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Here's how you can save over £1000 on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7

Here's how you can save over £1000 on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7

Stuff.tv5 days ago
Been eyeing the new Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 or Flip 7 and wincing at the price tag? I know, me too. The new flagship folding phones offer some big upgrades over the previous generation, but they don't come cheap. Fortunately, Vodafone is offering a rather tempting deal: trade in your current phone and you could save over £1000 on Samsung's new foldables.
Read more: A week with the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 convinced me this is the new foldable to beat
You can save up to £1032 on the Fold 7 – made up of £504 off the device and airtime plus up to £528 for your trade-in. For the Flip 7 and the more affordable Flip 7 FE, the total trade-in saving caps at £528 – still not bad considering they already start at relatively low prices for flagship foldables.
When you trade your old device in, you get a guaranteed value straight away. You can apply it as a monthly discount or use it to pay off your current phone plan. Vodafone also throws in its Lifetime Service Promise where you can get repairs and services done for free. You can spread contract payments over 36 months at 0% APR with flexible upfront costs and even upgrade from just three months in. Plus, you can sign up to Vodafone's rewards and gadget insurance that uses approved parts.
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 is available from £54 a month (plus a £50 upfront cost), based on a 36-month Phone Plan and 24-month Unlimited Max Airtime Plan – with a £22 monthly saving from trade-in applied for two years. The Z Flip 7 comes in at £27 a month (also £50 upfront), while the Flip 7 FE goes even lower at £21.50 a month (£40 upfront). Each of these prices also includes a £22 trade-in saving per month for 24 months.
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Here's how you can save over £1000 on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7
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Stuff.tv

time5 days ago

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Here's how you can save over £1000 on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7

Been eyeing the new Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 or Flip 7 and wincing at the price tag? I know, me too. The new flagship folding phones offer some big upgrades over the previous generation, but they don't come cheap. Fortunately, Vodafone is offering a rather tempting deal: trade in your current phone and you could save over £1000 on Samsung's new foldables. Read more: A week with the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 convinced me this is the new foldable to beat You can save up to £1032 on the Fold 7 – made up of £504 off the device and airtime plus up to £528 for your trade-in. For the Flip 7 and the more affordable Flip 7 FE, the total trade-in saving caps at £528 – still not bad considering they already start at relatively low prices for flagship foldables. When you trade your old device in, you get a guaranteed value straight away. You can apply it as a monthly discount or use it to pay off your current phone plan. Vodafone also throws in its Lifetime Service Promise where you can get repairs and services done for free. You can spread contract payments over 36 months at 0% APR with flexible upfront costs and even upgrade from just three months in. Plus, you can sign up to Vodafone's rewards and gadget insurance that uses approved parts. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 is available from £54 a month (plus a £50 upfront cost), based on a 36-month Phone Plan and 24-month Unlimited Max Airtime Plan – with a £22 monthly saving from trade-in applied for two years. The Z Flip 7 comes in at £27 a month (also £50 upfront), while the Flip 7 FE goes even lower at £21.50 a month (£40 upfront). Each of these prices also includes a £22 trade-in saving per month for 24 months.

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With one exception, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic is everything I want from a smartwatch

Stuff Verdict Ultra-inspired looks and expanded fitness features take the Galaxy Watch 8 Classic that bit further upmarket. This distinctive smartwatch isn't a longevity champ, but impresses almost everywhere else. Pros Rotating bezel great for offscreen interaction Comprehensive health and fitness features Snappy performance and clean UI Cons Squircle shape won't be to all tastes Not the longest-lasting Wear OS watch Introduction The Galaxy Watch 8 Classic feels like Samsung attempting to please everyone at once. The firm's latest smartwatch brings back one fan favourite feature, inherits the design from its flagship wearable, and doubles down on fitness features. It's also first out the door with on-wrist Gemini smarts. 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Find out more about how we test and rate products. Design & build: squared away It's not quite the dominating presence that the Galaxy Watch Ultra was, but the Watch 8 Classic is still a sizeable bit of wristwear. It reimagines the bigger brother's styling, again setting a circular screen inside a square bezel, but slimming things down a bit at the sides. A coin-edge bezel then sits on top, rotating with a satisfying click as you bi-directionally scroll through onscreen menus. I'm convinced this dual approach is the best wearable input method, letting you tap and swipe the touchscreen while stationary but not having to hit tiny touch targets while exercising – or simply when you don't have both hands free. As for the squircle shape? Personally I'm a fan, because I like my watches to make a statement, and means there's more case between the screen and anything you might accidentally bash it on. 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It's an OLED, so of course colours look brilliantly vibrant and blacks are properly black. Pick the right watch face and that inner bezel disappears entirely. That's doubly true for the always-on display mode, if you don't mind the associated hit to battery life. Brightness has jumped up dramatically this year. A peak 3000 nits means this is a serious shiner, with zero visibility issues on even the brightest of days. It helps that viewing angles are excellent. The ambient light sensor is quick to react to changing environments, so you're not left waiting for it to boost brightness outdoors – or blinded by a bright screen when you step inside. Sapphire crystal glass should withstand most scrapes and scratches; my review unit still looked box-fresh after several weeks of wear. Interface: how about Now? Samsung's home-grown Exynos W1000 chipset is still running the show; the 3nm silicon hasn't changed at all from the Watch 7 series, and it's still paired with 2GB of RAM. Happily there's still more than enough grunt to keep Wear OS running smoothly, even with Samsung's extensive One UI customisations on top. There's a welcome consistency here with Samsung's latest smartphones, with familiar icons and pre-installed watch apps. The firm's in-house apps are the defaults for things like contactless payments, but with full access to the Play Store you can quickly swap to Google Wallet if you like. I'm more than happy with the 64GB of storage the Watch 8 Classic gets standard; there's enough room for loads of third-party apps, plus more workout playlists than I could possibly get through in a single session. Tiles are now grouped onto single screens now, saving you a few swipes or twists of the bezel. Notifications are also grouped into the firm's Now Bar, which also hosts media controls right on your watch face. I definitely found I was spending less time finding relevant information than on previous iterations, which sounds like a job well done by the software team. This is also the first Wear OS watch to put Google Gemini on your wrist. As well as controlling your smart home appliances with your voice, compatibility with Samsung's own ecosystem means you can ask Gemini to start a workout based on a metric like burning calories. It also understands multi-step actions, like recommendations on locations near you, paired with messaging invitations to you friends. It's slick, though I still can't bring myself to talk into my tech in public. Health & fitness: catch some Zs Samsung's watches have never been short on exercise tracking ability, and the Watch 8 Classic is no exception; it'll monitor heart rate, blood oxygen levels, skin temperature, step count and exertion levels for any workout, as you'd expect, and goes a lot more granular for certain exercises like running. 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Any bad morning moods are usually reflected in a low Energy Score. There's now an option to monitor your vascular load during sleep, and if you're in the UK or Europe, the Galaxy Watch 8 series also gains certified sleep apnea detection. Basically if you're losing Zs for any reason, this wearable will clue you in as to why. I'm less sold on the Antioxidant Index, which measures your carotenoid levels by sticking your thumb over the watch's rear optical sensor. If you're low, it'll suggest you munch some fruits or veggies rich in the stuff. Battery life: more of the same With a 445mAh cell stuffed inside, the Watch 8 Classic has a roughly 8% larger battery capacity than the Watch 7 series. With a slightly smaller screen as well, I was expecting it to last a fair bit longer between charges, but the reality was a closer match to the outgoing model. I typically got to the end of a second day of wear before the Watch needed a trip to its magnetic charging puck. That's roughly 30 hours, though admittedly that was with the always-on display mode switched on. With it off, you'll get closer to 40 – or into a third day, depending on when you first strapped it to your wrist. That means Samsung still lags behind the OnePlus Watch 3, which uses two chipsets to stretch comfortably into a fifth day. It's still more than the most recent Pixel Watch can manage, though. Samsung's charging puck is less fussy about placement than OnePlus' pogo pin cradle, too, so I never worried about it not charging because I hadn't lined it up perfectly. Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic verdict With most of the feel of a Galaxy Watch Ultra, at a price that's (a little) kinder to your wallet, the Watch 8 Classic is another Samsung success story. By spacing its Classic-badged wearables, the firm has also sensibly left enough time for existing owners to think about upgrading. This is about as feature-rich as Android wearables get, and there's been no skimping on the health and fitness front either. While battery life isn't class-leading, and some will find the chunkier looks a turn-off, it has no real weak links anywhere else. It commands a premium over rival smartwatches, so you've got to decide if the rotating bezel and distinctive styling are worth paying extra for. If you're already entrenched in the Samsung ecosystem, I expect they will be. Stuff Says… Score: 5/5 Ultra-inspired looks and expanded fitness features take the Galaxy Watch 8 Classic that bit further upmarket. This distinctive-looking smartwatch isn't a longevity champ, but impresses almost everywhere else. Pros Rotating bezel great for offscreen interaction Comprehensive health and fitness features Snappy performance and clean UI Cons Squircle shape won't be to all tastes Not the longest-lasting Wear OS watch Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic technical specifications Screen 1.34in, 437×437 AMOLED CPU Samsung Exynos W1000 Memory 2GB Storage 64GB Operating system Wear OS 16 w/ One UI 8.0 Watch Battery 445mAh Durability IP68/5ATM/MIL-STD-810 Dimensions 46x46x10.6mm, 63.5g

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