Latest news with #GooglePixel9ProFold


Android Authority
20-05-2025
- Business
- Android Authority
Save $300 on the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold
C. Scott Brown / Android Authority Are you looking for a foldable phone? The Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold or the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 are your best bets. Today, we're highlighting Google's device, which is currently discounted to $1499, saving you $300. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is also on sale, but it is slightly more expensive. Keep reading to learn more about that deal. Buy the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold for $1,499 ($300 off) This offer is available from Amazon. It is a 'limited time deal,' so we're not sure how long the discount will be available. Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold The Fold goes Pro. The Pixel 9 Pro Fold is Google's most impressive foldable to date, offering a 6.3-inch exterior display, 16GB of RAM, and 256GB of internal storage. When you're ready for more, unfold to access the 8-inch interior display. Solid cameras, a decent battery, and top-notch software support round out this monster of a device. See price at Amazon Save $300.00 As already mentioned, the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold is among the best foldable phones around. It offers a great experience all around, starting with the great performance, thanks to its Google Tensor G4 processor and 16GB of RAM. The chip still runs a bit hot, but it isn't as bad as previous generations, and it can definitely perform. The 16GB of RAM gives it plenty of multitasking power, but the internal display is even more important in this department. Unfold it and you'll meet a large 8.0-inch LTPO OLED screen with a 2,152 x 2,076 resolution. It touts a 120Hz refresh rate. For the times when you don't need the extra screen real estate or prefer saving battery power, there's also the external 6.3-inch screen. C. Scott Brown / Android Authority The handset follows a similar design language to the rest of the Pixel 9 series, save for the folding mechanism. It looks and feels great. It's also made of an aluminum frame and Gorilla Glass Victus 2. And while it has no dust protection, you get an IPX8 rating, so it has excellent protection against liquids. We can confirm that the battery can last a full day without reaching for an outlet despite the smaller 4,650mAh battery. You'll also get that seven-year update promise that Google is so popular for. We wish the camera and charging speeds were as good as the rest of the Pixel 9 series, especially considering the phone's much higher price point. These are still decent, though, and we're sure engineering a foldable phone has its challenges, so some sacrifices had to be made. Extra deal: Save $350 on the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 Thinner, lighter, and more powerful than ever. With a focus on refinement over previous generation Fold phones, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 rocks a 6.3-inch cover screen, a 7.6-inch, 20.9:18, 120Hz AMOLED folding display, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 Mobile Platform for Galaxy chipset, a 50MP camera, 12GB of RAM, and up to 1TB of internal storage. See price at Samsung Save $350.00 If you're more of a Samsung fan, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is also on sale, but for $1,549.99. Is it worth the extra $50.99? Well, it is actually a bigger $350 discount. The Samsung foldable's retail price is higher at $1,899.99, so you're technically catching a bigger discount. Some might also argue that the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is better. For starters, we know many of you prefer Samsung's designs. This phone is sleek, with an aluminum frame and outstanding aesthetics. It also gets a higher IP48 rating, giving it more protection against solids like dust. Performance won't be an issue with this phone, either. It has a potent Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset. While it has less RAM, at 12GB, that is enough for most users. It is definitely a factor to consider, though. If you're a beastly multitasker, you might want to opt for the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold instead. Ryan Whitwam / Android Authority The external display is also a bit smaller at 7.6 inches, but it does have a really nice LTPO AMOLED 2X panel with a 2,160 x 1,856 resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. The external display measures 6.3 inches diagonally, so it is the same. Similarly to the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, the camera isn't as impressive, but it is decent. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 also lasts about a full day per charge. And while some complain about the 25W wired charging, that is actually a bit faster than Google's 21W. At least it still gets a seven-year update promise, though. Samsung is actually the only manufacturer that matches Google in this regard. Regardless of which phone you decide to get, you should probably take advantage of this deal sooner rather than later. These deals don't often last very long. You can also take a look at some alternatives in our list of the best foldable phones, if you want to consider other great options.


Phone Arena
05-05-2025
- Phone Arena
Foldable iPhone: Apple has a special marketing tactic in store
*Header image is referential and showcases a concept render. | Image credit — ConceptsiPhone The mythical foldable iPhone has been the subject of rumors and sketchy reports for a very long time but it may finally become a reality for the 20th anniversary of the iPhone. Apple insider Mark Gurman reveals in his newsletter Power On that the company has a different marketing tactic in store for the foldable iPhone .Unlike the upcoming Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 or the current Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold the iPhone foldable will not be a niche product. Apple apparently plans to sell the foldable iPhone as a much higher-end variant of that year's flagship iPhone lineup, kind of like the Pro Max models today. The foldable iPhone has taken this long because Apple wants to 'perfect' the foldable formula. Most notably, Apple wants to release a foldable smartphone that has an almost invisible crease. However the foldable iPhone will, understandably, be a lot pricier than any iPhone ever made before it. Samsung has had to revise sales expectations for the Galaxy Z Flip 7 and Fold 7 because the foldable industry continues to underperform. In fact the company is allegedly only going to be manufacturing around 200,000 units of its upcoming tri-foldable phone. This is because it will be very expensive and Samsung does not expect it to go out of Galaxy tri-foldable will also only be released in a select few regions that have the buying power to purchase it. Which makes Apple's marketing tactic for the foldable iPhone a little questionable in my opinion. The Galaxy Z Fold 6 did not sell as well as Samsung had hoped. | Image credit — PhoneArena If other foldables have failed to sell as expected — mostly due to the price tag — then the foldable iPhone will logically face the same issue. Perhaps Apple is hopeful that a nearly invisible crease might entice more consumers to give foldables a try: specifically the foldable iPhone . However we already have an example of Apple having tried something similar and failing. The Apple Vision Pro, despite being one of the best AR headsets ever made, did not sell as expected. This was mostly due to the insane price tag of $3,499. Which is why I'm doubtful about Apple's marketing strategy for the foldable iPhone . Then again the iPhone is also a much more well established product than a Mixed Reality headset so I may yet be surprised by how it performs.


Forbes
05-04-2025
- Forbes
Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold Leak Reveals Design, Report Claims
Google is likely to reveal its next flagship phones in August, with the handsets going on sale in September, if it follows last year's schedule. And it might, because the latest leak suggests that the folding phone in its range, likely called the Pixel 10 Pro Fold, looks strikingly familiar. Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold — the successor may look very similar. A new leak from Android Headlines shows renders of the folding phone and it seems to be near-identical in measurements to the current Pixel 9 Pro Fold. 'The Pixel 10 Pro Fold is the spitting image of the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, and that's not necessarily a bad thing. After all, the Pixel 9 Pro Fold is simply stunning,' the report says. Initially, the report said, 'We do expect it to be a bit thinner this year,' but later updated to give the exact dimensions, noting that in fact if these measurements are right, it will be slightly thicker or else the same. 'The Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold will dimensions of about 155.2 x 150.4 x 5.3mm. That's slightly different than the Pixel 9 Pro Fold,' it said. In a separate report the next day, Android Headlines qualified this. 'Now, the eagle-eyed readers here likely noticed that this makes the Pixel 10 Pro Fold thicker than the Pixel 9 Pro Fold. Don't read too much into that. Onleaks dimensions are typically close, but sometimes they are off by around 0.2mm. So, I would expect the Pixel 10 Pro Fold to have the same dimensions as the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, including the same 5.1mm thickness when unfolded,' it said. Changes will be focused on the inside of the phone, it seems, with changes to the processor —Tensor G5 is predicted — and probably camera sensors for a start. Externally, it's likely there will be new colors in the range, too. One other change is predicted, and it's a good one: 'Other sources have indicated that the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold will be offered at a lower price point this year. This stands in contrast to the pricing strategy for other phone makers this year, which will either maintain their current prices or become more expensive. Google's premium foldable device is expected to see a modest price reduction when it launches in August,' it's claimed. However, that this prediction came before the introduction of tariffs for goods coming from outside the U.S., so this may not turn out to be accurate. More as we have it.
Yahoo
23-02-2025
- Yahoo
Oppo Find N5 review: A simply superior foldable
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. At the time of its launch, the Oppo Find N5 is the ultimate foldable phone. But even as new models arrive on the scene, it's hard to imagine the Find N5 losing its lead. Thinning out its foldable's dimensions to previously unprecedented levels hasn't stopped Oppo from adding two beautiful displays, strong camera hardware, the latest chipset and a huge battery capacity to the Find N5. Rivals like the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 or Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold look years out of date by comparison, and even the wonderful OnePlus Open can't keep up. Sadly, we don't know how easy it's going to be to buy the Find N5, which makes it tough to decide where this device should sit on our best foldable phone list. The software support window is also shorter than you get from Samsung or Google. That's not ideal when you're spending this much on a foldable phone. But you can't really fault this new Oppo foldable from a hardware perspective, as you'll see through the rest of my Find N5 review. I hope you aren't the jealous type if you already have a Z Fold or Pixel Fold. The Oppo Find N5 was announced on February 20, but we have yet to get specific availability or pricing info outside of Singapore, where the launch took place. We'll update you as soon as we learn more. Going for $2499 SGD with 512GB storage, the Find N5 seems to be aimed to be a touch cheaper than the Galaxy Z Fold 6, which goes for $2548 SGD in its basic spec. The Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold starts at $2,399 SGD, but it costs $2,579 if you want the same amount of storage capacity as the Oppo, making the Find N5 an attractive deal despite its high price. Understandably, Oppo is crowing loudly about how the Find N5 is the "world's thinnest book-style foldable," meaning unless you're holding it next to a triple-foldable like the Huawei Mate XT, it's thinner than any other flexible phone around. If you want specifics, the Find N5 is just 8.93mm thick when folded (just a touch thicker than the non-folding OnePlus 13), and a mere 4.21mm when open. That makes it slimmer than any other rival foldable, and even other devices sold on their sleekness like the 13-inch iPad Pro M4 (5.1mm or 0.2 inches thick). It's also just 229 grams (8.07 ounces) in weight, about 5-10% lighter than other book-style foldables. Just to hammer home the slimness point, the USB-C port on the bottom of the Find N5 was apparently customized in order to fit in the slim frame. There is barely any metal on either side of the opening for the charging port, but it still feels sturdy when you plug in or remove cables. The back, made from "aerospace-grade fiber" (not glass like a typical modern flagship phone) is daubed with either a matte Cosmic Black colorway, or a layered Misty White one. The white model, which you can see in these photos, looks rather special, with the pattern in the back glass shifting in intriguing ways as you hold the phone in different lighting. Both phones use aluminum side rails and inner frames, but have different finishes on each color option to match the style better. It's on these side rails where you'll find an alert slider for switching between normal, silent and vibrate profiles, a OnePlus staple that Oppo's started to borrow for some of its flagship phones. Foldables aren't known for their durability, but Oppo's focused on waterproofing the Find N5, having it rated IPX6, X8 and X9. So while it's not rated for dust proofing, it is in theory able to shrug off splashes or immersion, or even jets of hot water were you ever to encounter them for some bizarre reason. The main attraction of the Find N5 is its dual screens: an almost perfectly square 8.12-inch inner screen, larger than any rival device, and a 6.62-inch outer display with a slightly narrower than average width but a fairly similar shape to a regular phone. Both panels have a 1 - 120Hz adaptive refresh rate, with a 2450-nit peak brightness on the outer screen and 2,100 on the inner display. The two screens also have 2160Hz PWM dimming to reduce eye strain. The main screen does have a crease in it to allow it to fold, which covers about the same area as the Galaxy Z Fold 6's or Pixel 9 Pro Fold's. But the crease is quite a bit shallower than either of those foldables, meaning it's less obvious to the touch and to your eye. Within its Hasselblad-branded camera block, the Oppo Find N5 houses a 50MP main camera, an 8MP ultrawide camera and a 50MP 3x telephoto camera. For front-facing sensors, the Find N5 uses a pair of 8MP punch-hole cameras, one on the inner display and one on the outer. Neither the Galaxy Z Fold 6 nor the Pixel 9 Pro Fold are slouches when it comes to photography, so I took both out for my comparative testing, starting with this main camera shot of a sculpture outside Paddington Station. The Pixel 9 Pro Fold's image is effectively a darker version of the Oppo Find N5's here. The Google foldable does have a little better contrast as a result though. This shot over the Paddington Canal against the Galaxy Z Fold 6 shows the Find N5's shot again as the brighter one, with the Samsung going all-in on saturated colors. The Oppo's ultrawide camera is its lowest-resolution sensor, and that shows in this shot of a latte in a bright red cup. The Find N5 shows the colors of the ceramic, coffee and milk in brighter hues, but the detail is very much lacking. Oppo's 3x telephoto camera with 6x in-sensor zoom mode fits neatly with the 3x and 5x telephotos of the Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Pixel 9 Pro Fold respectively. So I pointed both at the archway of St Mary's Hospital to see the differences. There's not much separating the Find N5 and the Galaxy Z Fold 6 in this 3x comparison. The Samsung's shot is brighter this time around, but its colors and detail are nowhere near as strong as the Find N5. Despite relying on digital zoom for this 6x shot, the Find N5 is sharper than the Pixel 9 Pro Fold's, perhaps because the Pixel's sensor is a meager 10.8MP. The two shots' color and brightness levels are similar, but you can more easily make out the face of St Mary and the text around the plaque in the Find N5 image. Finally we come to a pair of selfie comparisons, starting with the outer cameras and portrait mode enabled. This shot against the Galaxy Z Fold demonstrates that Samsung remains the master of portrait mode, cutting accurately around my glasses. It's offering a slightly cooler tone for my skin than the Find N5, but not in an obviously bad way. Switching to the internal cameras, and to the Pixel 9 Pro Fold as my comparison phone, the Find N5 becomes the one furnishing us with a cooler-looking image. The brighter look of the Oppo shot doesn't help here, even if the Pixel has dialed up the colors a little too much as well. Oppo picked the Snapdragon 8 Elite to drive the Find N5, making it the only foldable to use this chip at the time of its launch. The benchmarks show how far ahead this silicon puts it of currently-available foldables, but we can also see how similar the Find N5's scores are to the OnePlus 13, another phone from the combined Oppo/OnePlus stable that uses the 8 Elite chip. The Find N5 comes with 16GB RAM and 512GB storage, which is just as generous as you'd hope for a super-premium foldable phone. That said, perhaps a 256GB storage edition would have been nice as an option to make the N5 a little more accessibly-priced. By using a pair of silicon-carbon cells, Oppo has been able to fit 5,600 mAh of battery capacity into the Find N5. That's over 25% larger than the battery capacity of the Galaxy Z Fold 6, or 20% compared to the Pixel 9 Pro Fold. That extra battery space isn't just for show either. The Find N5 lost 15% of its charge while playing three hours of YouTube over Wi-Fi at 50% brightness. The Galaxy Z Fold 6 drops 18% on the same test, and the Pixel 9 Pro Fold 21%. Oppo also beats the competition with its charging speeds - 80W wired and 50W wireless. The latter works with the OnePlus/Oppo magnetic wireless charging puck provided you buy a case with the necessary magnets installed. The Find N5 doesn't come with a charger in the box in every market due to regional laws. But if yours does, you'll be able to charge the Find N5 to from 0 - 34% in 15 minutes, to 66% in 30 minutes and to 100% in 52 minutes, based on my testing. The typical collection of AI transcription, translation, summary and image editing tools comes with the Android 15-based ColorOS 15. Using the text features is especially good on the inner screen since the phone can use that extra space to show a before/after view of what you're working on. There's also a Galaxy Z Fold 6-style interpreter mode, where you partly close the phone and then set it between you and another person for an instantly translated conversation. And there's Circle to Search and Gemini from Google. For more general productivity, Boundless View is here. Like the OnePlus Open's Open Canvas, this keeps up to three app windows at a proper size while letting the user move between them like sliding a camera viewfinder over a flat layout of different documents. It's far better than cramming your apps into a single static screen, which is the best that the Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Pixel 9 Pro Fold can do. More uniquely, the Oppo offers O+ Connect, a sharing app that notably allows you to send photos to an iPhone with the respective app installed. This was introduced on the Find X8 series, but the Find N5 takes this a step further by now allowing you to pair the phone with a Mac (Intel or Apple Silicon), sharing files, and even controlling it remotely if you wish by downloading the O+ Connect Mac app from Oppo's website. The app's rather demanding, requiring lots of permissions to be altered to make it work, but it does function, whether on Wi-Fi or on a cellular connection. There's lag to contend with, and having to swap between the trackpad and keyboard would get in the way of full-on work sessions. But navigating my MacBook from the Find N5 did work, even down to the trackpad gestures. I wouldn't use this much, but I can see it coming in handy sometimes. Oppo does offer an Oppo Pen stylus for doodling on the Find N5. This works on both the inside and outside displays, a step ahead of the Galaxy Z Fold 6's S Pen which functions only on the internal screen. However, there's no indication where this Oppo stylus is sold as of yet, so it might be hard to get hold of one depending on where you live. Oppo has been offering its latest flagship phones five years of software updates and six years of security updates, which is hopefully enough to last most owners before they upgrade. But both Google and Samsung offer seven years of updates for their latest foldables. If Oppo offered a couple of extra years of software support, and guaranteed that users around the world have direct route to buying the Find N5, then it would be as perfect a foldable as we could have right now. But even without those two problems addressed, this is still a long way ahead of the current best foldables. The Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Pixel 9 Pro Fold are going to have to undergo huge improvements if their next-gen versions want to compete. But the fact that they're going to be sold in the U.S. and the Oppo isn't will keep them as the best available foldables for a huge amount of possible customers. We had hoped that the OnePlus Open 2 would be along soon, borrowing large parts of the Find N5's design along the way, but OnePlus has confirmed it won't launch a foldable this year. That said, if you can buy an Oppo Find N5, you will be getting your money's worth and then some. Users wanting more value from a flagship device or the ultimate cameras may want to look elsewhere, but if your heart is set on a foldable, and you want the best performance, power efficiency and a futuristic design that's practical to use open or closed, the Find N5 is the phone to seek out.
Yahoo
06-02-2025
- Yahoo
Apple is rumored to have taken another key step towards making a foldable iPhone
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The folding iPhone is apparently another step closer Apple may be about to choose a display supplier Previously Apple had struggled to find a satisfactory display Apple hasn't officially said there's a folding iPhone on the way, but the number of leaks we've come across about such a device make it very likely that it's in development – and there's another rumor to report on today. Well-known tipster Yeux1122 (via MacRumors) says that Apple is now close to deciding on a manufacturing partner to produce the folding displays for the folding iPhone. That's based on information from sources in Apple's supply chain. There's not too much more information here, but there is a suggestion that some parts suppliers are now getting close to the standard required by Apple in terms of the folding display and the mechanisms that underpin it. Previously, we have heard that the foldable iPhone project was on the verge of being cancelled, because Apple couldn't get a bending screen it was happy with. It would seem those obstacles may now have been overcome. There have been plenty of earlier rumors around a folding iPhone. Back in November, we got news that the device had gone past the concept stage and was actively being worked on as a physical product that would ship to consumers. More recently, we've heard talk that the folding iPhone would have a 7.6-7.9-inch main display and a smaller 5.3-5.5 inch cover screen. The same source predicted a launch window sometime in 2026 for this long-awaited smartphone. Other predictions had suggested 2025 could be the year of the foldable phone from Apple, but as we're now into February that seems less likely. Exactly what style of foldable we'll get – book-style or flip-style – remains to be seen. While Apple hasn't yet launched a folding iPhone, the foldable market has seen plenty of new and high-end devices appear over the last 12 months – including the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6, and the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6. A foldable iPhone could save a stagnant folding phone market Where the heck is Apple's foldable iPhone? Apple's foldable iPhone could get a protective self-healing screen