Samsung teases a Galaxy Z Fold Ultra
You can use voice controls on the phone while it's folded to ask its AI assistant to text your family or friends and to find a restaurant you can eat at, Samsung said. You can finish unsent work emails, browse online, game or capture photos while the phone is in its folded state. Unfolded, it becomes an immersive entertainment hub or a workspace. Samsung said its Galaxy AI features will be designed specifically for the foldable form.
It's been rumored for a while now that the company is launching a tri-fold phone this year. The animation in the teaser didn't show a tri-fold form factor, so unless this is a redirection by Samsung, it's likely another device altogether. If it is indeed an Ultra version of the Galaxy Z Fold, we can only wait and see if Samsung will sell the ordinary Z Folds at a lower price or if it will add several hundred to its pricing for the Ultra variant.

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Digital Trends
2 hours ago
- Digital Trends
7 moments from Samsung history that shaped the Galaxy Z Fold 7
The new Galaxy Z Fold 7 is the best foldable for most people — especially in the US — but it costs $2,000. Despite the high price, Samsung has recorded record-breaking sales for the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Galaxy Z Flip 7, a fact made even more surprising considering Samsung's current market dominance is less than two decades old. Millions of Samsung foldables have been sold, but I recall a time when selling a Samsung phone priced under $100 was a challenge. I worked across all the carrier stores in the UK, and at this time, Samsung had such a poor reputation that it was a struggle to sell Samsung phones before the launch of Android and the subsequent Galaxy S lineup. Yet, within a few short years, Samsung became the dominant force in Android, playing a crucial role in halting the runaway success of the early iPhones. Samsung was everywhere and fast becoming the go-to alternative to those who wanted a credible alternative to the iPhone. Recommended Videos How did Samsung turn it around? Having used and reviewed Samsung phones before the first Galaxy S, I've experienced all the ups and downs as Samsung has established its dominance. Here are five key moments in Samsung's history that helped shape the new Galaxy Z Fold 7. May 2011: Galaxy S II — The Samsung Name Did you know that before the Galaxy S II, many Samsung phones didn't bear the company's name? Instead, they would often be released by carriers under custom names, running software that was preloaded with far too many useless apps, and handing software updates over to carriers to dictate the release schedule. The Galaxy S II changed this and is pivotal to Samsung's history. It was released on three of the four major carriers under the actual name, the only holdout being Sprint, which branded it the Samsung Epic 4G Touch. As a byproduct of the marketing around the product, Samsung began cementing its place in consumers' minds. Had Samsung continued custom names like it did with the original Galaxy S — T-Mobile had the Samsung Vibrant, AT&T had the Samsung Captivate, Verizon offered the Samsung Fascinate, and Sprint branded it as the Samsung Epic 4G — it would have been much harder for Samsung to build customer trust. In hindsight, this would be key over the following year. Sep 2011: Galaxy Note — The Big Phone Era Just months after the Galaxy S II, Samsung made one of its biggest contributions to smartphones with the launch of the Galaxy Note. Fourteen years later, it's clear that Samsung single-handedly launched the big-screen era that every phone has followed since. The original Galaxy Note was criticized for being too large with its 5.3-inch screen, but in hindsight, this would now be considered a mini phone by current smartphone expectations. Instead, the obsession with fitting as large a screen as possible in your pocket while keeping it portable has led companies to the best folding phones. However, even a great phone needs something else, and these two phones set up Samsung to cement its place in history just a year later. May 2012: Galaxy S III — The Olympics On 29 May 2012, Samsung launched the Galaxy S III. Two days later, it was launched in the UK, just two months before the Olympics came to London. All of this was synchronized, and for good reason: Samsung's sponsorship of the London Olympics directly contributed to its current success. Samsung's sponsorship revolved around making the Galaxy S III synonymous with the Olympics, and it worked extremely well. This sponsorship enabled Samsung to reach hundreds of millions of potential customers, and the Galaxy S3 London 2012 Olympic Edition marked the beginning of a tradition where Samsung creates custom Olympic-branded smartphones for each athlete at every Olympic Games. I remember working in retail on Oxford Street during the Olympics and in the months that followed. It should come as no surprise that just weeks later, when Apple launched the iPhone 5, Samsung's positioning and marketing strategy paid off even further. For the first time, customers who sought stock of the new iPhone 5 (to no avail) would then enquire about the Galaxy S III instead. Aug 2012: Galaxy Note II — The Multitasking Maestro A few short months after the Galaxy S III came another phone, and one that has directly impacted every Samsung phone made since. If you've used a Samsung flagship phone in the past decade, you'll know that it features an excellent multitasking feature. You may not know, however, that this feature first launched on the Galaxy Note II. Since then, every Samsung flagship has had multitasking features, and coupled with the S-Pen — a staple of the Galaxy Note — it introduced the concept of true multitasking on mobile devices. Over a decade later, Samsung remains the only company to invest in this, yet it is core to taking full advantage of the larger 8-inch main display on Samsung's new folding phones. Feb 2019: Galaxy S10 — Bye TouchWiz, hello One UI Between 2012 and 2019, Samsung grew to complete dominance in smartphones, having fought off the competition to capture the number one spot in global smartphone market share following the launch of the Galaxy S III. Each Samsung phone that launched in the years that followed continued to press the company's advantage, but in hindsight, many of these weren't as important as they seemed at the time. As we'll cover at the end, one particular moment continues to have an impact today. In February 2019, Samsung launched the Galaxy S10 and with it, One UI. A complete redesign of the software interface was the result of Samsung shedding its legacy software interface in favor of a new, more streamlined software experience. Aug 2022: Galaxy Z Fold 4 — Peak Folding Phone Before the Galaxy Z Fold 7, the Galaxy Z Fold 4 was the best Samsung folding phone, mostly as the Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Galaxy Z Fold 6 were notably iterative upgrades over previous generations. The Galaxy Z Fold 4 reduced the size of the hinge and the bezels around the display, while tweaking the screen's aspect ratios and implementing a new camera system from the Galaxy S22 line. The latter remains to this day: the Galaxy Z Fold 7 has the same 200MP camera as the Galaxy S25 Ultra — at least on paper — and previous versions since the Fold 4 have shared camera features with the flagship Galaxy S lineup. This was before the launch of thinner folding phones like the OnePlus Open (2023), Honor Magic V3 (2024), and Oppo Find N5 (2025), all of which are considerably thinner than Samsung's previous best. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 changes this considerably and continues a trend of Samsung making its phones thinner and lighter. Jan 2025: Galaxy S25 Ultra — The 200MP beast It would be remiss to think about all the Galaxy Z Fold 7 features without mentioning the Galaxy S25 Ultra, and specifically the 200MP main camera. Although the Galaxy Z Fold 7 also has a 200MP main camera, it's 18% smaller than the Galaxy S25 Ultra, yet as my testing showed, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 camera is just as capable as Samsung's imaging powerhouse. The Galaxy S25 Ultra isn't the first Samsung phone to use a 200MP camera, but several years of Samsung's marketing around this feature have piqued customer interest in the camera and the rest of the lineup. The fifth-generation Ultra delivers the best Samsung Ultra experience, and it's a key part of the marketing positioning for the Galaxy Z Fold 7. The Galaxy S25 Edge shows that Samsung is ready to bring better camera features to its flagship foldable, and the 200MP main camera solves a key complaint about previous versions. Plenty of other twists and turns These are just seven of the phones from Samsung's history that have shaped the Galaxy Z Fold 7. There's that phone, which explains why Samsung is cautious about its batteries, but as a result, the company's battery optimization is second-to-none. Samsung also deserves a lot of praise for how it handled that incident, and in my opinion, it's still a benchmark for other phone makers to meet. Then there's every foldable so far, with Samsung iterating and slimming the design and thickness of each version. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 bucks the trend of iterative changes, and instead, it delivers the biggest change to Samsung's foldable lineup so far. Hindsight is wonderful, but I have little doubt that fifteen years from now, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 will be one of the most impactful Samsung phones during this time. Having used every Samsung Galaxy flagship phone to date, I already know the Galaxy Z Fold 7 will be a phone I'll remember for a long time.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why Did Micron Stock Drop Today?
Key Points Samsung says the market for HBM memory for artificial intelligence (AI) functions is getting oversupplied. Samsung will cut prices on the most powerful HBM3E product in an attempt to win market share. Wells Fargo says this is bad news for Micron. 10 stocks we like better than Micron Technology › Shares of computer memory-maker Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) tumbled 5.2% through 11:25 a.m. ET Thursday -- but as far as I can tell, it wasn't anything Micron did to deserve this. Instead, it was Samsung that's to blame. What Samsung said about high-bandwidth memory (HBM) As WCCFTech reports this morning, Samsung has just announced it's lowering prices on HBM3E (that's "High Bandwidth Memory 3 Enhanced," currently the most capable kind of HBM memory, designed for use in artificial intelligence and machine learning). Samsung explained that on the one hand, it hasn't been able to win as much HBM business from Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) as it would like, while on the other hand, the HBM market seems oversupplied right now. And the solution to both problems -- to help Samsung move product -- is to lower prices. Is Micron stock a sell? For Micron, this poses a problem -- because Micron also wants to sell HBM3E memory, and now Samsung has effectively declared a price war in the HBM market. In order to fight it, Micron will have to lower its own prices (hurting Micron's revenue and profit), or else it will lose market share to Samsung (also hurting Micron's revenue and profit!) And if that sounds like a lose-lose proposition for Micron, that's because it is. In a note on The Fly this morning, Wells Fargo warned that Samsung's action will "impact market prices," drying up much of the premium in prices between HBM3E and plain-vanilla DRAM memory, perhaps as early as H2 2025 (i.e., now). Priced at just 20x trailing earnings, Micron stock may not look too expensive. But if profits are about to dry up as Samsung's price cuts take hold, Micron stock could look expensive in a hurry. Savvy investors might want to sell before that happens. Should you invest $1,000 in Micron Technology right now? Before you buy stock in Micron Technology, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Micron Technology wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $638,629!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,098,838!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,049% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 182% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 29, 2025 Wells Fargo is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Why Did Micron Stock Drop Today? was originally published by The Motley Fool Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


CNET
7 hours ago
- CNET
Bark Phone Lets You Prioritize Your Children's Safety and Right Now, You Can Save $30
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