect lean years ahead, if you live in an information economy.

I don't know if it's the SARS2. Maybe it's the attention economy; maybe it's accumulated exposure to heavy metals, plastics (equivalent to "an unused crayon" in each brain[1]), PFAS, etc.; maybe it's permanently elevated baseline CO2 levels; maybe it's something else.

But it's REALLY depressing to talk to people in their 30s and older who, in 2019, were clever.

Nurses, accountants, business leaders. Folks who were quite sharp!

Now it's a struggle to convey simple ideas, let alone to analyze. Inference, working memory set size and retention time, linguistic expressivity, even simple math (division by 2 kind of thing) - some of these folks have regressed back into early grade school, in terms of cognitive competence.

It's gonna be hard as this plays out, as these people will be cognitively disabled in place and won't want to leave jobs they are no longer able to perform. Institutions too perforated will collapse. These folks aren't going to want to do physical labour, and in many cases aren't healthy enough to now (THAT one IS the COVID, though, folks).

I see some of these institutions failing in real time right now. It burns more resources to slow fail but many of these folks will be unemployable.

And employment isn't everything! But labour IS how we survive as individuals and as a species, and this drastic reduction in summed output means lean years are ahead.

That's barring unlikely techno-miracles. Treatment that cures Long COVID cognitive disruption WOULD take a miracle though, because neurons don't really grow back much at all. Treatment that cures Long COVID fatigue and PEM would soften the fall.

If you're reading this, the info is not likely news, but sometimes it's hard to make out the forest for all the trees. You've heard Cassandra; sorry that you are cursed* to be unable to change it, but maybe you'll be able to suffer less as it happens.

[1] nature.com/articles/d41586-025
[*] (unless you're a medical researcher, in which case, THANK YOU and may your work bear fruit!!!)

www.nature.comYour brain is full of microplastics: are they harming you?Plastics have infiltrated every recess of the planet, including your lungs, kidneys and other sensitive organs. Scientists are scrambling to understand their effects on health.

A quotation from Victor Hugo

Thus it was that with the shadows deepening about him, with his hopes fading one after another, Monsieur Mabeuf had remained serene, rather childishly but profoundly so. His spiritual states resembled the swing of a pendulum. Once set in motion by an illusion, the swing continued for a long time, even after the illusion had vanished. A clock does not stop the moment one loses the key.
 
[C’est ainsi qu’à travers cet obscurcissement qui se faisait autour de lui, toutes ses espérances s’éteignant l’une après l’autre, M. Mabeuf était resté serein, un peu puérilement, mais très profondément. Ses habitudes d’esprit avaient le va-et-vient d’un pendule. Une fois monté par une illusion, il allait très longtemps, même quand l’illusion avait disparu. Une horloge ne s’arrête pas court au moment précis où l’on en perd la clef.]

Victor Hugo (1802-1885) French writer
Les Misérables, Part 3 “Marius,” Book 5 “The Excellence of Misfortune,” ch. 4 (3.5.4) (1862) [tr. Denny (1976)]

Sourcing, notes, alternate translations: wist.info/hugo-victor/75017/

A quotation from Hugo

However, as we have just pointed out, brains which are absorbed in some bit of wisdom, or folly, or, as it often happens, in both at once, are but slowly accessible to the things of actual life. Their own destiny is a far-off thing to them. There results from such concentration a passivity, which, if it were the outcome of reasoning, would resemble philosophy. One declines, descends, trickles away, even crumbles away, and yet is hardly conscious of it one’s self. It always ends, it is true, in an awakening, but the awakening is tardy. In the meantime, it seems as though we held ourselves neutral in the game which is going on between our happiness and our unhappiness. We are the stake, and we look on at the game with indifference.
 
[Du reste, comme nous venons de l’indiquer, les cerveaux absorbés dans une sagesse, ou dans une folie, ou, ce qui arrive souvent, dans les deux à la fois, ne sont que très lentement perméables aux choses de la vie. Leur propre destin leur est lointain. Il résulte de ces concentrations-là une passivité qui, si elle était raisonnée, ressemblerait à la philosophie. On décline, on descend, on s’écoule, on s’écroule même, sans trop s’en apercevoir. Cela finit toujours, il est vrai, par un réveil, mais tardif. En attendant, il semble qu’on soit neutre dans le jeu qui se joue entre notre bonheur et notre malheur. On est l’enjeu, et l’on regarde la partie avec indifférence.]

Victor Hugo (1802-1885) French writer
Les Misérables, Part 3 “Marius,” Book 5 “The Excellence of Misfortune,” ch. 4 (3.5.4) (1862) [tr. Hapgood (1887)]

Sourcing, notes, alternate translations: wist.info/hugo-victor/74854/

Had this article shared with me today: fortune.com/2025/02/11/ai-impa

I went through an array of #emotions. At first, I found it #awkward and #discomforting. I made jokes:

Wait, you mean people aren't thinking #critically and growing #cognitively because the #digitalization of the world is doing it for them....and it's making them (gasps) #dumber!!?? #AI is making it worse?? Is this #Idiocracy? 👀 😞 Am I being #punked right now!? Where's Ashton and the cameras! 📹

Then, I had a deep #selfrealization:

Jokes aside - This is a #sensitive topic for me. I talk about it in my closest circle too often. Unfortunately, I have a front seat to the steep cognitive #decline of some close #friends and #family members for years now, and it makes me sad - not because of disease or "old age", simply because of too much screen time and no new cognitive #stimulation. I see too many people purposefully avoiding nearly anything #cerebral, if they even approach them at all. I have many days where I wish the #Internet didn't exist - for a multitude of reasons, but this is a big one. I'm not trying to be "old fashioned" or #sarcastic, I'm just #disappointed in how we #humanz have grown to depend on #technology as a #crutch, rather than using it as the #tool it was invented to be. As the article eludes to, these technologies are supposed to #complement human #evolution, not #supplement it.

(part 1)

Fortune · AI might already be warping our brains, leaving our judgment and critical thinking ‘atrophied and unprepared,’ warns new studyBy Chloe Berger

We recently had a documentary series on television about former advanced #civilisations that disappeared into nothingness quite suddenly. Some were unlucky with a volcanic eruptions or nature disasters, but many sledded down a shit run on a cascade of wrong decisions and ideologies. I missed the episode about the 21th century USA.

But the series was comforting: other civilisations always step in. And a lush green jungle grows over the ruins.

'Royal' Mail may (will) cut deliveries for 2nd class post.

I see it now, this is Beeching for 2025. Capacity will go, the equivalent of feeder lines will wither and we will be left with nothing - a Tory and Lib Dem dream, enabled by Labour. I am sure the new owner will have asset stripped before the final closure.

theguardian.com/business/2025/

The Guardian · Royal Mail should cut second-class delivery days, says regulator OfcomBy Joanna Partridge

#Political Logic of #Trump’s International #Threats. Renaming Gulf of #Mexico is a lot simpler than building the wall. Since winning 2nd term #Trump has made curious pivot to a kind of performative #imperialism..acquiring #Greenland.. #taunting #Canada by referring to its prime minister [who resigned] as a “governor” and vaguely threatening a#nnexation. He began demanding a return of #PanamaCanal, which US ceded more than 4 decades ago. #cognitive #decline #dementia theatlantic.com/politics/archi

The Atlantic · Donald Trump’s Performative ImperialismBy Jonathan Chait