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One UI 8.5 Beta 4 to carry newer Samsung Camera app

Samsung Camera has been updated to version 16.5.02.17, and it could become accessible in the One UI 8.5 Beta 4 update.

One UI 8.5 Beta Program is live for the Galaxy S25 series, with Samsung Camera preparing to be updated to a newer version with the Beta 4 release. The software update’s rollout is getting delayed due to some major issues.

Recently, a fresh Samsung Camera version has emerged on APKMirror. The installation fails upon sideloading this version on the Beta 3 release. It signals incompatibility, which would be addressed with the next Beta release.

Samsung is working hard on the One UI 8.5 Beta. However, the release of Beta 4 has been pending for about three weeks. We may see the rollout next week, if no new problem doesn’t arrive in the remaining test phase.

The Korean tech giant is also focusing on the Galaxy S26 series. The official launch is slated for February 25. Before that, Samsung had started releasing official teasers to create hype for the upcoming flagship phones.

Two internal builds have already updated on the server today. It shows the developers are regularly testing the latest software. Changes in build version shows the progress is being made before the rollout initiates.

If you’ve joined the Beta, your Galaxy S25 device should get the new update next week. The software could also bump the current Camera app version 16.5.02.6 to version 16.5.02.17.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Winter Olympics

Source – Samsung Mobile Press

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Galaxy S25 Ultra is a major thing at 2026 Winter Olympic

Samsung announced that Galaxy S25 Ultra devices will be hardwired into the Opening Ceremony broadcast on February 6, working alongside Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS) to capture angles traditional cameras can’t reach.

The Korean tech giant is doubling down on its Olympic partnership with a technical integration that goes well beyond logo placement to include the Galaxy S25 Ultra and AI.

Galaxy S25 Ultra units will be positioned on jibs, in stadium stands, and inside athlete entrance tunnels at Milano San Siro Olympic Stadium. All footage streams wirelessly over 5G directly into the live broadcast feed.

OBS CEO Yiannis Exarchos says the goal is to “complement core broadcast coverage” with perspectives that feel native to how fans already consume content on their phones.

Over 75,000 people will be in the stadium, but millions more will watch on screens where mobile-first framing actually makes sense. The real story here is how Samsung is deploying Galaxy AI across Milano Cortina’s geography.

Volunteers stationed in high-altitude or remote venues will use Galaxy AI’s Interpreter to communicate with athletes and officials. Since translation happens on the device itself, it works even when network coverage is not available.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Winter Olympics

Source – Samsung Mobile Press

Samsung House

Samsung is opening Samsung House at Palazzo Serbelloni in Milan. The space will host National Olympic Committee events, live competition viewing, and catering by Michelin-starred chef Enrico Bartolini.

  • It runs from February 4 through 22, then reopens for the Paralympic Games from March 6 to 15.

Charging stations, monitors for short-track speed skating officials, and the usual operational tech round out the package. Samsung’s Olympic involvement now stretches back to Nagano 1998 and continues through LA 2028.

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Samsung’s resale value problem is getting worse while Apple pulls further ahead

Samsung phones are losing resale value to Apple. Fresh data from the used phone market signals worsning situation of the retention rate. The numbers tell a grim story, and Samsung fans have seen this movie before.

Only this time, the gap has blown out to something close to embarrassing. As of December 2025, the average used iPhone is trading at around $485 (KRW 705,494). A comparable used Samsung device sits at merely $130 (KRW 188,616).

The value gap between Apple and Samsung phones stretched to 3.7x, up sharply from 2.9x just a year earlier. Make no mistake, this is not a market fluke; it is a structural problem that Samsung keeps pretending is temporary.

The iPhone 17 Pro (256GB) traded at 1,633,089 won in January, five months after launch, dropping only 8.8% from its retail price (1.79 million won).

Meanwhile, the Galaxy S25 Ultra (256GB) had a used market price of 1,093,828 won at the same point, down 604,572 won (35.6%) from its retail price (1,698,400 won).

While the price difference is 540,000 won, the depreciation rate gap is approximately 4 times. The Ultra line is supposed to be the Android answer to the iPhone Pro.

The reality is, resale value reflects belief. Belief in longevity, brand discipline, and pricing sanity. Apple protects its floor aggressively, but Samsung keeps blowing holes in it.

Samsung floods the channel with discounts weeks after launch, then wonders why used prices collapse. Then there is the A series problem. Samsung ships millions of budget phones with the Galaxy name slapped on them.

An industry veteran once put it bluntly: “Resale value is where marketing slogans go to die.”

When the perception builds that the depreciation rate is high, consumers will choose a brand that they can “use longer and resell better” at a similar price. Samsung Electronics needs to establish a new value retention strategy.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Apple iPhone 17 Pro

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Galaxy S26 Ultra Geekbench leak: Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 confirmed for Global model, scores break 10k multi-core

A fresh Geekbench listing just surfaced for the Samsung SM-S948B; that’s the Galaxy S26 Ultra Global variant, and it’s running Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset.

The benchmark run of Galaxy S26 Ultra Global with Snapdragon chip shows a single-core score of 3,601 and a multi-core result of 10,686. The device is paired with 12GB of RAM and runs Android 16 on the “canoe” motherboard with a “walt” governor.

Looking at the numbers, the 3,601 single-core result represents roughly a 12-14 percent improvement over the Galaxy S25 Ultra’s typical Geekbench 6 single-core performance (around 3,150-3,200 depending on thermal conditions).

Multi-core performance crosses the 10k threshold for the first time in Galaxy history. The S25 Ultra typically landed between 9,200 and 9,600 in sustained workloads.

The topology breakdown reveals 1 processor with 8 cores: 6 performance cores clocked at 3.63 GHz (Cluster 1) and 2 prime cores at 4.74 GHz (Cluster 2).

The instruction set confirmation (neon, aes, sha1, sha2, neon-fp16, neon-dotprod, sve, i8mm, sme-i8i32, sme-f32f32) shows full ARMv9 feature parity with advanced matrix multiplication support.

For those of us tracking the S-series year over year, this marks a generational shift in on-device AI capabilities and sustained thermal performance under heavy compute loads.

Samsung appears to have made the strategic call to ship Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 globally for the Ultra model. The S26 Ultra is shaping up to be the most technically sound Ultra model Samsung has shipped in three years.

Whether it becomes the definitive upgrade of the year depends on factors this Geekbench listing can’t reveal. From the SoC side, this is the cleanest win Samsung has had in the premium Android space since the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 era.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5

Source – Geekbench

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Galaxy S26 Ultra price in India tipped early, launch offers could soften the blow

Samsung has started teasing the new features of its upcoming flagship phones. The official unveiling is expected on February 25, and a new rumor sheds light on the potential Galaxy S26 Ultra price in India and launch offers.

According to X user Phonenurd, Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra could come with a maximum retail price of INR 140,000 in India. It’s a substantial increase over the prices of the Galaxy S25 Ultra, which started at INR 129,000 in the market.

If accurate, the Galaxy S26 Ultra prices are going up by INR 11,000 in India. Meanwhile, Samsung may soften the blow with early purchase offers, which include a flat discount of INR 10,000 toward the Galaxy S26 Ultra.

The upgrade discount will take the Galaxy S26 Ultra price down by INR 10,000. The MRP of INR 140,000 would be slashed to INR 130,000. Besides, fans could be offered a cashback of INR 3,000 with the Buds 3/4 Pro bundle.

It seems the Korean tech giant is keeping the free storage upgrade alive in India. The rumor also mentions a possible availability of a free storage upgrade, meaning you get an upper-tier memory version at the lower price tag.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Price Rumor

Galaxy S26 Camera Teaser

Earlier, Samsung dropped a set of new teasers of the Galaxy S26 series. The videos primarily focused on highlighting the camera capabilities of the new flagships.

The upcoming Galaxy flagships bring a better zoom camera, nightography, and night videos. This is just the beginning of official teasers, with an Unpacked invite likely coming next week.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Camera Teaser

Source – Samsung

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iPhone 18 design may help Samsung defend Galaxy S27

iPhone 18 could feature a familiar look as iPhone 17 is selling too well. Samsung is bringing bold changes to the Galaxy S26 series, while Apple seems to have no plans of design refresh, but refinements are certainly likely.

Apple’s iPhone 17 turned out to be a massive success, and iPhone 18 could be paying the price in terms of design. iPhone 16 reverted to iPhone X-like vertical camera and iPhone 17 Pro debuted with a larger island on the back.

The iPhone maker is likely to highlight other improvements. It includes A20 and A20 Pro performance, manufactured using 2nm tech. Meanwhile, reports suggest Apple is avoiding the high-performance 2nm TSMC node.

iPhone 17 looks similar to the iPhone 16, and the iPhone 18 may replicate the 2026 design language. There’s nothing wrong, as leading smartphone vendors don’t usually tweak their design language every year or more frequently.

Samsung introduced its new signature design philosophy with the Galaxy S22 Ultra, which remained intact till the Galaxy S25 Ultra. This year’s Galaxy S26 Ultra is adopting a camera island alongside its two siblings.

With iPhone sales already hurting Galaxy, Apple could go even more fierce against Samsung. It’s said that the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max could only launch this year, while the standard iPhone 18 could arrive early next year.

iPhone 18 Pro could come with variable aperture camera technology. A DSLR-grade teleconverter mechanism is also being explored. If true, we may see Samsung bringing some exceptional camera upgrades to the S27 Ultra next year.

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Samsung Galaxy Wide Fold to launch in several countries

Samsung has a Galaxy Wide Fold model in its pipeline, and this device may go on sale in several countries. Apple is entering the foldable stream this year, and Samsung is already preparing to bring a direct alternative to the iPhone Fold.

A Galaxy Z Fold phone with a wide screen would be available in countries around the world. New findings paint a clear picture of the market availability, signaling a drop in South Korea, China, US, Canada and more markets.

Smartprix reports the so-called Wide Fold has appeared on the GSMA database with different model numbers, which reveal their regional belongings.

  • SM-F9710 – China
  • SM-F971W – Canada
  • SM-F971U1/SM-F971U – USA
  • SM-F971N – South Korea
  • SM-F971B – Global

Model numbers ending with 0 are locked to China, while U/U1 and W belong to North America (the US and Canada, respectively). Korean models come with an N suffix in the model number, while the B version gets a broad launch.

Countries from Asia and Europe usually get B models. The new development aligns with the recent revelation of potential production volume. Samsung plans to produce about 1 million units of the Galaxy Wide Fold in 2026.

Samsung is also working on the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Z Flip 8. The focus has shifted from clamshell to book-style foldable after the success of the Galaxy Z Fold 7.

In addition, the South Korean tech giant is also developing next-gen smartwatches and tablets, as the Watch 9, Watch Ultra 2, and Tab S12 series have also appeared onthe  GSMA database.

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Galaxy S26 pricing rumors: No increase vs massive 40% rise

Conflicting rumors are creating confusion about the pricing of Samsung’s Galaxy S26 series. In a recent development, two early inputs emerged, but they clash: one claims no hike, while the other warns of a 40 percent jump.

Greece – No price hike

A new report from Techmaniacs indicates that the Galaxy S26 series may not see substantial pricing changes. Industry sources claimed that the S26 Ultra may not go pricier, and Samsung either has no plans to launch it at a lower price.

Regarding the Galaxy S26 and S26 Plus, the report suggests that the pricing decision is yet to be made. The decision is pending, probably pushed by Apple’s price freeze for the iPhone 17 series released in September 2025.

Samsung will not bring a 128GB version of any Galaxy S26 series model this year. The base storage will be 256GB across all models. The flagship phones will be widely paired with 12GB of RAM, with some countries getting up to 16GB.

Bulgaria – 30 percent jump

Credible leaker MysteryLupin revealed Galaxy S26, S26+, and S26 Ultra prices for Bulgaria, terming them “concerning.” As termed, the pricing info is literally concerning as it indicates a notable jump of up to 40 percent.

The standard base Galaxy S26 with 256GB could start at €1,199 (~ $1,417), while the 1TB version of the Galaxy S26 Ultra could come with a price tag of €2,329 (~ $2,754). Here’s the price chart as shared by tipster MysteryLupin:

  • Galaxy S26 12/256 – €1199
  • Galaxy S26 12/512 – €1429
  • Galaxy S26+ 12/245 – €1499
  • Galaxy S26+ 12/512 – €1729
  • Galaxy S26 Ultra 12/256 – €1739
  • Galaxy S26 Ultra 12/512 – €1969
  • Galaxy S26 Ultra 12/1TB – €2329

However, the source further added that the country, Bulgaria, adopted the Euro (currency) this year only. The pricing information shared above isn’t the same as planned for other European markets such as France.

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Samsung teases Galaxy S26 camera design, zoom and nightography

Samsung just released three new teasers of the Galaxy S26 series, showcasing the new camera design, zoom capabilities, and nightography.

The South Korean tech giant earlier revealed the Privacy Display feature. This intelligent feature safeguards your on-screen content from peeping eyes. Later, another teaser surfaced to create hype for an imminent launch event.

Three new teasers on camera

One thing is common in all three teasers: the camera bump design. Samsung has crafted a pretty camera island for its 2026 flagships. The new teasers give us our first official look at the design in the most brilliant way possible.

Samsung’s latest teasers focus on camera capabilities. The video starts from a distance, with the text “CLOSER,” “GROOVE,” and “GLOW” turning “CLOOOSER,” “GROOOVE,” and “GLOOOW,” respectively.

The triple O comes into focus and evolves into the camera design of the upcoming flagships.

One teaser shows a camera viewfinder capturing a dog inside a car from a distance. It highlights the camera quality, which captures decent shots even of distant objects.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Camera Zoom

Image – Samsung Galaxy S26 Camera Zoom

The second teaser puts night videography of the devices on display. The device is shown capturing a lady enjoying celebratory moments somewhere at an event where a lighting environment isn’t favorable.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Camera Teaser

Image – Samsung Galaxy S26 Nightography Teaser

The third teaser potentially spotlighted camera presets that turn regular videos into cinematic clips. The text here used is “GLOW,” which signals at night videos that don’t look dull, and other phones can’t match the level.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Camera Teaser

Image – Samsung Galaxy S26 Night Camera Teaser

Samsung is preparing to hold the Galaxy Unpacked on February 25. It will be an in-person event in San Francisco, with the Buds 4 series also coming. Expect the general sale to open on March 11, the day the new devices hit market shelves.

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Galaxy S25 Ultra becomes more affordable ahead of Galaxy S26 launch

If you are planning to buy a new premium smartphone, now may be a great time. Amazon has dropped the price of its flagship phone, the Galaxy S25 Ultra, ahead of the launch of the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S26 series, which is expected later this month.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra originally priced at $1,299.99. Right now, it is available on Amazon for $973.41, saving buyers more than $325. This big discount brings Samsung’s top smartphone below the $1,000 mark, which makes it a very attractive deal.

This deal is for the 256GB storage model in Titanium Gray color. Other color options are also on sale, but the Titanium Gray version has the highest discount and offers the best value at the moment.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Gray and White

Source – Samsung Mobile Press

The Galaxy S25 Ultra comes with a premium design and powerful performance. It is built for users who want a fast phone, a high-quality display, an advanced camera, and the latest AI features. Even though Samsung is preparing to launch the Galaxy S26 series, the Galaxy S25 Ultra is still a very capable device that can easily handle everyday tasks, gaming, photography, and multitasking.

With the Galaxy S26 launch just around the corner, deals like this may not last long. If you want a premium Samsung phone at a much lower price, this Galaxy S25 Ultra discount is worth checking out. Click here to visit the deal page.

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4 More Samsung devices receiving January 2026 security update

Samsung has released the January 2026 security update for four more Galaxy devices – Galaxy M06, Galaxy F06, Galaxy M36, and Galaxy Tab Active 5. This update keeps your phone safe and makes it run smoothly, rather than adding new features or changing how it looks.

Users of these devices can verify the latest update via the One UI build versions given below.

  • Galaxy M06 – M066BXXS4BZA1
  • Galaxy F06 – E066BXXS4BZA1
  • Galaxy M36 – M366KKSS4BZA1
  • Galaxy Tab Active 5 – X306BXXS9CZA3

Samsung usually releases updates gradually, so users in other markets should receive the same update within one or two weeks.

Samsung Galaxy F06

Image – Samsung

January 2026 security patch fixes 55 security vulnerabilities found in the previous software version. Google has contributed fixes for one critical issue and 20 high-risk issues, making this update very important for device safety.

Samsung has also added 30 Samsung-specific security fixes (SVEs) that address high and moderate security risks. Phones powered by Exynos processors receive extra protection as well, ensuring better overall security and stability.

To download the update manually, go to Settings >> Software update >> Download and install. Once the download is complete, tap Restart/Install now to finish the installation. Make sure your phone is connected to a stable Wi-Fi network and has enough battery.

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Google adds Gemini Labs to centralize experimental features

Google has brought a new feature, Gemini Labs, to the Gemini web app. This new section is made to hold features that are still being tested. It helps users clearly see which tools are new, experimental, and not fully finished yet. By doing this, Google makes Gemini easier to understand and use.

A new toggle, Personal Intelligence, has been added with app. This option lets users choose whether Gemini can use information from connected Google apps, like Gmail or Google Drive, during a chat.

The setting is turned on by default. If users turn it off, Gemini will not use their connected app data in that conversation. When a new chat starts, the setting turns back on automatically.

Gemini Labs feature

Image via 9to5Google

To support these changes, Google has slightly changed the Tools menu. Regular features such as Deep Research, Nano Banana, and Deep Think are now grouped together in the main Tools area. Experimental features are kept in Gemini Labs so users can easily tell the difference.

For months, signs of Gemini Labs appeared in updates behind the scenes, showing Google was preparing a space for testing new ideas. Right now, Gemini Labs is only available on the Gemini web app in some regions. Mobile apps have not changed yet, but Google will likely bring this feature to more users soon. Stay tuned for more information.

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iPhone 18 SoC may miss high performance 2nm technology

Apple’s future iPhone 18 models may not use the most powerful version of next-generation 2-nanometer chip technology, according to recent reports. Instead, Apple is expected to rely on a more basic and stable version of TSMC’s 2nm manufacturing process for its upcoming iPhone processor.

Apple designs its own chips, but they are made by TSMC, the world’s leading semiconductor manufacturer. TSMC is preparing several versions of its new 2nm technology. The first version, N2, focuses on efficiency and reliable production. A later version, N2P, is designed for higher performance but costs more and is harder to produce.

For the iPhone 18, Apple is expected to use the N2 process, not the faster N2P version. The speed difference between the two is small, around 5 percent. Most users will not notice this difference in daily use.

Apple iPhone 17 Pro Series

Source – Apple

The reason for this choice is timing. The faster N2P process will be ready later, and Apple needs its chips ready on time for iPhone launches. Using N2 helps Apple avoid delays.

Cost is another reason. The high-performance N2P process is more expensive, and Apple often prefers balanced performance, long battery life, and stability over small speed gains.

Even without the high-performance 2nm technology, the iPhone 18 is expected to be fast, power-efficient, and reliable. For everyday users, the phone should feel smooth and responsive. Stay tuned for more information.

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Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra now supports HDR display on Weibo

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra is the latest flagship phone in the Galaxy S series. And the company is going to launch its next-generation model later this month. Now, a new report has shared an important update about the Galaxy S25 Ultra display.

According to a reliable tipster @UniverseIce, the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra now supports HDR display on Weibo. This means users can watch and view HDR photos and videos directly on Weibo using this smartphone. HDR helps make images look better by showing brighter colors, better contrast, and more detail in both dark and bright areas.

The Weibo post also shows several photos taken with the Galaxy S25 Ultra. These photos highlight the HDR effect clearly. With HDR support, pictures look more colorful, clear, and closer to real life. This makes viewing photos and videos on the phone more enjoyable.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra HDR support

Image via Weibo

Right now, many popular social media apps support HDR content. These include Instagram, Xiaohongshu, and Weibo. Because of this, users can enjoy high-quality images and videos on these platforms. However, the X platform still does not support HDR content.

The addition of HDR support on Weibo improves the viewing experience on the Galaxy S25 Ultra. This update is helpful for users who like taking photos, watching videos, and sharing content on social media. Stay tuned for more information.

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Newly launched Galaxy A-series phone enters One UI 8.5 testing

Samsung is gradually moving forward with the development of One UI 8.5. The version is already in the public beta stage, and Samsung has also started internal testing for several Galaxy devices. Now, a newly launched smartphone has joined this testing list.

According to a reliable tipster, @Mohammed Khatri, Samsung has begun testing One UI 8.5 for the Galaxy A07 5G. The first test build spotted for this device carries the version number A076BXXU2BZA6. This shows that Samsung has started preparing a major software update for the phone.

Even though the Galaxy A07 5G was launched recently, it has now appeared on Samsung’s internal testing servers. The device has been spotted being tested in multiple regions, including India, Thailand, Vietnam, and a few other countries. This suggests that Samsung plans to bring One UI 8.5 to the Galaxy A07 5G in the near future.

Samsung Galaxy A07 5G

Source – Samsung Malaysia

However, the overall development of One UI 8.5 seems to be moving slowly. Samsung appears to be taking more time to test the update properly before expanding it to more devices. This approach may help ensure better performance and fewer issues when the update is finally released.

Apart from the Galaxy A07 5G, several other Galaxy smartphones have already been spotted on Samsung’s testing platform. This growing list shows that Samsung is actively working on the update and preparing for a wider rollout.

Samsung has already confirmed that the stable version of One UI 8.5 will launch with the Galaxy S26 series, which is expected to arrive later this month. After that, the update is likely to reach more Galaxy devices gradually. More details are expected soon as development continues.

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Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 and 4 Pro renders show new case design and colors

Samsung is reportedly preparing to launch its new Galaxy Buds 4 and Galaxy Buds 4 Pro earbuds along with the Galaxy S26 series on February 25. Ahead of that, new images have now given us the clearest look at both earbuds and their cases.

According to the renders shared by Android Headlines, both earbuds look similar, but there is one main difference. The Galaxy Buds 4 do not include silicone tips, while the Buds 4 Pro do. Silicone tips help the earbuds fit better and block outside noise.

Both the Galaxy Buds 4 and Buds 4 Pro models have a stem design. The charging connectors are on the inside of the stem, and microphones are placed at the bottom and the back top of the earbuds.

Samsung Galaxy Buds 4

Image via Android Headlines

Samsung may also add a pinch-to-hold gesture to quickly launch Interpreter Mode on both earbuds. However, the Buds 4 Pro will come with multiple sizes of tips so users can choose the best fit.

Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro

Image via Android Headlines

The charging cases are rectangular with a transparent lid. The Galaxy Buds 4 case has a dark green base with the inside matching the earbud color, while the Buds 4 Pro case seems to be white. The earbuds lie horizontally inside the case, and the Samsung logo is on the front.

Rumors say that the Galaxy Buds 4 will have a 42mAh battery and the Buds 4 Pro a 57mAh battery, but this is not confirmed yet. The expected prices are €179 for the Buds 4 and €249 for the Buds 4 Pro.

The Buds 4 are light and simple, while the Buds 4 Pro offer a better fit and noise blocking. With their new design and features, these earbuds could be a good choice for Samsung users. Stay tuned for more information.

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Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 series could address build issues seen in Buds 3

Samsung is getting ready to launch its new wireless earbuds, the Galaxy Buds 4 and Galaxy Buds 4 Pro. These new earbuds are expected to arrive later this month along with the Galaxy S26 series. This time, Samsung aims to avoid the problems it faced with its previous earbuds and focus on making a more reliable product.

The previous model, Galaxy Buds 3, launched in 2024. Many users faced problems with them. The earbuds were weak, had small gaps, and broke easily.

Because of these issues, Samsung stopped selling them soon after launch. This caused disappointment among customers. Now, Samsung wants to regain user trust with better quality.

For the Galaxy Buds 4 series, Samsung is working on a simple and strong design. The new earbuds are expected to look more practical and feel more durable. The stems may be flatter and smoother, which can make them stronger and more comfortable to wear. Samsung may remove extra design elements, like LED lights, to keep things simple.

Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro New color

Image via Android Authority

Aside from this, the charging case may also get a new design. Instead of holding the earbuds upright, the case may let them lie flat. This can make the case easier to use and help protect the earbuds from damage. Samsung may also add a Find My Phone button, so users can find their phone using the earbuds.

The Galaxy Buds 4 Pro may include easy touch controls. Users could pinch the stems to play or pause music, change volume, or answer calls. There may also be head controls, like nodding to accept or reject a call or use the voice assistant.

Even with these changes, Samsung is not expected to increase the price. The Galaxy Buds 4 and Buds 4 Pro may cost the same as the Galaxy Buds 3 series. Samsung wants the Galaxy Buds 4 to be simple, strong, and reliable for everyday use.

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I won’t miss the Titanium Galaxy S26 Ultra

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra will launch soon, and it is expected that this flagship will not come with titanum frame, which may not be a big deal for the majority of customers. Here’s a history lesson of this short-lived titanium reign.

In 2023, Apple released iPhone 15 Pro models, the first in line to use a titanium design. Titanium, known for its strong and lightweight composition, is becoming the perfect choice for the next-gen iPhone.

The company followed this design practice with the iPhone 16 in 2024. However, the iPhone 17 Pro made it obsolete, returning to aluminum alloy.

Apple said the new design is space-efficient and is more thermal performance-friendly, but there was a twist. The new design consists of a plateau, which enables Apple to shift some important electronic components inside, making space for a larger battery life.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra and Galaxy S24 Ultra Comparison

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra and Galaxy S24 Ultra (Source – Sammyfans.com)

There is a reason we are taking this crash course: In the following year of Apple’s Titanium debut, Samsung launched the Galaxy S24 Ultra, with a titanium body, the first ever among Galaxy devices. In 2025, Samsung launched the S25 Ultra with the same composition. Yet reports are indicating that Samsung is likely to close a chapter on titanium, similar to Apple.

Early leaks about the design suggest that the Galaxy S26 Ultra will return to aluminum. As you should know, Samsung has been using this material all the way to the S23 Ultra.

Following Apple’s trend, this year should be the time for Samsung to do the same. However, Apple’s decision was justified through its spec upgrade, but Samsung may struggle on this front. Especially the battery, which may remain at 5,000mAh.

So, what could be the difference maker here? Three things: an aluminum frame may help the company to improve the frame molding and reduce frame borders around the bezels for a sleek look. The second is to produce a more vibrant color than the Galaxy S25 Ultra. Third could be a better heat dissipation system for better thermal management.

This news remains unconfirmed, but press renders leak are in favor of excluding this design trait at least from this new smartphone.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra official renders leak

Source – Android Headlines

I’ve held the Galaxy S22 Ultra, S23 Ultra, S24 Ultra, and S25 Ultra. The latter phones bring a more premium finish and a better in-hand experience than the former two. However, that’s the only thing that separates the S24U and S25U from their predecessors.

Ultimately, consumers won’t mind holding an aluminum Galaxy S26 Ultra if Samsung can justify removing the titanium and adding important hardware upgrades.

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Samsung’s ISE 2026 showcase highlights AI signage, Micro LED and more

Samsung used ISE 2026 to unveil Spatial Signage, a glasses-free 3D display along with Micro LED and enterprise display technologies.

The company is not presenting Spatial Signage as a one-off product. It is positioning it as part of a tighter system where display hardware, content creation, and deployment live under the same roof.

Spatial Signage

Spatial Signage is Samsung’s latest attempt to make 3D viable in real commercial environments. The display relies on the company’s proprietary 3D Plate technology, which creates depth behind the LCD panel itself rather than projecting outward.

The first global model measures 85 inches and uses a 4K UHD panel with a 2,160 x 3,840 resolution in a 9:16 portrait layout. Retail floors, museums, luxury storefronts, and entertainment venues are the primary targets.

Samsung Spatial Signage

Source – Samsung

AI Studio

At ISE 2026, Samsung also demonstrated AI Studio, a new app inside its VXT platform. The tool converts still images into motion-ready signage content without relying on third-party software.

For Spatial Signage, the system automatically adjusts shadows, spacing, and background treatment to better suit the 3D effect, reducing the amount of manual tuning typically required.

Micro LED

Beyond Spatial Signage, Samsung used ISE 2026 to broaden its supersized commercial display lineup. The headline addition is the 130-inch Micro RGB Signage (QPHX), shown to commercial audiences for the first time.

108-inch The Wall All-in-One in 2k res

Samsung also introduced a new 108-inch The Wall All-in-One (MMF-A) in 2K resolution. Like existing 110-inch, 136-inch, and 146-inch variants, it reduces on-site complexity, but the 108-inch model goes further with a split-panel structure.

Enterprise displays

Samsung confirmed that its 115-inch 4K Smart Signage (QHFX) and 146-inch 2K The Wall All-in-One (IAB) are now certified for compatibility with Cisco collaboration devices.

The company also announced a new partnership with Logitech. The 4K Smart Signage QBC series is now part of Microsoft’s Express Install for Microsoft Teams Rooms.

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Samsung Wallet goes after Apple Pay with Amex cards

Samsung announced that its Wallet app will gain support for Amex (American Express) cards. Starting February 4th, Samsung Wallet users can utilize the app to make international payments through their Amex card.

Mastercard and Visa are already supported on Samsung Wallet, with Amex being the latest addition. This expansion will facilitate Samsung Wallet users with overseas payments, even without requiring a physical card.

Based on this collaboration with Amex, Samsung plans to expand the Wallet app’s global payment support coverage and further strengthen its competitiveness in the global markets.

Beyond that, it’s the latest attempt against Apple, which continues to expand the presence of Apple Pay in the markets where Samsung Wallet has a clear lead in the segment.

American Express

Amex is a technology-based global premium payment and lifestyle brand that is a credit card preferred by high-income earners and business travelers in the US, Europe, and Asia.

American Express cards provide users with several premium benefits to customers through partnerships with hotels, airlines, restaurants, and more.

Payments through Samsung Wallet are available at American Express merchants worldwide that support NFC (contactless payment). The company says it plans to expand beyond Samsung Card to additional card issuers later.

Chae Won-chul, Executive Vice President and Head of the Digital Wallet Team at Samsung Electronics’ MX Division, said, “Through this addition of Amex card international payment support, we plan to strengthen Samsung Wallet’s global usability and provide differentiated services to premium card users,” adding, “In the future, Samsung Wallet will continue to improve user convenience by adding more global payment options.”

Samsung Wallet

Samsung Wallet has various services like Samsung Wallet MiliPass, a mobile ID for military personnel and their families, Wallet Money, a rechargeable simple payment service, Wallet Points, a rewards program, and more.

Pay attention, Samsung’s rising digital wallet and payments app offers a secure payment environment based on robust security features, allowing users to use it with confidence during international travel or business trips.

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Galaxy S26 Ultra colors leak again, but bolder options still unseen

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra will launch in four bold colors and at least two online exclusive shades. A fresh leak brings back the flagship’s color options to headlines, but two more rumored colors remain to be seen.

Newly leaked Galaxy S26 Ultra images showcase the device in its four standard colors, including Cobalt Violet, Black, White and Sky Blue. The device could be available in two more shades, namely “Pink Gold” and “Silver Shadow.”

After AndroidHeadlines, Russian retailer Cifrus.ru (via SammyGuru) also revealed official pictures of Samsung’s upcoming flagship. The retailer has also listed a 128GB model of the S26U, which was nothing but a technical error.

Moments after listing the device, Cifrus.ru pulled the webpage. The listing is no longer there, but the visual assets have been grabbed early. Colors that are missing in renders could be sold as Samsung.com-exclusive variants.

Just recently, an online listing brought disappointing news for fans. It looks like Samsung hasn’t installed Qi2 magnets inside the devices. Users would be required to purchase compatible accessories to utilize Qi2 charging.

If it happens, Pixel 10 will remain the only Android device with Qi2 charging. Samsung is widely rumored to bring Qi2 charging to the Galaxy S26 series; meanwhile, things may not turn out the way everyone has anticipated.

Samsung’s Galaxy S26 series could hit market shelves on March 11. Before release, the devices will officially be unveiled on February 25. The event is set to take place in San Francisco, and an official livestream will be available for fans.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Colors

Source – Cifrus.ru

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Galaxy Z Fold7 demand flips the script: Samsung to produce more Fold 8 than Flip 8 in 2026

A new industry report suggests that Samsung is betting big on the Galaxy Z Fold 8 rather than the Z Flip 8, and it’s going to happen for the first time in history.

Korea’s ETNews, citing industry sources reveal that Samsung plans to manufacture around 3.5 million Galaxy Z Fold 8 units for the second half of 2026, compared to just 2.5 to 3 million Galaxy Z Flip 8 devices.

This marks a historic production reversal that nobody saw coming three years ago when the clamshell Flip dominated sales at a comfortable 60-70 percent share.

Galaxy Z Fold 7 to be thanked

At 215g, it came in lighter than the Galaxy S25 Ultra. At 8.9mm thin, it became the slimmest foldable Samsung has ever shipped. Those two numbers alone erased years of complaints about bulky, heavy book-style foldables.

Industry estimates put combined Fold 7 and Flip 7 shipments at over 6 million units last year, with the Fold 7 outselling its clamshell sibling despite initial production plans favoring the Flip.

One industry insider called it “effectively the first Fold to increase shipments through reorders,” a stunning achievement for a product line that traditionally played as a niche portfolio.

Apple is entering the foldable game this year with a book-type device. Analysts project the Cupertino giant will ship approximately 10 million foldable units annually. The message is clear: the book-type form factor is where the real money lives.

Galaxy Z Fold 7 dumped the S Pen support for sleekness. Samsung could keep the Z Fold 8 unchanged from this particular aspect. The company also promises major improvements to the display crease.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

Source – Samsung Mobile Press

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Android 16 QPR3 splits Adaptive Connectivity into Wi-Fi stability and battery saving

Google is finally admitting what Pixel users have known for years. With Android 16 QPR3 Beta 2, Adaptive Connectivity is no longer a single, vague toggle buried in network settings. It is now split into two clear controls, each with a specific job and a clearer promise.

Until now, Adaptive Connectivity lived as a lone on-off switch under Settings, Network and internet. Google said it would extend battery life and manage connections automatically. You flipped it on and hoped the phone made the right call when Wi-Fi turned unreliable or power drain lagged in.

In QPR3 Beta 2 (via 9to5Google), Adaptive Connectivity becomes two separate toggles, both enabled by default.

One focuses purely on stability. Auto switch to mobile network does exactly what the name suggests. When Wi-Fi quality drops, the phone prioritizes staying connected, even if that means jumping to mobile data.

The second toggle is about restraint. Optimize network for battery life chooses the most efficient connection with power savings in mind, not raw reliability.

Android 16 QPR3 Adaptive Connectivity

Technically, the change appears tied to an update of Adaptive Connectivity Services, recently pushed via Google System Services as version p.2026.01.

In Android 16 QPR3 Beta 2, the old single toggle is gone. In its place sit the two new options, described in plain language, inside the same Network and internet menu.

This split matters more than it may look at first glance. One more QPR3 beta is expected later this month. The stable Android 16 QPR3 release is still lined up for March.

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Samsung update policy changes: Galaxy S21 out, S22 and S21 FE moved to slower track

February 2026 version of the Samsung update roadmap has brought bad news for the users of the Galaxy S21 series, S22 series, and S21 FE. Notable reshuffle has been carried out, with some getting ousted and others getting downgraded.

Looking at the differences between the January 2026 and February 2026 charts:

Models removed completely

  • Galaxy S21 series (moved from Quarterly in January, completely removed in February):
    • Galaxy S21 5G
    • Galaxy S21+ 5G
    • Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G

Samsung launched the Galaxy S21 series in January 2021. The lineup has received four years of regular security updates and an additional year of quarterly updates. Samsung ended the support after the 5th anniversary.

Even though the software support has ended, your device will remain as functional as before. It would stop receiving new Android and One UI patches, rendering your privacy and data less secure and vulnerable to threats.

Models shifted from Monthly to Quarterly

  • Galaxy S22 series (demoted from Monthly to Quarterly):
    1. Galaxy S22
    2. Galaxy S22+
    3. Galaxy S22 Ultra
  • Galaxy S21 FE 5G (remained in Quarterly, but was in Monthly in January)

Galaxy S22 series and S21 FE have been downgraded from Monthly to Quarterly tier. The devices have completed their 4-year monthly updates support. Now, Samsung will offer a new security update once every three months.

If you own a Galaxy S22 series device or the S21 FE, February 2027 would mark the end of software updates support. Your device will remain secure through software patches through January 2027, with no impact on functionality.

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Samsung updates One UI software rollout roadmap – February 2026

Samsung today released the February 2026 patch details and software roadmap. This month’s roadmap carried out major changes, removing 2021’s flagship lineup from support and demoting the 2022’s premium phones alongside an FE.

Galaxy S21 series will no longer receive software updates. The Galaxy S22 series will now get new updates on a quarterly basis. The S21 FE has also been transferred to the Quarterly schedule, demoted from the Monthly tier.

Current Models for Monthly Security Updates

Premium Samsung devices are eligible for new updates every month. The chart is dominated by Galaxy S and Z series phones. However, Samsung also provides monthly updates to select Galaxy A and Tab series devices.

Galaxy Foldable Series

  • Galaxy Z TriFold
  • Galaxy Z Fold4, Galaxy Z Fold5, Galaxy Z Fold6, Galaxy Z Fold7, Galaxy Z Fold Special Edition
  • Galaxy Z Flip4, Galaxy Z Flip5, Galaxy Z Flip6, Galaxy Z Flip7, Galaxy Z Flip7 FE
  • W23, W23 Flip, W24, W24 Flip, W25, W25 Flip, W26

Galaxy S Series

  • Galaxy S25, Galaxy S25+, Galaxy S25 Ultra, Galaxy S25 Edge, Galaxy S25 FE
  • Galaxy S24, Galaxy S24+, Galaxy S24 Ultra, Galaxy S24 FE
  • Galaxy S23, Galaxy S23+, Galaxy S23 Ultra, Galaxy S23 FE

Galaxy A Series

  • Galaxy A56 5G

Enterprise Models

  • Galaxy A53 5G, Galaxy A54 5G, Galaxy A55 5G
  • Galaxy Tab Active5 Pro
  • Galaxy XCover6 Pro, Galaxy XCover7, Galaxy XCover7 Pro

Current Models for Monthly Security Updates

Non-flagship devices, such as mid-range and budget devices, get updated once every quarter. This tier also features Samsung’s flagship tablets. In addition, Samsung shifts Monthly devices to Quarterly chart after a certain period.

Galaxy Foldable Series

  • Galaxy Z Fold3 5G
  • Galaxy Z Flip3 5G

Galaxy S Series

  • Galaxy S22, Galaxy S22+, Galaxy S22 Ultra
  • Galaxy S21 FE 5G

Galaxy A Series

  • Galaxy A04, Galaxy A04s, Galaxy A04e, Galaxy A05, Galaxy A05s, Galaxy A06, Galaxy A06 5G, Galaxy A07
  • Galaxy A13, Galaxy A14, Galaxy A14 5G, Galaxy A15, Galaxy A15 5G, Galaxy A16, Galaxy A16 5G, Galaxy A17, Galaxy A17 5G
  • Galaxy A23, Galaxy A23 5G, Galaxy A24, Galaxy A25 5G, Galaxy A26 5G
  • Galaxy A33 5G, Galaxy A34 5G, Galaxy A35 5G, Galaxy A36 5G
  • Galaxy A73 5G

Galaxy C Series

  • Galaxy C55 5G

Galaxy M Series

  • Galaxy M04, Galaxy M05, Galaxy M06 5G, Galaxy M07
  • Galaxy M13, Galaxy M13 5G, Galaxy M14, Galaxy M14 5G, Galaxy M15 5G, Galaxy M16 5G,
  • Galaxy M17 5G
  • Galaxy M23 5G
  • Galaxy M33 5G, Galaxy M34 5G, Galaxy M35 5G, Galaxy M36 5G
  • Galaxy M44 5G
  • Galaxy M53 5G, Galaxy M54 5G, Galaxy M55 5G, Galaxy M55s 5G, Galaxy M56 5G

Galaxy F Series

  • Galaxy F04, Galaxy F05, Galaxy F06 5G, Galaxy F07
  • Galaxy F13, Galaxy F14, Galaxy F14 5G, Galaxy F15 5G, Galaxy F16 5G, Galaxy F17 5G
  • Galaxy F34 5G, Galaxy F36 5G
  • Galaxy F54 5G, Galaxy F55 5G, Galaxy F56 5G

Galaxy Tab S Series

  • Galaxy Tab S11, Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra
  • Galaxy Tab S10+, Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra, Galaxy Tab S10 FE, Galaxy Tab S10 FE+, Galaxy Tab S10 Lite
  • Galaxy Tab S9, Galaxy Tab S9+, Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra, Galaxy Tab S9 FE, Galaxy Tab S9 FE+
  • Galaxy Tab S8, Galaxy Tab S8+, Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra
  • Galaxy Tab S6 Lite (2024)

Galaxy Tab A Series

  • Galaxy Tab A11, Galaxy Tab A11+
  • Galaxy Tab A9, Galaxy Tab A9+, Galaxy Tab A9+(2025)

Enterprise Models

  • Galaxy Tab Active4 Pro, Galaxy Tab Active5
  • Galaxy XCover5

Samsung’s Biannual software update tier has officially shut down this month. As of January 31, 2026, the category had two devices, including the A03 and Tab A8. Now, there are just two categories: Monthly and Quarterly.

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February 2026 update brings 37 patches to Samsung devices [Details]

Samsung has made the details of its February 2026 security update public. Galaxy phones, foldables, and tablets will receive over three dozen CVE and SVE items combined.

February 2026 update brings 37 patches to Samsung devices, including smartphones, foldable phones, and tablets. Among the total improvements, 25 come from Google for Android and 12 are provided by Samsung Mobile.

Android CVEs

Google no longer introduces “critical” patches in the monthly bulletin. The company has tweaked the mechanism to benefit a wide range of Android devices. The February patch features 25 “high” level CVEs for Samsung devices.

Here’s a list of CVEs included in the February update:

  • CVE-2025-47366, CVE-2025-47397, CVE-2025-47398, CVE-2025-47402, CVE-2025-48630, CVE-2025-48641, CVE-2025-48645, CVE-2025-48646, CVE-2025-48649, CVE-2025-48650, CVE-2026-0014, CVE-2026-0015, CVE-2026-0017,
  • CVE-2026-0018, CVE-2026-0020, CVE-2026-0021, CVE-2026-0023, CVE-2026-20401, CVE-2026-20403, CVE-2026-20404, CVE-2026-20405, CVE-2026-20406, CVE-2026-20420, CVE-2026-20421, CVE-2026-20422

Apart from this, Samsung highlighted that it has already patched 8 CVE items that Google included in its February bulletin.

Here’s a list of CVEs Samsung already patches:

  • CVE-2025-48568, CVE-2025-48574, CVE-2025-48577, CVE-2025-48602, CVE-2025-48605, CVE-2025-48616, CVE-2025-48619, CVE-2026-20402

One UI SVEs

One UI is based on Android, yet Samsung specifically brings SVE items to further cement Galaxy’s security and reliability. The latest iteration carries 12 Samsung Vulnerabilities and Exposures items for Galaxy device users.

Samsung’s February 2026 SMR has 12 patches for One UI labeled as “High” and “Moderate.”

  1. SVE-2025-1140(CVE-2026-20977)
    • Improper access control in Emergency Sharing prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows local attackers to interrupt its functioning.
  2. SVE-2025-1217(CVE-2026-20983)
    • Improper export of android application components in Samsung Dialer prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows local attackers to launch arbitrary activity with Samsung Dialer privilege.
  3. SVE-2025-2226(CVE-2026-20978)
    • Improper authorization in KnoxGuardManager prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows local attackers to bypass the persistence configuration of the application.
  4. SVE-2025-2289(CVE-2026-20979)
    • Improper privilege management in Settings prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows local attackers to launch arbitrary activity with Settings privilege.
  5. SVE-2025-2473(CVE-2026-20980)
    • Improper input validation in PACM prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows physical attacker to execute arbitrary commands.
  6. SVE-2025-2705(CVE-2026-20981)
    • Improper input validation in FacAtFunction prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows privileged physical attacker to execute arbitrary command with system privilege.
  7. SVE-2025-2706(CVE-2026-20982)
    • Path traversal in ShortcutService prior to SMR Feb-2026 Release 1 allows privileged local attacker to create file with system privilege.

Samsung Knox Security

Note that some of the SVE items may not be included in this package, in case these items were already included in a previous update. Some SVE items included in the Samsung Android Security Update cannot be disclosed at this time.

Samsung will begin rolling out the February 2026 security update soon.

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Galaxy S26 Global version benchmarks with bold CPU and GPU performance

Samsung Galaxy S26 Global version has now appeared on Geekbench, revealing the Exynos 2600’s CPU and GPU performance benchmarks.

Galaxy S26 and S26 Plus will launch with Exynos 2600 in the Global market, whereas the Galaxy S26 Ultra will go solo with Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5. Samsung’s in-house chip has made great improvements in CPU and GPU stats.

Galaxy S26 Exynos CPU performance

The Galaxy S26 vanilla model has spotted on Geekbench with the Exynos 2600 chipset. The device scored up to 3336 points in single-core CPU performance tests and up to 11369 in multi-core CPU performance tests.

Galaxy S26 Exynos GPU performance

The base Galaxy S26 was also tested on Geekbench’s GPU benchmark. The phone benchmarked at 27478 points in Vulkan, indicating strong performance. This is backed by Samsung’s Xclipse 960 GPU powered by AMD graphics.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Exynos 2600 CPU GPU

Source – Geekbench

The Exynos 2600 chipset features a deca-core CPU, consisting of a tri-cluster architecture. It has a prime core clocked at 3.8 GHz, 3 performance cores hitting 3.26 GHz, and six efficiency cores peaking at 2.76 GHz.

Additional info revealed in the benchmark test includes Android 16-based One UI skin and 12GB of RAM. The device is set to launch with One UI 8.5 preinstalled and storage options start from 256GB; there’s no 128GB version.

The device was tested a handful of times on the Geekbench platform. Scores remained stable, indicating that the company has finally achieved reliability. From this point, only further improvements are likely till release.

Samsung will introduce the Galaxy S26 series on February 25 in San Francisco.

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Galaxy S26 leak paints a worrying picture for Qi2 wireless charging

Samsung Galaxy S26 series is widely expected to bring Qi2 wireless charging upgrade. Samsung also has a new Magnet Charger with Qi2 support, which could launch this month, but a new leak signals troubling info for fans.

Recently, NewMobile leaked images of the S26 Ultra’s S Pen along with official cases and screen protectors. The leaks indicate that the transparent cases may or may not have a magnetic ring for wireless charging.

This revelation suggests that the Galaxy S26 series may not have Qi2 magnets inside. If true, it’s a massive letdown after a long streak of leaks of arrival. Fans would have to rely on official cases to support Qi2 wireless charging.

Case with magnets is to support Qi2 charging, while the regular transparent case that lack magnetic field on the back is the point. If there’s a case exist without magnets, it’s simply telling us that there is no native Qi2 magnet inside.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Qi2 Case

Source – nieuwemobiel

In the past, we’ve seen leaks of upgraded wireless charging standards and Qi2-compatible power banks. The recently leaked Magnet Charger also signaled the upgraded charging standard, but that’s not going to happen.

Meanwhile, it’s said that the Galaxy S26 Ultra may charge at up to 25W wirelessly. Samsung could be bringing 15W or 20W charging to the Galaxy S26 and S26 Plus.

Galaxy S25 series and later flagships are already Qi2 charging-ready. Buy a Qi2-compatible case, and your phone will begin supporting Qi2 charging. The same could have to be done with the new Samsung Galaxy flagships.

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Samsung Display’s A6 Gen 8 OLED factory to begin production in May

Samsung Display will reportedly begin production at its new Gen 8 OLED factory, A6, in May. This will be the first factory in the world to make OLED screens using Gen 8 technology.

Gen 8 means the factory uses very large glass sheets to make screens. Bigger glass allows the company to make bigger screens more easily and at lower cost. These large OLED screens are mainly used in laptops and tablets. Today, most phone OLED screens are still made in Gen 6 factories, which use smaller glass.

Samsung Display has already told its suppliers that glass substrates will be added to the A6 production line in May. This is a sign that the factory is almost ready to run at full speed. The screens made at this factory will be used in Apple’s future MacBook laptops. Apple plans to launch MacBooks with OLED screens later this year, in 14-inch and 16-inch sizes.

Samsung Display Car OLED

Source – Samsung Display

The Korean tech giant expects to ship about 2 million OLED screens for MacBooks this year. Some parts needed to finish the display are still under development. Apple is also changing some designs to save money. Because the final assembly happens later, Samsung Display wants to make enough screens first.

Samsung Display has a bigger plan for the A6 factory. It wants the factory to be able to make up to 10 million 14.3-inch OLED screens every year. Stay tuned for more information.

Google Search Top Stories Preferred Source

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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra could be more expensive in 2026

Samsung’s new phone, the Galaxy S26 Ultra, could cost more than last year’s Galaxy S25 Ultra. The main reason is that the price of important parts like RAM (memory) and storage has gone up. These higher costs are affecting many electronics, and now smartphones are being affected too.

Reports say the Galaxy S26 Ultra could cost about 6% more than the S25 Ultra. The S25 Ultra started at $1,299.99 for the 256GB model. With a 6% increase, the S26 Ultra could cost around $1,377.

So, the price might be between $1,350 and $1,400. In South Korea, the new phone could be 1.8 million Won, up from 1.69 million Won for the previous model.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Camera

Samsung has not officially announced the price or the release date yet. These numbers are only estimates. It is possible that Samsung could keep the price the same, but because memory and storage are more expensive now, it is more likely the company will charge a bit more. Other phones in the Galaxy S26 series might also cost more.

For buyers, this means flagship phones in 2026 could be a little more expensive. The main reason is that modern phones need faster memory and more storage, which costs more to make. Small price increases like this are becoming common as phones get better and more advanced.

Even though Samsung hasn’t shared the official price yet, it seems very likely that the Galaxy S26 Ultra will cost more than the S25 Ultra. Buyers should expect a small price increase when the new phone launches later this year.

Google Search Top Stories Preferred Source

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Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra could redefine face unlock with sleek punch hole

Samsung may bring a new way to unlock phones with your face on the Galaxy S27 Ultra. The exciting part is that it could be very secure without needing a large cutout or notch. This means the phone can stay sleek and all-screen.

According to the information, the new technology is called Polar ID. Unlike normal face unlock, which uses 3D sensors and many parts, Polar ID works by looking at how light reflects off your skin. Everyone’s skin reflects light in a unique way. 

The new system is also very fast. When you look at your phone, it sends out infrared light and captures both the image and how the light reflects. This happens in about 180 milliseconds, so unlocking your phone is almost instant.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Camera

Polar ID is much smaller than current face unlock systems. Normal systems need many parts, like cameras and projectors, which take up space. Polar ID combines everything into one module that is 50% smaller. This means Samsung could fit it inside a small punch-hole camera, keeping the phone’s screen clean and smooth.

Right now, this is just a rumor as Samsung has not confirmed the Galaxy S27 Ultra’s final features. But if Polar ID works as expected, it could make Samsung phones more secure and stylish. Stay tuned for more information.

Google Search Top Stories Preferred Source

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One UI 8.5 Beta 4 moves closer to release for US Galaxy S25 models

Samsung has already released the One UI 8.5 Beta 3 update for the Galaxy S25 series. For a long time, the company has been working on the next beta update. Now, new information confirms that One UI 8.5 Beta 4 is coming to Galaxy S25 models in the US.

According to tipster Tarun Vats, a new One UI 8.5 beta build has appeared on Samsung’s US testing servers for the Galaxy S25 lineup. This confirms that the Beta 4 update is ready for the US region. Earlier, the testing beta build was also spotted on servers in other regions, including South Korea.

The new build version is S938USQU7ZZAH, which shows that Samsung is actively testing the next beta update. This also suggests that Samsung may release more beta updates before launching the final stable version.

Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra Camera

Samsung has already confirmed that the stable One UI 8.5 update will be released with the Galaxy S26 series, which is expected to launch on 25 February 2025. Since we are already in February 2026, there is still a chance that one more beta update could arrive before the stable rollout.

Earlier, the One UI 8.5 Beta 4 changelog was leaked online. It revealed several fixes and improvements for Galaxy S25 users. The update fixes Phone app crashes, search history issues, and Bluetooth call switching problems. It also fixes a bug where call links did not paste correctly. In addition, Bixby has received backend updates to improve its speed and performance, and AI Select now closes automatically after use.

However, Beta 4 is expected to include more changes and improvements beyond these fixes. The update could be released at any time, so stay tuned for more updates.

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Samsung Galaxy S25 series stock enters reverse countdown

It’s been a year since the Samsung Galaxy S25 series entered sales, and after shipping millions of units worldwide, the lineup’s stock has started a reverse countdown.

It’s always a good time to buy a Galaxy device right before the launch of its successor. Samsung customers know this strategy and wait until the last moment to turn this situation into an opportunity.

The reason behind this thinking is based on the price discounts on the outgoing model. Hence, the company doesn’t want to keep selling the old unit in the face of a new release. Now, Samsung is emptying its inventory of the Galaxy S25 series.

The change has appeared on the online order page of the base and the Plus variants. As some of the color options are already out of stock. Among these, the 128GB variant is receiving extra attention, with its three online store colors – Mint, Icyblue, and Silver Shadow- no longer available. Yet, the online exclusive colors of the Galaxy S25 series are still in stock.

Galaxy S25 series stock

The same changes are also observed on the locked model for at least two color variants. However, this scenario remains irrelevant to the S25 Ultra, as all of its versions are still open for orders, at least for now.

This is a completely usual practice for the phone maker, as it phases out the existing stock of the concurrent flagship phones. Samsung may restock the outsold models, but it remains highly doubtful.

On the other hand, a teaser leak has confirmed that the Galaxy S26 series will launch on February 25, 2026. Given this revelation, Samsung may drain the stock further as we near the next Unpacked event. Still, if you want to sweep a unit of the Galaxy S25, S25+, or S25 Ultra, this is the best time for you to advance with the existing discount.

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Should you turn off AICore on your Samsung phone?

Samsung phones, like the Galaxy S24 FE, come with a system app, AICore. This app helps run AI features on the phone. A big benefit is that it can do many of these things on the phone itself, without needing the internet. Some people, however, might want to turn it off to save storage or battery.

In a recent experiment by Android Authority, it has been decided to disable AICore. The process involved navigating to Settings >> Apps >> AICore, then selecting Force Stop and Disable. Additionally, the they enabled the “Process data only on device” option in Galaxy AI to ensure remaining AI tasks would continue to run locally.

After disabling it, they noticed very little change. Some AI features, like Generative Edit in the Gallery or Summarize in Samsung Internet, now asked to use the internet instead of working locally. Since these features were rarely used, it didn’t make much difference. Other features, like Circle to Search and Live Transcribe, continued to work normally.

Samsung Galaxy S24 FE

Samsung Galaxy S24 FE

Turning off AICore didn’t make a noticeable difference in speed or battery life. The app takes about 1.3GB of storage, but it doesn’t use much RAM, and battery performance stayed about the same. On other phones, some users have seen better battery life after disabling it, so results may vary.

One thing to keep in mind is privacy. With AICore off, tasks that used to run on the phone may now go through the internet. For those who want AI tasks to stay private, keeping it on is safer.

For people who use AI features very low, turning off AICore is generally fine. So, it frees up some storage without breaking the main features of the phone.

Google Search Top Stories Preferred Source

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Samsung Galaxy F70e will launch on February 9; specs and features revealed

Samsung is getting ready to launch a new smartphone in India called the Galaxy F70e 5G. The phone will be launched on February 9 and it is is made for users who want good camera quality, long battery life, and 5G support at a low price.

The Galaxy F70e 5G will have a 120Hz display, which means the screen will feel smooth while scrolling and watching videos. The display can reach up to 800 nits of brightness and is expected to be an LCD screen. The phone will have a notch at the top of the screen.

For photos, the phone will come with a 50MP main camera on the back and a 2MP depth camera for portrait photos. On the front, it will have an 8MP camera for selfies and video calls.

The phone will be powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 6300 processor. The phone supports 12 5G bands, which helps with better network coverage. It will also have a big 6000mAh battery, so users can use the phone for long hours without charging often.

Samsung Galaxy F70e

Via – Fonearena

The Galaxy F70e 5G will run Android 16 with One UI 8. Samsung has promised six Android updates and six years of security updates.

The phone will have a leather-like finish on the back and will be available in Lime Green and Spotlight Blue colors. It also has an IP54 rating, which protects it from dust and water splashes.

Other features include Voice Focus for clearer calls and Samsung Knox Vault for better security. The phone will be sold on the Samsung India website and Flipkart after launch. The company has confirmed that the phone will cost under ₹15,000, which makes it a budget-friendly option.

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Samsung’s 2026 S Pen for Galaxy S26 Ultra out

Samsung is preparing to launch its next flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S26 Ultra, and a new leak has revealed details about its S Pen stylus. The leak gives an early look at the stylus design and some official accessories expected to arrive with the phone. The information has been shared by NieuweMobiel.nl.

The Korean tech giant appears to be introducing a new two-tone design for the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s S Pen. Most of the stylus body comes in either black or white, which makes up nearly 90 percent of the pen. The top part of the S Pen, which remains visible when stored inside the phone, matches the color of the device.

The leaked images show four color options that are expected to match the Galaxy S26 Ultra finishes. These include Cobalt Violet, Shadow Black, White Shadow, and Galactical Blue. This design helps the S Pen blend smoothly with the phone and keeps a clean, simple look.

Samsung Galaxy S26 S Pen

Image via NieuweMobiel.nl.

Samsung will continue to offer familiar S Pen features. The stylus will include a physical button on the side and a clickable top. However, Bluetooth support is not making a return. This means features like Air Actions and gesture controls will not be available on the Galaxy S26 Ultra.

Image via NieuweMobiel.nl.

Along with the S Pen, the leak also reveals several accessories for the device. These include anti-reflective screen protectors and clear cases, available both with and without a magnetic ring on the back.

Image via NieuweMobiel.nl.

Aside from this, Samsung is also expected to offer a wide range of official cases at launch. These will reportedly include the Standing Grip Case, Rugged Case, Flipsuit Case, Silicone Case, and Kinduit Case.

Samsung will reportedly launch the Galaxy S26 series on 25 February 2026 at the Galaxy Unpacked event. Stay tuned for more information.

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Samsung Galaxy Watch 9, Ultra 2 and Tab S12 appear with bold twist

While everyone is awaiting the Galaxy S26 series, Samsung is already working on the Galaxy Watch 9, Watch Ultra 2, Tab S12+, and Tab S12 Ultra.

New entries in the GSMA IMEI database have revealed Samsung’s next flagship tablets and smartwatches, offering a rare, concrete glimpse into the company’s plans months ahead of launch.

The listings were first uncovered by Smartprix, and they hint at a strategy shift that will not go unnoticed by long-time Galaxy watchers.

Galaxy Watch 9 and Watch Ultra 2

The GSMA IMEI database confirms the Galaxy Watch 9 with model number SM-L345U and the Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 listed as SM-L716U.

The Galaxy Watch 9 is expected to continue refining Samsung’s established smartwatch formula. Design changes are likely to be subtle, with the focus shifting to improved health tracking, better efficiency, and longer battery life.

The emergence of the Watch Ultra 2 confirms that Samsung sees long-term potential in the rugged, durability-focused segment it entered recently. Expect tougher materials, enhanced GPS accuracy, and deeper fitness and outdoor features.

Galaxy Tab S12+ and Tab S12 Ultra

Samsung is preparing two tablets: the Galaxy Tab S12 Ultra 5G, listed as SM-X946B, and the Galaxy Tab S12+ 5G with model number SM-X846B. For now, there is no standard Galaxy Tab S12 anywhere in sight.

Last year, Samsung trimmed its tablet lineup by dropping the Plus model and sticking to a base Tab S11 and a premium Ultra. Now the company seems to be reversing course. The Plus is back, and the entry-level flagship is gone.

Samsung Galaxy Watch 9, Watch Ultra, and Tab S12 Ultra GSMA listing

Source – Smartprix

The IMEI leaks suggest Samsung is entering the second half of 2026 with a sharper, more premium-focused lineup. The smartwatches may launch alongside the Galaxy Z Fold 8, Flip 8, and Wide Fold in H2 206.

Historically, Samsung devices tend to surface in IMEI databases roughly six to seven months before launch. With these listings now public, a Galaxy Unpacked event sometime in July 2026 looks increasingly plausible.

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Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Details: Here’s everything you should know

The Galaxy S25 series was a hit in 2025, and Samsung is now working on its successor lineup. This article contains crucial details about the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra flagship smartphone, based on leaks and industry reports.

Samsung is set to launch the Galaxy S26 Ultra on February 25, 2026, but the details mentioned in this article may change based on the following inputs. For now, do not take this information as a confirmed spec or feature of the device.

Quick Look: What the rumors say

  • Expected Release: February 25 (launch), March 11 (release/first sale)
  • Processor: Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy (TSMC 3nm)
  • RAM: LPDDR5X RAM (Faster 10.7Gbps)
  • Display: 120Hz refresh rate, 2600 nits brightness, and a new Privacy Display feature (Flex Magic Pixel technology)
  • Camera: 200MP main, 50MP ultrawide, 50MP 5x periscope and a 12MP 3x telephoto
  • Charging: 60W wired and 25W Qi2 wireless charging
  • Design: A potential move from “floating lenses” to a new pill-shaped camera island
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra CAD Render

Image Source – Onleaks and AndroidHeadlines

Display

Samsung’s displays are always best-in-class, and the S26 Ultra aims to continue that legacy.

  • Size: 6.9-inch Dynamic AMOLED.
  • Refresh rate: 120Hz refresh rate, touch sampling rate will increase.
  • Brightness: Peak brightness is rumored to remain unchanged at 2,600 nits.
  • Protection: It’s expected to use the next-generation Corning Gorilla Glass Armor.
  • New Feature: The most exciting feature is the “Privacy Display” technology based on “Flex Magic Pixel.”

Performance

Galaxy S26 Ultra will use Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy, a chipset tailored for Samsung flagships. The chip will be manufactured using TSMC’s 3nm process technology, offering significant gains in CPU, GPU, and especially NPU.

A key rumor indicates the S26 Ultra will be one of the first phones to use new LPDDR5X RAM clocked at 10.7Gbps. This is a substantial speed bump from the 8.5Gbps RAM in the S25 Ultra, offering various improvements.

Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Features

Image: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Features

Camera

Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra is expected to be paired with:

  • A 200MP Wide (primary) sensor with f/1.4 aperture.
  • A 50MP Ultrawide lens (1/2.52-inch sensor size).

A dual-telephoto system.

The device may use a new telephoto camera with 10MP resolution, trimmed down from a 12MP lens, featuring 3x optical zoom at a 1/3.94-inch sensor size, smaller than the Galaxy S25 Ultra’s 1/3.52-inch image sensor.

Additionally, the Galaxy S26 Ultra will have a 50MP periscope with a 1/2.52-inch sensor size. This camera will offer 5x optical zoom capabilities and enhanced light intake as compared to its predecessor, the S25 Ultra.

The bigger punch-hole:

  • Recent rumors suggest it will stick with a 12MP punch-hole but will make the cutout larger. This is allegedly to house a new lens with a wider 85-degree field-of-view (up from 80), allowing for better group selfies.

Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Camera Hole

Battery and charging

This is the upgrade users have been requesting for years. Samsung isn’t bringing a capacity upgrade to the Galaxy S26 Ultra. The battery will remain 5,000mAh, but the wired and wireless charging will upgrade to 60W and 25W, respectively.

Disclaimer: This is an Article Based on Leaks and Rumors

The information presented in this article is based on early leaks, supply chain rumors, and industry analyst speculation circulating as of February 2, 2026.

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