logo
Galaxy Z Fold 7, Z Flip 7, Watch 8 And More: Everything Announced at Samsung Unpacked

Galaxy Z Fold 7, Z Flip 7, Watch 8 And More: Everything Announced at Samsung Unpacked

CNET09-07-2025
In an all-too common (and annoying) tactic these days, Samsung has been drip teasing its "Ultra-experience" for more than a month prior to Unpacked, despite the lack of anything named "Ultra" besides a new blue version of the Watch that bears the name. And we've gotten hinting views of the new Galaxy Z Fold 7, Z Flip 7 and 7 FE and Watch 8 (and the Watch 8 Classic), which are now officially official.
All the devices debut One UI 8, Samsung's skin and apps for Android 16, which brings a new look of its own and increased Gemini AI integration to its partner's products. One UI 7 is still rolling out to Samsung's older phones. Lots of One UI 8's feature updates are agentic AI based thanks to Gemini.
Those features include AI Mode, a multistep-capable version of Circle to Search, plus Gemini Live to search via the camera and perform actions across apps. The phones come with 6 months of Google AI Pro, Google AI Ultra's affordable sibling, too. Along with the usual anticipatory reminders, summaries, writing help and so on. Google wants you. Samsung has updated its security to sandboxed apps that are encrypted on-device.
On the other hand, Senior Reporter Imad Khan opined during our event group chat "I'm using the Z Fold 6. I'm an AI reporter. I've never seen any of these AI features actually ever surface in my normal use." So there's that.
If you want a deeper play-by-play, check out the archived version of our live blog. And if you've decided that the newest Galaxys aren't worth the money, look for upcoming Prime Day deals on other models like the Galaxy Watch Ultra, Galaxy A36 and more.
A side view of the Z Fold 7
Numi Prasarn/CNET
Galaxy Z Fold 7: Thin is in for this foldable
In a pre-Unpacked interview with Senior Editor Abrar Al-Heeti, Samsung implied that it believes the Z Fold 7's thinness and improved cameras will make it a turning point for foldables, stating that its "newest Galaxy Z series is the thinnest, lightest and most advanced foldable yet" -- that there are no more tradeoffs between the type of phones we've become used to and the folding models. And the Z Fold 6 really is pretty chunky; in contrast, the Z Fold 7 is thinner than even the S25 Edge when open.
Watch this: Ultra Thin: First Look at the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7
02:45
Notably, it incorporates the same 200-megapixel main camera as the thicker S25 Ultra, as well as 12MP ultrawide and 10MP telephoto cameras and a 10MP selfie cameras on the inner and cover screens. The battery capacity stays the same as the previous model. Gemini can run on the cover for quick access. The processor is the new Snapdragon 8 Elite, and apps are optimized for the big screen as well as for transitions between the smaller and larger screens.
There is one tradeoff that remains, though: Price. It starts at $2,000, more than most standard phones. It will come in black, blue, silver and light green. Preorders start today, with devices shipping at the end of the month.
The Galaxy Z Flip 7
Joe Maldonado/CNET
Galaxy Z Flip 7 and 7FE: Bigger or cheaper
Samsung redesigned the Galaxy Z Flip 7 for this year's line, with a thinner body -- 6.5mm when unfolded -- 4.1-inch cover screen (FlexWindow) that runs at 120Hz like the main screen (and hits a peak brightness of 2,600 nits), a 6.9-inch main display and a larger 4,300mAh battery. The FE is more like the last-generation Galaxy Z Flip 6, smaller than the 7 with a 3.4-inch cover screen and the older model's cut-out for the cameras.
The Flip 7 has a 50MP wide-angle main camera plus a12MP ultrawide, the same as on the 6. There are enhancements to the image pipeline, though, and Samsung added 10-bit HDR video, updates to portrait shooting, and a zoom slider. A 10MP selfie camera is on the main display.
On the other hand, the Z Flip 7FE seems less of a "Fan Edition" and more like a "we have to hit a price below $1,000" version: It's essentially the same as the 6, albeit with Samsung's Exynos 2400 processor rather than the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, likely for its better heat management to compensate for the 7FE's thinner body. It also comes with less storage at the lower price, 128GB, and tops out at a lower 256GB. But it's still not cheap enough.
Both phones are now available for preorder, shipping on July 25. The Galaxy Z Flip 7 starts at $1,100 (it comes in blue, black and coral), while the FE model (your options are black or white) is $200 less, starting at $900.
The Galaxy Watch 8 Classic brings back the rotating bezel in two color options: white or black.
Joseph Maldonado/CNET
Galaxy Watch 8 and Watch 8 Classic: Rotate me again
Samsung redesigned the latest generation to look more like the Watch Ultra -- circular face set within a rounded rectangle bezel quick-action button, plus a rotating bezel on the Classic -- and thinner and lighter than their preceding models, but with slightly higher battery capacity for the Watch 8. A new band design ensures the sensors are pressed more tightly to your wrist (for more reliable data capture).
The watches also have double the storage. More space is essential to handle larger local AI models, especially now that Gemini is now integrated into Samsung's One UI 8 on Wear OS and handling more complex and multistep requests. That's not to say Gemini runs completely locally: It still requires an internet connection, either via an LTE model of the watch or paired with a phone.
Watch this: The Rotating Bezel is Back! A Look at Samsung's New Galaxy Watch 8 and Classic
04:31
New health data available to factor into wellness suggestions include a needle-free Antioxidant Index and Vascular Load (strain on your heart during sleep), plus Bedtime Guidance aggregates metrics to AI-your-way to better sleep. Samsung also follows Apple's Workout Buddy with its own Running Coach, but the latter acts more of a personal trainer than cheerleader.
Samsung bought Xealth, a company that integrates health provider connections with personal devices; the plan is bringing deeper management into Watch.
You can preorder now, with prices for the Watch 8 starting at $350, the Classic starting at $500 and a new Titanium Blue model of the Ultra -- which includes the increased storage -- running $650.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US securities regulator announces AI task force
US securities regulator announces AI task force

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US securities regulator announces AI task force

(Reuters) -The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said on Friday that it is creating an artificial intelligence task force to lead the agency's efforts to "enhance innovation and efficiency" in its operations. Valerie Szczepanik, who has been named the SEC's chief AI officer, will lead the task force, the regulator said in a statement. 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

Your chats with Meta's AI might end up on Google — just like ChatGPT until it turned them off
Your chats with Meta's AI might end up on Google — just like ChatGPT until it turned them off

Business Insider

time5 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

Your chats with Meta's AI might end up on Google — just like ChatGPT until it turned them off

OpenAI's ChatGPT raised some eyebrows this week when people realized that certain chats were able to be found by Google search. Although people had checked a box to share the chats publicly, it seemed likely that not everyone understood what they were doing. On Thursday, OpenAI said that it would stop having shared chats be indexed by Google. Meanwhile, Meta's stand-alone MetaAI app also allows users to share their chats — and it will continue to allow Google to index them, meaning that they can show up in a search. I did a bunch of Google searches and found lots of MetaAI conversations in the results. The Meta AI app, launched this spring, lets people share chats to a "Discover" feed. Google crawlers can "index" that feed and then serve up the results when people use Google search. So, for instance, if you do a site-specific search on Google for " and the keyword "balloons," you might come up with a chat someone had with the MetaAI bot about where to get the best birthday balloons — if that person tapped the button to allow the chat to be shared. As Business Insider reported in June, the Meta AI Discover feed had been full of examples of chats that seemed personal in nature — medical questions, specific career advice, relationship matters. Some contained identifying information like phone numbers, email addresses, or full names. Although all of these people did click to share, based on the personal nature of some of the chats, I could only guess that people might have misunderstood what it meant to share the conversation. After Business Insider wrote about this a few weeks ago, the Meta AI app made some tweaks to warn users more clearly about how the Discover feed works. Now, when you choose to share a conversation, you get a pop-up with the warning: "Conversations on feed are public so anyone can see them and engage." The additional warning seems to be working. Scrolling through the Discover feed, I now see mainly instances of people using it for image creation and far fewer accidental private text conversations (although there seemed to still be at least a few of those). Meanwhile, Daniel Roberts, a representative for Meta, confirmed that Meta AI chats that were shared to its Discover feed would continue to be indexed by Google. He reiterated the multi-step process I just described. For now, Meta AI can only be used via its mobile app, not the web. This might lead people to think that even the Discover feed exists as a sort of walled garden, separate from "the internet" and existing only within the Meta AI app. But posts from the Discover feed (and only those public posts) can be shared as links around the web — and that's where the Google indexing comes in. If this sounds slightly confusing, it is. That may also be confusing to users. Now, it's possible that some people really do want to share their AI chats with the general public, and are happy to have those chats show up on Google searches along with their Instagram or Facebook handles. But I'm still not sure I'd understand why anyone would want to share their interactions — or why anyone else would want to read them.

TNB Tech Minute: Noma Security Raises $100 Million to Keep AI Agents in Check - Tech News Briefing
TNB Tech Minute: Noma Security Raises $100 Million to Keep AI Agents in Check - Tech News Briefing

Wall Street Journal

time5 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

TNB Tech Minute: Noma Security Raises $100 Million to Keep AI Agents in Check - Tech News Briefing

Full Transcript This transcript was prepared by a transcription service. This version may not be in its final form and may be updated. Ariana Aspuru: Here's your afternoon TNB Tech Minute for Friday, August 1st. I'm Ariana Aspuru for The Wall Street Journal. Noma Security, a New York based startup that polices artificial intelligence agents, says it has raised $100 million in investment capital. Even though it's a relatively new technology, a number of businesses are already using AI agents in areas ranging from product development to marketing, sales, customer service, cybersecurity, and other tasks. The company says it has dozens of customers across financial services, life sciences, retail, and other industries. Plus, in an earnings call this week, Apple said it would substantially increase capital expenditures in the year ahead. A Quilter Cheviot analyst says that Apple is starting to spend on AI, but it's way behind its tech competitors. So far, Apple has invested 10 billion on AI compared with $130 billion, $120 billion, and $85 billion at Microsoft, Amazon, and Google respectively. The analyst also says this increase in spending would be a positive sign that Apple is preparing to be more aggressive about its future capabilities. Finally, Palantir was awarded a $10 billion ten-year contract that should be an additional tailwind for the software company, according to analysts at Wedbush. This comes as the federal government accelerates its artificial intelligence initiative. Analysts say the deal establishes a framework for the Army's future software and data needs by pooling together dozens of contracts into a single agreement with volume-based discounts. And that's a wrap on your TNB Tech Minutes. For a deeper dive into what's happening in tech, check out our Tech News Briefing podcast on Tuesdays and Fridays.

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