logo
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Display Can Be Folded 500,000 Times, According to Testing

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Display Can Be Folded 500,000 Times, According to Testing

CNET22-07-2025
Fold, fold and fold again. It doesn't matter how many times you fold the Galaxy Z Fold 7 open and closed -- it's highly unlikely to give out on you.
Samsung Display (SDC) announced Tuesday that its latest foldable OLED panel "remained fully functional after a 500,000-fold durability test," more than doubling its previous benchmark of 200,000 folds. The company says this screen is the one you can find on Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 7 phone.
Bureau Veritas, a French leader in testing, inspection, and certification, tested the screen with 500,000 folds over a 13-day period at a temperature of 25°C (77°F).
For those of you trying to wrap your head around the math, half a million folds translates to the average user folding their phone 100 times a day for 10 years, or prolific users doing 200 folds a day for 6 years. Samsung Display -- a separate company from Samsung itself -- says the durability results prove that "durability is no longer a limiting factor in the lifespan of foldable smartphones."
"As foldable OLED enters its seventh year of commercialization, we've achieved another meaningful breakthrough in both durability and design," Hojung Lee, EVP at Samsung Display, said in a press release. "This new panel... builds consumer confidence in foldable OLED durability."
Bulletproof glass technology has helped Samsung Display develop its creaseless screens. SDC borrowed from the concept and increased the thickness of its Ultra Thin Glass (UTG) -- the outermost glass on the screen -- by 50%. SDC also added high-elastic adhesive to each screen layer, thereby enhancing fold recovery performance by four times the previous design.
CNET reported last week that Apple has tapped Samsung Display to manufacture screens for Apple's first foldable iPhone, set to launch in summer 2026.
With the era foldable phones upon us, these are the best ones in 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lectra's Maximilien Abadie on Reshaping Fashion's Future With AI and a Consumer-first Mindset
Lectra's Maximilien Abadie on Reshaping Fashion's Future With AI and a Consumer-first Mindset

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Lectra's Maximilien Abadie on Reshaping Fashion's Future With AI and a Consumer-first Mindset

PARIS — Behind the scenes of fashion's digital reinvention sits Lectra, the France-based technology company quietly shaping much of what we wear. In June, the company appointed Maximilien Abadie deputy chief executive officer. Abadie joined the company 14 years ago, and was pivotal in its acquisitions of traceability platform TextileGenesis and trend analysis tool Launchmetrics, the latest in a flurry of deals he has spearheaded since 2018. More from WWD E.l.f. Beauty Sees Higher Conversions With This AI Shade Finder Browzwear Acquires AI-generated Model Maker A Showcase for Innovation Comes to Times Square More than one third of the world's clothing is designed by brands with Lectra technologies, according to the company's data, reflecting its widespread behind-the-scenes influence in manufacturing. With fashion contributing more than half of Lectra's revenue, the industry will be 'the vast majority' of the company's future investment strategy, Abadie said. Lectra started as design and sizing software for the fashion industry, later expanding into production equipment. The group now has a SaaS-oriented acquisition strategy, with more expected in the coming months to support its growth. For Abadie, who stepped into his latest role in June, Lectra's ambitions stretch into steering the fashion world into what he calls the 'fourth industrial revolution' — a future defined by AI, cloud computing and real-time data analysis. The shift is fundamental and will boost brands' revenues, as well as sustainability, he believes. 'Fashion is a loop,' said Abadie. 'You need to create, manufacture and market quicker than before. And before the steps were siloed — first you were focusing on create, then manufacture, then market. But now everything starts from the market.' Abadie believes we're in the midst of a move from the top-down 'push' model of the past, when brands would dictate trends and drive production, to a 'pull' model, where consumer demand influences everything from design to manufacturing and distribution. Brands must understand consumer demand, identify trends, determine pricing and position products competitively — all at the same time. 'Everything goes in parallel now,' he said. It's a shift that will fundamentally change the fashion industry, Abadie asserted. In response to this transformation, Lectra has pursued an aggressive acquisition strategy, snapping up six companies over the past few years. Among them is Launchmetrics, acquired in January 2024, which provides brands with analytics tools to evaluate ROI from runway shows and media campaigns. It goes beyond the runway — though that, too, is expanding with invitation and event management tools — to assess consumer brand sentiment. Despite ongoing economic challenges across the fashion sector, Lectra reported a 10 percent year-over-year increase in revenue for the 2024 fiscal year to 526.7 million euros. Launchmetrics, consolidated as of January 2024, contributed 41.2 million euros, and fashion overall accounted for 50 percent of the company's 2024 revenue. Lanchmetrics' latest initiative aims to analyze consumer perception through AI-driven analysis of buzz, mapping words like 'responsible' or 'innovative' to track how brands are perceived in real time. 'We track every post on social media, every magazine and newspaper,' Abadie said. Using an algorithm, it can gauge if response is positive or negative, and analyze what images are most popular by use in articles or posts. This kind of visibility is increasingly valuable in a fast-paced environment where consumer attention must be maintained constantly amid the clamor of Instagram and TikTok, and 'new-in' drops. Abadie described this as a step closer to the 'see-now, buy-now' model, where new products can reach consumers within weeks of being showcased on the runway, instead of months. 'Products now, they are coming to the store on a regular basis — if not every month, twice a month or every week,' Abadie said. 'So the goal for the brands is really how they can attract consumers on a regular basis to the stores, how they can create several reasons for the consumers to go back.' That same real-time agility is also reshaping production timelines. Lectra's technologies allow brands to adapt to be closer to a 'see-now-buy-now' model — products paraded on the runway can hit the shelves within a couple of weeks, rather than months. 'By interconnecting people around the same data…all those creative mindsets now, they can get a product in the hands of the consumers in a few weeks,' said Abadie. 'That's a tremendous shift.' On the sustainability front, Lectra's TextileGenesis platform seeks to improve supply chain transparency by tracing certified fibers such as organic cotton and recycled polyester. The system uses blockchain-inspired technology to track materials across the supply chain and flag discrepancies, such as mismatches between the volume of garments produced and the available supply of certified fiber. If they don't match, there has been some mixing of fibers or misreporting along the way. 'If you are not, as a brand, capable to know who is behind your supply chain, you cannot master it,' Abadie said. 'You cannot influence the decisions, you cannot make commitments.' The platform has tracked 2.6 billion garments to date — up from 2 billion at the beginning of the year — with over 15,000 suppliers across Asia, Europe, and South America participating. 'Without traceability, there's a risk of fraud. There's a risk of greenwashing,' Abadie said. 'That's what we're trying to solve.' Other manufacturing products enable real-time adjustments in production planning. According to the company, this improves agility in responding to market fluctuations, while its on-demand production platform aggregates orders and aligns manufacturing with actual demand to reduce overproduction and waste, and allow for smaller, more frequent collections. One company cited by Lectra has reportedly used the system to produce 5 million made-to-measure shirts in Vietnam for the U.S. market. Driving all of this transformation is AI — not as a buzzword, Abadie noted, but as an embedded, working reality. 'There are more and more concrete applications of AI, notably in fashion,' Abadie said. 'Our belief is that the only way to shorten lead time, to close the gap between consumers and the brands, to use material resources in a responsible manner so to avoid CO2 emissions and so on — the only way is by digitizing the task and automating processes.' The cloud, resisted a decade ago by fashion executives concerned about ensuring IP secrecy, is now essential. 'Ten years ago I had an interesting discussion with a very famous luxury company' which refused to use the cloud, said Abadie. 'Now I can tell you if you are not in the cloud, you are not competitive.' Abadie also rejected the notion that technology and creativity are in conflict. Instead, he argued, technology allows designers to iterate and execute ideas more efficiently. 'People are pitting one against the other, creativity and technology,' Abadie said. 'I don't know why. Technology is leveraging the creative mindset of everyone, because you can iterate much more than in the past.' An AI-empowered designer can test ideas, communicate specifications, and move from sketch to store faster than ever. 'If the rest of the value chain is digitized and the designer is not, then you create a conflict. Only technology can remove this barrier,' he said, noting that design does not come from the tech, but the tech is used to promote creativity. 'I think it's highly correlated — this notion of emotion and technology. Emotion starts from the product itself.' Best of WWD Retailers Leverage First Insight for ESG Alignment What Steph Curry's Sneaker NFTs Can Teach Fashion Year in Review: Brands, Retailers Go Hyper-digital in a Challenging Landscape 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

This Pixel 10 leak offers another dose of that stunning Indigo hue
This Pixel 10 leak offers another dose of that stunning Indigo hue

Android Authority

time28 minutes ago

  • Android Authority

This Pixel 10 leak offers another dose of that stunning Indigo hue

TL;DR New marketing images of the Pixel 10 series have been leaked. The leak mainly focuses on the base model, but also includes images of the Pro and XL. After the color options for the Pixel 10 initially leaked, we threw up a poll asking our readers what their favorite color was. Out of those four options, Indigo emerged as the clear winner. Now everyone's favorite colorway is back in the spotlight in the latest Pixel 10 leak. This leak offers a glimpse at the Pro models as well. We have been treated to another helping of Pixel 10 leaks, this time from tipster Evan Blass. This leak comes in two parts: one focusing squarely on the base model and the other showcasing the whole family. As mentioned earlier, we get a healthy dose of the Pixel 10 in the new Indigo colorway. It has a similar vibe to the 'Really Blue' hue that appeared on the original Pixel phone, arguably one of the best colors Google has used for its devices. In one of the images, we also see the Frost (light blue) and Lemoncello (yellow) color options. From earlier leaks, we know that the vanilla Pixel 10 should have a 6.3-inch FHD+ display that's protected by Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2. Inside, it's expected to have a Tensor G5 chip, a 4,970mAh battery, 29W wired charging, 15W wireless charging, 12GB of RAM, and 128GB or 256GB of storage. As for that new triple camera setup, there should be a 50MP Samsung GN8 primary camera, a 13MP Sony IMX712 ultrawide camera, and an 11MP Samsung 3J1 telephoto camera. The next part of the leak features the Pro models, including the Fold. These marketing images come only days after we saw the Pixel 10 Pro from every angle. And only a day after Google's largest Pixel 10 model also leaked. Here, we see the entire series, except for the base model, in the new Moonstone colorway. We won't have to wait too much longer for the Pixel 10 series unveiling, as it's slightly less than two weeks away at this point. The next generation flagship should also be joined by the launch of the Pixel Watch 4 and Pixel Buds 2a. Follow

Samsung Will Reportedly Make iPhone Image Sensors at Texas Facility
Samsung Will Reportedly Make iPhone Image Sensors at Texas Facility

CNET

time28 minutes ago

  • CNET

Samsung Will Reportedly Make iPhone Image Sensors at Texas Facility

Samsung will reportedly begin producing a three-layer stacked image sensor for Apple's iPhone 18 in Texas. The deal with Apple will help the South Korean company avoid President Trump's strict tariffs policy and cut out Sony as the sole image sensor maker for iPhones, according to Financial Times, The three-layer stacked image sensors enable fast shooting speeds and high-frame-rate 8K video in smartphones. On Wednesday, Apple said it was "working with Samsung at its fab [semiconductor fabrication facility] in Austin, Texas, to launch an innovative new technology for making chips, which has never been used before anywhere in the world." The statement was part of Apple's overall announcement that it was launching the American Manufacturing Program, part of a $600 billion investment to increase its supply chain and manufacturing in the US. Thursday's report by Financial Times adds more clarity to what Apple's "innovative new technology" will mean for the iPhone 18. The move by Apple will allow it to avoid penalties by President Trump, who on Wednesday announced 100% percent tariffs on computer chips but added, "if you're building in the United States of America, there's no charge." Samsung is investing billions to increase manufacturing in the US, while Sony is producing iPhone image sensors in Kumamoto, Japan under a contract with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). Last month, CNET reported that Samsung Display Company -- a separate entity from Samsung -- would be producing the screens for the first iPhone foldable, reportedly to be launched next summer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store