Forget Galaxy S25 Edge — I just went hands-on with the world's thinnest phone
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
The smartphone world's getting excited for the launch of the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge, and the rumored iPhone 17 Air that will similarly be a super-thin version of a flagship phone we know and love. But nobody — not even we tech journalists — can handle either of these phones yet.
Fortunately, Tecno, a Chinese phone maker, has come to MWC 2025 with its Spark Slim concept, a super-skinny phone you can already try out. Which, of course, I did as soon as the conference hall opened.
The headline spec of the Tecno Spark Slim is its 5.75mm (0.23 inches) thickness. For reference, the Galaxy S25 Edge is tipped to be about 6mm (0.24 inches) thick, and the iPhone 17 Air 5.5mm (0.22) thick.
With the curved screen and soft ceramic back panel, the phone basically melts into your hand like an open foldable phone, but without the huge palm-spanning area of those devices' inner screens.
Despite the slim design, Tecno's managed to fit a 5,200 mAh battery inside the phone, which can be charged at up to 45W. That's a larger capacity than you get in regular-sized phones like the Galaxy S25 Ultra (5,000 mAh), and shows that despite the obvious focus on a slim design, Tecno didn't ignore the other needs a phone user has.
That continues with the other specs. The Spark Slim features a 6.78-inch AMOLED screen with a 3K resolution and a 144Hz refresh rate for smooth and detailed scrolling. It's rated as 4,500 nits at peak brightness, too.
On the back of the phone are two 50MP cameras, with a 13MP selfie camera and a punch-hole on the front. Decorative lights around the back cameras add even more personality to the Spark Slim.
But perhaps the wildest thing the Tecno representatives explained to me was that the 144-gram (5.07 ounces) weight of the phone is heavier than the original version of this concept.
The company had to add more weight to the Spark Slim in order to make it feel better to use, which is a mind-boggling piece of design work.
Sadly, I now have to tell you that the Spark Slim is not commercially available.
At least not yet. Tecno's primarily focused on developing phone markets such as Africa, and a phone like this would be way too expensive for regions like that. But the company apparently hopes that there's enough demand for the Spark Slim to make it worth releasing a production version.
We still don't know much about the Galaxy S25 Edge, other than it's a real device that's likely going to be launched in the next few months. And the iPhone 17 Air is still just the stuff of rumors, even if we hopefully see it this fall along with the other iPhone 17s.
But Tecno has more than proven that the slim flagship phone is already here, and that Samsung and Apple both have plenty of room to grow, if their slim phones' specs are as far behind Tecno's as the rumors suggest.
iPhone 17 Air will reportedly have three missing features
I review phones for a living — and this is the budget phone I recommend to friends and family
I shot over 200 photos with the iPhone 16e vs Pixel 8a — here's the winner

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
32 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Samsung and Perplexity Near AI Deal
Bloomberg Technology TV Shows Samsung is close to reaching a wide-ranging deal to invest in Perplexity AI and put search technology from the artificial intelligence startup onto its devices. Bloomberg's Seth Fiegerman discusses the plans with Caroline Hyde on 'Bloomberg Technology.' (Source: Bloomberg)


Tom's Guide
42 minutes ago
- Tom's Guide
Send money in a tap — Samsung Wallet just got a game-changing upgrade
After being teased in early May, the new Tap to Transfer feature for Samsung Wallet is finally available in the United States. The new feature uses the NFC chips in Samsung devices to make peer-to-peer (P2P) payments. The feature is rolling out this week. There are some caveats as the feature becomes available. It is only available for Visa and Mastercard debit cards (and only available in the United States with US cards). Eligible cards need to be stored in your Samsung Wallet to send money to people. According to Samsung, it can be utilized to interact with recipient's cards in their digital wallets, including Samsung Wallet, Google Wallet and Apple Wallet. Additionally, Samsung says that Tap to Transfer will also work with physical debit cards (Visa or Mastercard) that support tap-to-pay. Like Google and Apple Wallet, Galaxy phone owners can store a number of cards, including driver's licenses, tickets, membership cards and boarding passes, to name a few. It should be noted that these transfers aren't free. On the FAQ page for the feature, it says "a 1.75% fee (minimum of $0.25) is applied to each transaction. The fee only applies to the sender." Currently, there is no fee for a "limited time," but it's not clear when that window will close. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. There is also a limit to how much money you can send via Tap to Transfer. It won't take any payments less than $,1 and you can only send $500 in a single transaction with a daily limit of $500. As for device compatibility, you need to be running Android 12 or higher. The feature is now available, but it is rolling out. If you don't have immediate access to Tap to Transfer, please allow a day or so.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Venture funding is creating a global AI divide, even as sovereign wealth funds and tech unicorns try to bridge the gap
Venture investors may claim to have 10-year time horizons, but that future tech-scape seems to always have a U.S. bias. I started my tech reporting career at a publication cheekily called Rest of World during the early days of COVID, when the free-money era let VCs plow capital into emerging regions like South and Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America in record sums. That trend evaporated when high inflation hit. Though global venture investing has ticked back up, it's been tilted by massive AI deals, which are almost entirely aimed at U.S. companies. According to an April report from KPMG, the U.S. accounted for nearly 75% of global venture investment in the first quarter of 2025. I spent last week in Malaysia (still recovering from that brutal 18-hour flight to Singapore), where Fortune hosted a conference alongside a trilateral summit between the Association of Southeast Asia Nations, the Gulf Cooperation Council, and China. Unsurprisingly, AI was top of mind for the assembled governmental and economic leaders. But their perspective was one we don't usually get from the U.S. Here's the simple summary: Everyone wants AI, but they don't know if they have the capital to build it on their own terms. In the U.S., we're accustomed to hearing about some new multi-billion-dollar startup funding deal seemingly every week, but this is not a reality for most of the world's countries, let alone regions. And that's not to mention the immense energy demands needed to supply the computing power for the AI revolution. One revealing panel featured Mohamed Hassan Alsuwaidi, who has a dual role as the United Arab Emirates' minister of investment and the CEO of one of the country's top sovereign wealth funds, ADQ. With billions of dollars at his disposal, he's among the more influential figures in global tech, though few readers of this newsletter have likely heard of him (partly because he gives so few interviews). With its trove of sovereign wealth funds and tech-focused leadership, the UAE is one of the best-suited 'rest of world' countries to ride the AI wave. And it has been aggressively making deals, especially under the Trump administration, including a recently announced venture with OpenAI to invest likely tens of billions of dollars into new data centers. That came right after President Donald Trump visited Abu Dhabi in May and visited a new AI campus in Abu Dhabi supplied with enough energy to power all the homes in Minnesota. But, caught in the mounting geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China, Alsuwaidi acknowledged that the UAE will never be able to compete against the two superpowers when it comes to AI. He used a metaphor, saying that U.S. and Chinese firms like OpenAI and DeepSeek want to 'boil the ocean' when it comes to hoovering up data and energy to supply their models. In contrast, smaller countries like the UAE must learn to 'fry the fish,' or use AI more strategically for their own purposes (and, ostensibly, partner with the bigger players who can spread their fishing nets). It was a surprising admission from a government official with seemingly endless resources at his disposal. But it's a concept that's hotly debated alongside the rapid rise of AI—the question of sovereignty, or how a country can control and guide the technology's development, especially when it's being created by non-state companies, often in a different language and cultural context. 'Clearly, if you want to be involved in this AI race, you need to consume a lot of power and energy,' Alsuwaidi said. In a later panel, OpenAI's chief strategy officer Jason Kwon discussed his company's new initiative, AI for Countries, which will—with some clear self-interest for OpenAI—help governments build data centers, fund local startups, and create use cases for AI. (No surprise, OpenAI chose the UAE as its first partner for the project.) Kwon admitted that many countries won't have sufficient resources to supply enough energy to create their own AI iterations, be it bespoke LLMs or applications. 'We'll provide the engine, and they're going to be providing the steering,' Kwon said, referring to OpenAI's relationship with governments. Time will have to tell how that really works. Alsuwaidi did say that the UAE's fleet of sovereign wealth funds wants to invest in emerging regions, including Latin America, Africa, and Southeast Asia, returning to those heady days of 2021 and 2022. But he added that they often cannot find infrastructure plays that make economic sense, describing the mismatch between the risk/reward in the U.S. and Europe compared to emerging regions as 'mind-boggling.' Alsuwaidi may not be your average venture investor, but it's a challenge that every VC will face as they try to envision the new AI reality, 10 years down the line. Regions like Southeast Asia clearly have as much appetite as the U.S. or Europe. But will they get the funding to satisfy it? Leo SchwartzX: @leomschwartzEmail: Submit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter here. Nina Ajemian curated the deals section of today's newsletter. Subscribe here. In total, Fortune 500 companies represent two-thirds of U.S. GDP with $19.9 trillion in revenues, and they employ 31 million people worldwide. Last year, they combined to earn $1.87 trillion in profits, up 10% from last year—and a record in dollar terms. View the full list, read a longer overview of how it shook out this year, and learn more about the companies via the stories below. A passion for music brought Jennifer Witz to the top spot at satellite radio staple SiriusXM. Now she's tasked with ushering it into a new era dominated by podcasts and subscription services. Read more IBM was once the face of technological innovation, but the company has struggled to keep up with the speed of Silicon Valley. Can a bold AI strategy and a fast-moving CEO change its trajectory? Read more This year, Alphabet became the first company on the Fortune 500 to surpass $100 billion in profits. Take an inside look at which industries, and companies, earned the most profits on this year's list. Read more UnitedHealth Group abruptly brought back former CEO Stephen Hemsley in mid-May amid a wave of legal investigations and intense stock losses. How can the insurer get back on its feet? Read more Keurig Dr. Pepper CEO Tim Cofer has made Dr. Pepper cool again and brought a new generation of products to the company. Now, the little-known industry veteran has his eyes set on Coke-and-Pepsi levels of profitability. Read more NRG Energy is the top-performing stock in the S&P 500 this year, gaining 68% on the back of big acquisitions and a bet on data centers. In his own words, CEO Larry Coben explains the company's success. Read more This story was originally featured on Sign in to access your portfolio