Connect with us
DAPA Banner

Business

Which 2026 Foldable Wins for Thinness, Power or Battery?

Published

on

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold represent the pinnacle of 2026 book-style foldables, pitting Samsung’s ultra-slim design and raw power against Google’s superior battery life, cameras and pure Android experience in a head-to-head battle that has divided reviewers and buyers since both devices launched last year.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

Released in July 2025, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 starts at $1,999 and quickly became known as the thinnest and lightest mainstream foldable yet. Google countered in October 2025 with the Pixel 10 Pro Fold at a more accessible $1,799 starting price. As of April 2026, both phones have received software updates, real-world testing and direct comparisons that highlight clear trade-offs rather than a single outright winner.

The most striking difference is physical design. Samsung engineered the Z Fold 7 to feel as close as possible to a traditional slab phone. It measures just 8.9mm thick when folded and an astonishing 4.2mm when unfolded, weighing only about 215-216 grams. Reviewers consistently praise how pocketable and comfortable it feels for all-day carry, describing it as transformative for first-time foldable users who previously found the category too bulky.

In contrast, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold remains noticeably thicker and heavier — over 40 grams more than the Z Fold 7 in many measurements. While still an improvement over earlier Pixel Folds, it does not match Samsung’s refinement in this area. Many testers say the weight difference becomes evident during prolonged use, especially when holding the device unfolded for media consumption or multitasking.

Advertisement

Display quality is competitive but favors Samsung slightly for everyday versatility. Both offer roughly 8-inch inner folding panels with 120Hz adaptive refresh rates and high peak brightness reaching 3,000 nits or more. The Z Fold 7’s 6.5-inch cover display features a taller 21:9 aspect ratio that many find more usable for one-handed operation compared with the Pixel’s 6.4-inch outer screen. Crease visibility has improved on both, but Samsung’s panel often edges out in outdoor visibility and color vibrancy according to side-by-side tests.

Performance leans toward Samsung. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 is powered by the Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, an overclocked flagship chip that delivers superior benchmark scores and smoother gaming. Paired with 12GB RAM (or 16GB on 1TB models), it handles demanding tasks like video editing and heavy multitasking with less thermal throttling. Google’s Tensor G5 in the Pixel 10 Pro Fold prioritizes AI efficiency over raw speed; it includes 16GB RAM standard and excels in on-device machine learning features, but falls behind in sustained performance for graphics-intensive games.

Battery life tells the opposite story. The Pixel 10 Pro Fold packs a larger 5,015mAh cell and routinely delivers longer endurance, often lasting well into a second day of moderate use. The Z Fold 7’s 4,400mAh battery is adequate for most users but frequently requires topping up by evening, especially with the inner display active. Charging speeds are modest on both — 25W wired for Samsung and 30W for Google — with wireless options available.

Advertisement

Camera systems showcase the brands’ traditional strengths. Samsung equips the Z Fold 7 with a 200MP main sensor that captures highly detailed shots and offers strong zoom capabilities. Reviewers note excellent low-light performance and natural colors in many conditions. Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold relies on computational photography magic, delivering cleaner, more vibrant and consistently color-accurate images, particularly in challenging lighting. While the Pixel’s hardware specs appear lower on paper, its AI-driven processing often produces more pleasing results for casual shooters and content creators. Video recording and specialized features like audio sync also tilt toward Google.

Software and multitasking represent another key divide. Samsung’s One UI 8 on Android 16 provides extensive customization, advanced split-screen and multi-window features that power users love. The Z Fold 7 feels optimized for productivity, with seamless app continuity when unfolding. Google’s stock-like Android experience on the Pixel 10 Pro Fold offers cleaner navigation, faster updates and deeper integration with Gemini AI tools. However, it lacks some of Samsung’s foldable-specific optimizations for heavy multitasking.

Durability and build quality favor Google in one important area: the Pixel 10 Pro Fold carries a full IP68 rating for dust and water resistance, making it more suitable for outdoor or dusty environments. Samsung’s Z Fold 7 improves on previous generations but stops at IP67/IP48-level protection in some reports. Both devices have enhanced hinge durability, though foldables in general still require careful handling.

Pricing and value depend on priorities. At $1,799, the base Pixel 10 Pro Fold undercuts the Z Fold 7’s $1,999 entry point and includes more RAM by default. Higher storage tiers widen the gap, with 1TB models pushing Samsung closer to $2,400. Trade-in deals and carrier promotions can narrow the difference, but Samsung commands a premium for its refined design.

Advertisement

Early 2026 reviews and user feedback reflect the split. Many who prioritize portability, performance and a premium feel lean toward the Galaxy Z Fold 7, calling it the best foldable for most people. Others praise the Pixel 10 Pro Fold for better battery life, cameras in real-world scenarios, durability and the pure Google experience at a lower price. Some buyers switch between both, using the Samsung for its slim profile and the Pixel for travel or photography.

Long-term software support favors Google, which typically delivers seven years of updates. Samsung has closed the gap significantly but still trails slightly in promised platform longevity. Both receive regular security patches and feature drops.

For buyers deciding in April 2026, the choice boils down to lifestyle. Frequent travelers or those who value a phone-like folded experience and top-tier performance should consider the Galaxy Z Fold 7. Users who need all-day battery, excellent computational photography, stronger dust/water resistance and seamless AI features may prefer the Pixel 10 Pro Fold.

Neither device is perfect. Foldables remain expensive, crease visibility persists to varying degrees, and repair costs are high. Yet both represent meaningful progress in making the category more practical for everyday users.

Advertisement

As the foldable market matures, Samsung continues to lead on hardware refinement while Google differentiates through software intelligence and value. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 currently holds a slight edge in most head-to-head reviews for its overall balance, but the Pixel 10 Pro Fold wins converts with its strengths in battery, cameras and affordability.

Prospective buyers should test both in-store if possible, as the feel of a foldable in hand often decides the winner more than specs alone. With trade-in programs and potential summer sales approaching, now remains an excellent time to evaluate which 2026 flagship foldable better suits individual needs.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Roberts-Smith behind bars following war crime charges

Published

on

Ben Roberts-Smith arrested over alleged war crimes

UPDATED: Former SAS soldier Ben Roberts-Smith will spend the night behind bars after being charged with the murder of unarmed Afghan civilians.

Continue Reading

Business

Air New Zealand cuts flights and hikes fares as fuel prices surge

Published

on

Air New Zealand cuts flights and hikes fares as fuel prices surge

Airlines have reduced services and lifted ticket costs as the Iran war weighs on jet fuel supplies.

Continue Reading

Business

Transcend appoints Elizabeth Jackson as marketing chief

Published

on


Transcend appoints Elizabeth Jackson as marketing chief

Continue Reading

Business

Hot money increasingly dominates emerging markets financing, raising risks, IMF says

Published

on

Hot money increasingly dominates emerging markets financing, raising risks, IMF says


Hot money increasingly dominates emerging markets financing, raising risks, IMF says

Continue Reading

Business

Iran War Risk Appears To Be In Danger Zone

Published

on

U.S. Budget Deficit Pressures Mount As War Spending Surges

A wooden cube with the alphabet that makes up the word

Pavel Kot/iStock via Getty Images

By James Picerno

The war with Iran continues to roil financial markets. At some point the risk will peak, providing context for deciding if the worst has passed. Estimating that point will be useful but also challenging

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Beyond The Deadline: What Markets Are Still Not Pricing In

Published

on

Beyond The Deadline: What Markets Are Still Not Pricing In

Beyond The Deadline: What Markets Are Still Not Pricing In

Continue Reading

Business

Launching Main Street Alpha: Focusing On Long-Term Wealth Creation

Published

on

ITWO: Russell 2000 Covered Call Strategy That Outperforms Its Peers (BATS:ITWO)

Introduction

Today, I’m extremely excited to launch Main Street Alpha. This new investing service on Seeking Alpha was created to help investors focus on long-term wealth creation through macro-driven research, structural market trends, and high-conviction investment ideas.

Main Street Alpha combines deep macroeconomic analysis, geopolitical insights, and company-level research to identify the opportunities that benefit from long-term trends instead of short-term market noise. Members receive exclusive research reports, high-conviction investment ideas, three model portfolios, direct access to me, and a private member chat where members discuss the markets and long-term investment strategies.

For a limited time, the first group of members for Main Street Alpha can sign up for the service at the price of $499. The price increases to $599 after this special offer expires.

Main Street Alpha represents the next stage of the journey my followers and I have been on together for more than 10 years on Seeking Alpha.

Advertisement

Introducing Main Street Alpha

I started investing at the age of 15. That was 15 years ago. As some of you may know (because I have brought it up so much in my research), what I did back then was flat-out gambling. I still remember how I felt when I nearly blew up my account on Christmas Eve and had to pretend everything was fine during the holiday.

This is obviously an incredibly silly story, yet in hindsight, all of these mistakes were terrific building blocks for what turned out to be a career in finance and publication. Moreover, because I experimented with almost every type of investing and trading style/strategy, I was able to early on figure out the best approach that fit my goals and strategy.

Fast forward to 2026. I have spent the past six years working professionally in the industry, advising a hedge fund, working for a number of third-party research companies, and building a dividend growth portfolio that has become the foundation of a serious long-term investment strategy.

That strategy is built around what I like to call the “Big Picture” approach, as it combines macroeconomic research, structural trends, political developments, competitive business models, and durable wealth-building strategies like dividend growth investing.

Advertisement

My goal has always been to help investors filter out the daily market noise and focus on the factors that actually drive long-term returns. Even if some readers disagree with a specific stock pick or a thesis, I want them to walk away with a better understanding of the bigger picture that helps them in their own investment process.

Now, it’s time to take all of this to the next level. I believe that everything I have done so far has led to this big moment, as I get to introduce my new endeavor called “Main Street Alpha,” which I’m launching here on Seeking Alpha with Albert Marko, my business partner, long-term mentor, and friend.

It’s everything we have done over the past 10 years, packaged and brought to a whole new level, to bring institutional-grade research to the masses.

Why We Created Main Street Alpha

The current market environment seems to be louder and more challenging than ever.

Advertisement

Every day is a bombardment of news headlines, economic numbers, and a ton of narratives that have the potential to change everything happening in the markets. Essentially, the financial media cycle is moving faster, which is further worsened by social media-fueled noise and artificial intelligence. It has created a data overload.

In my personal experience, some of the most successful investors are the ones who filter out that noise, maintain a focus on the Big Picture (there it is again), and build portfolios that work for them. One thing a former mentor always told me was, “It’s all noise.”

That philosophy has always been the core of my work here on Seeking Alpha.

However, over time, it became increasingly clear to me that my readers wanted more than just ideas on single stocks. They wanted a place to discuss ideas in a more in-depth way, at a higher frequency, and with more in-depth analysis. And personally, I also wanted more. It was time for a change.

Advertisement

This reminds me of the following quote from the 1987 movie “Wall Street”:

If you’re not inside, you are outside, OK?

We’re going to change that, as we’ll be that helping hand in a noisy market that helps you focus on the drivers that actually matter for long-term returns. To achieve that, we’ll combine macroeconomic analysis, structural investment trends, and individual company research.

To us, the goal is very straightforward:

Help individual investors approach markets with the same big-picture mindset used by professional investors.

Main Street Alpha

Main Street Alpha (Main Street Alpha)

Advertisement

What You’ll Find Inside Main Street Alpha

Main Street Alpha is built on a number of core pillars, all of which have the goal to help you make better long-term decisions.

First of all, our members will receive high-conviction investment ideas. All of these are fully supported by detailed research and Big-Picture analysis. Our research is designed to find the best companies and discuss major macro and geopolitical trends. Essentially, in our service, we go the extra mile and tell you what the “big guys” on Wall Street and in Washington, D.C., are discussing. Suddenly, you’re an “insider” as well.

Second, we publish deep-dive research reports that go beyond the “traditional” articles you may be used to on the Internet. Our research deep-dives into various industries, macroeconomic developments, and niche investment opportunities that often go unnoticed.

Just think about the in-depth research I have written so far, taken to the next level.

Advertisement

Moreover, our members will get access to three portfolios:

  • Leo’s personal portfolio.
  • A dividend income portfolio with a >5% average yield and high-single-digit annual dividend growth.
  • A community portfolio that is funded with service proceeds and directly influenced by members who get a say in what we buy and sell.

Image

Main Street Alpha (For Illustrative Purposes Only)

On top of that, members get full access to a private chat with direct access to me, the community, and any real-time investment alerts we publish.

Image

Main Street Alpha

Advertisement

In other words, we’re going exclusive, to a whole new level, and you’re invited!

Who’s Behind Main Street Alpha

This service is run by Albert Marko and myself.

Most of you will be familiar with me. Not only did I just share my story with you, but I also spent the past 10 years sharing way too many details about my personal life. I’m sometimes surprised by how much people know about me and by how much people care.

Albert, however, is a name you may not be familiar with. Until now, of course.

Advertisement

I have worked with Albert for more than six years in various settings. He brings a different but highly complementary skill set, as he’s a political-economic consultant and investor with roughly two decades of experience in foreign affairs and geopolitical analysis.

Moreover, throughout his career, he has advised hedge funds, corporations, and institutional investors on political risk, legislative developments, and international relations. His work has also involved consulting policymakers and members of Congress on geopolitical strategy and economic policy.

For a Big Picture approach, there’s no better partner.

Hence, by integrating political analysis with macroeconomic research and equity strategy, Main Street Alpha aims to give investors a clearer view of the forces that truly drive long-term returns and generate long-term alpha and income for dividend investors.

Advertisement

Who Main Street Alpha Is For

This service is for everyone who has money invested or plans to invest.

However, to narrow it down, it’s especially ideal for readers who:

  • Focus on long-term wealth creation.
  • Want to understand macro and geopolitical trends.
  • Appreciate dividend growth and income investing.
  • Prefer research-driven investment ideas.

If you’re a short-term trader, this service may not be for you, as we help people achieve long-term goals and do not focus on short-term trading signals. However, even if you’re a trader and want to get a better understanding of the market, this service is for you as well.

After all, even traders need to understand the bigger picture.

A Quick Note on Expectations

Before wrapping things up, I want to make one more thing clear.

Advertisement

I’m a macro/equity strategist, not a salesman. This service is not about chasing the next hot stock or promising you quick gains. Markets do not work that way, and anyone who claims otherwise may be selling you something other than good research.

Some ideas will work extremely well. Others may take a while to unfold. And, occasionally, we’ll be wrong on things. That’s part of investing.

What matters is the process to increase the risk/reward and build something that works for you.

That’s what we are about.

Advertisement

Join Us On The Next Stage Of The Journey

Over the past 10 years, the Seeking Alpha community has played a major role in shaping the way I think about markets and investing.

Main Street Alpha is the next step in the investment journey.

It’s the place where we take everything we have been doing to a whole new level. Better intel, better research, portfolio management, and fruitful community discussions.

If that sounds like the investing approach you are looking for, we invite you to join us.

Advertisement

Main Street Alpha is available for $599 per year, with a limited launch discount for the first 400 members who will get the whole package for $499.

Financial Growth Concept: Bull Jumping Up Green Bar Chart with Arrow. 3d rendering

Getty Images

Continue Reading

Business

Boss of manufacturer William Group takes swipes at politicians despite rising revenues

Published

on

Business Live

The steel castings group enjoyed a strong 2025, accounts show

Cook Defence  Systems, Stanhope

Cook Defence Systems, Stanhope(Image: William Cook Group)

The owner of historic UK steel company William Cook has taken a number of swipes at politicians as his company announced rising turnover and profits.

Sir Andrew Cook, chairman of the County Durham and Yorkshire-based steel castings business used the group’s latest accounts to accuse law makers of “fiddling and flirting with costly and unreliable wind and solar while energy demand increases and black-outs loom”. The remarks came as the group – which supplies the defence, rail, manufacturing and structural engineering sectors – reported turnover of almost £100m and a rise in operating profits from £22.3m to £24.2m in the year to the end of June 2025.

It is not the first time industrialist Sir Andrew has aimed criticism at Westminster, having previously said Government efforts to promote a resurgence of UK manufacturing were “wishful thinking”. His group, which employs more than 600 across sites in the North East, Yorkshire and Cumbria, includes various subsidiaries including Cook Defence Systems Ltd, William Cook Rail and a newly created US-based company, among others.

The buoyant 2025 results were credited to the performance of the group’s defence business, which includes production of tank tracks. Sir Andrew said the “internationally unstable situation” was forcing increased spending by NATO members and allies. In addition to the firm’s work for the British Army, Cook Defence Systems also exported to more than a dozen allied nations during the year, serving more than 6,000 vehicles.

Advertisement

The group’s rail business was also said to have prospered, with separate accounts showing turnover falling from £14.5m to £13.8m but its gross profit margin increasing to more than 23% and operating profits up from about £71,000 to more than £556,000. It has contracts for different rolling stock operating across the country, including underground trains.

Sir Andrew said: “It is a testament to our persistence and determination – my motto – that rail has remained a key component of our business despite the sector’s neglect by successive British governments: a neglect which has led to there being no remaining domestic train-builder at all. Instead, taxpayers’ money is squandered on the absurd and truncated HS2 while the rest of the system, best described as ‘good second world’, labours on.”

The chairman added: “Our industrial business had a difficult year, with low order levels continuing. However, this was expected, which is why considerable investment has continued with the goal of making it fit for the future, manned, equipped and qualified to manufacture the ultra-high specification cast components which inevitably will be required when the nuclear industry finally gets its act together.

“In this respect the vacillation of politicians is beyond disgraceful, fiddling and flirting with costly and unreliable wind and solar while energy demand increases and black-outs loom.

Advertisement

“Appropriately, I reproduce an extract from my letter, first published in the Financial Times in 2003: ‘When in the flickering fight of wind and solar-generated power, the realisation finally dawns that nuclear energy is the only reliable way of supplying this planet with carbon-free electricity, the factories which could make nuclear power stations will be long gone and the engineers who knew how to make them, dead’. To which I have nothing to add, other than to reassure readers that William Cook is still alive and kicking and, thank God and medical science, so am I.”

Continue Reading

Business

New HQ for housing association Hedyn in the centre of Newport

Published

on

Business Live

It has acquired a former Royal Mail building on Mill Street

The building on Mills Street in Newport that has been acquired by Hedyn.(Image: John Myers)

Housing association Hedyn has confirmed it is creating a new headquarters for its 750 staff in the centre of Newport. Hedyn, formed last year from the merger of social landlords Melin and Newport City Homes, has acquired the 54,000 sq ft former Royal Mail building on Mill Street.

It will relocate staff from its existing offices in Newport and Pontypool into its new HQ. The site, which consists of two adjoining buildings, will be ready for occupancy by the summer of 2028 with fitout work starting shortly.

Advertisement

The investment is a timely boost for the commercial property market in the centre of Newport and an example of the role that housing associations can play in city and town centre regeneration.

Last year housing association Valleys to Coast revealed plans to transform a prime office building in the centre of Bridgend to serve as its new headquarters alongside new apartments and commercial units.

As part of wider efforts to regenerate the town centre the social landlord acquired Wyndham House, which fronts onto the historic war memorial. It will house its workforce of 300.

READ MORE: We need a new Welsh Development Agency and a radical approach to business supportREAD MORE: Strong support in Wales for an expansion in renewable energy

Advertisement

Paula Kennedy, chief executive of Hedyn, said: “At Hedyn, we know how important home is in creating a sense of belonging and safety. We want the same thing for our colleagues which is why I’m so pleased to announce Hedyn’s new home.

“Now we are a larger organisation (following merger), it’s important for us to balance our commitment to being part of the communities we serve, with ensuring our offices are fit for purpose for our workforce.

“The move to the former Royal Mail building will help more of our colleagues work side by side meaning a more seamless service for our residents.

“Though our HQ will remain in Newport – albeit in a new location – we will continue to strengthen our presence in the other local authority areas we serve. We are committed to investing in the local community and are excited to be part of the local regeneration that will come from the increased footfall and the knock-on boost for shops and cafes.”

Advertisement

Hedyn has a portfolio of 15,000 social homes across the local authorities of Blaenau Gwent, Monmouthshire, Newport, Powys, and Torfaen.

It has not disclosed the value of the acquisition of its new HQ building.

Its new HQ was previously owned by property development firm Garrison Barclays Estates, which acquired the empty building from engineering firm Industrial Automation and Control around a decade ago and revamped the exterior of the building to attract new tenants.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

Published

on

Columbia High Yield Municipal Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

Bond yield with dollar banknotes. Business and financial management.

cagkansayin/iStock via Getty Images

Market overview

Elevated political uncertainty was front and center during the quarter, with the end of the longest-ever federal government shutdown. The shutdown disrupted economic data flow and added uncertainty to interest-rate expectations and risk markets. In addition, concerns

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025