Tech
YouTube rolls out an AI playlist generator for Premium users
YouTube is rolling out a new AI-powered playlist-generation feature that allows Premium users on iOS and Android to use text prompts to create playlists.
Users can go to the Library tab, tap the “New” button, and select the “AI playlist” option to get started. They can then use text or voice to enter the prompt of their choice, such as “raging death metal,” “sad post rock,” “progressive house mix for a chill party,” “indie pop” or “90s classic hits,” to build a playlist.
YouTube has been toying around with using AI to create playlists for a while. In July 2024, the company was testing a feature to let people create custom radio stations using prompts in the U.S.
Other rival streaming services like Spotify, Amazon Music and Deezer, have also rolled out AI-powered playlist or radio creation features.
YouTube has been trying to make its Premium plan more attractive to users. Earlier this week, the company started restricting free users from viewing song lyrics on the YouTube Music app. The company told TechCrunch that the restriction was an experiment it was running “with a small percentage of ad-supported users,” and that song lyrics are available to the vast majority of free users.
Google has seen an uptick in its subscription business, and YouTube is a key part of that division. Earlier this month, the company said it now has 325 million paying users across Google One and YouTube Premium.
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Tech
Anthropic’s India expansion collides with a local company that already had the name
As Anthropic expands into India, a local software company has filed a court complaint saying it was already using the name “Anthropic,” spotlighting how the rapid global push of AI firms can collide with local incumbents.
The filing comes amid Anthropic deepening its focus on India, announcing an India office last October and more recently appointing former Microsoft India managing director Irina Ghose to lead its operations in the country, underscoring the South Asian market’s growing importance to global AI companies expanding beyond the U.S. and Europe.
In a complaint filed in a commercial court in Karnataka in January, reviewed by TechCrunch, the Indian company Anthropic Software says it has used the name since 2017 and that Anthropic’s recent entry into India has led to customer confusion. The firm is seeking recognition of its prior use and relief to prevent further confusion, along with ₹10 million (about $110,000) in damages.
Anthropic Software founder and director Mohammad Ayyaz Mulla told TechCrunch that the Indian company was not seeking confrontation, but clarity and recognition of its prior use in India, adding that litigation was a fallback if clean coexistence could not be achieved.
“As of now, I am exercising my legal right as it’s causing huge confusion to my customers,” he said.
India, the world’s most populous nation and one of the fastest-growing internet markets, has become a key battleground for AI companies like Anthropic and its rival OpenAI. The country is also set to host an AI Impact Summit in New Delhi next week, where Anthropic co-founder and chief executive Dario Amodei is appearing alongside other industry leaders like Sam Altman, Jensen Huang, and Sundar Pichai.
A court order dated January 20 and seen by TechCrunch shows that the court has issued notice and suit summons to Anthropic. However, it declined to grant an interim injunction and listed the matter to return on February 16.
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Anthropic did not respond to a request for comment.
Tech
Newly Public Emails Sure Make It Look Like RFK Jr. Lied To Congress About His Trip To Samoa In 2019
from the liar-liar dept
Way back in 2018, a series of events in Samoa brought about the country’s worst measles outbreak in years. It started in July of that year when two 1-year old children who were given a measles vaccine subsequently died. While anti-vaxxers around the world gleefully jumped into action to blame the vaccine for those deaths, it turns out that the vaccine didn’t kill the children at all. Instead, medical professionals had accidentally mixed the vaccine with a muscle relaxer solution instead of sterilized water like they were supposed to. Despite that fact, the anti-vaxxers sowed all kinds of fear and disinformation throughout the country, whipping up negativity around measles vaccines. As a result of that, the government put a 10 months ban in place on the vaccine.
In June of 2019, RFK Jr. visited Samoa. He met with anti-vaxxer crusaders and government officials. Despite that, he has said publicly and in testimony before Congress that his trip there had nothing to do with vaccines and was instead about a medical records and tracking system the country was interested in. You can see an example of that claim in his own confirmation hearing.
Lots of people questioned that claim. And rightly so. The people he was meeting with, the timing in conjunction with the vaccination ban, it all lined up to yet another anti-vaxxer visiting the country to push their anti-vaxxer message.
Two months later, Samoa experienced a massive measles outbreak.
An outbreak began in October 2019 and continued for four months. Before seeking proper medical treatment, some parents first took their children to ‘traditional healers’ who used machines purchased that claimed to produce “immune-protective” water.
As of 22 December, there were 79 deaths. This was 0.4 deaths per 1,000 people, based on a population of 200,874, an infection fatality rate of 1.43%. There were 5,520 cases, representing 2.75% of the population.61 of the first 70 deaths were aged four and under. All but seven of the deaths were from people aged under 15.
At least 20% of babies aged six to 11 months contracted measles. One in 150 babies died.
This past week, documents and emails obtained by The Guardian and The AP show that everyone on the Samoan government’s side of the house understood Kennedy’s visit to be explicitly about vaccines, contrary to his statements, including statements before Congress. He was sworn in for that confirmation hearing, to be clear.
Documents obtained by The Guardian and The Associated Press undermine that testimony. Emails sent by staffers at the U.S. Embassy and the United Nations provide, for the first time, an inside look at how Kennedy’s trip came about and include contemporaneous accounts suggesting his concerns about vaccine safety motivated the visit.
The documents have prompted concerns from at least one U.S. senator that the lawyer and activist now leading America’s health policy lied to Congress over the visit. Samoan officials later said Kennedy’s trip bolstered the credibility of anti-vaccine activists ahead of the measles outbreak, which sickened thousands of people and killed 83, mostly children under age 5.
The AP post has a ton of details further down the article, but here is an example of the content.
Embassy staffers got a tip about Harding’s involvement in the trip from Sheldon Yett, then the representative for Pacific island countries at UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund.
“We now understand that the Prime Minister has invited Robert Kennedy and his team to come to Samoa to investigate the safety of the vaccine,” Yett wrote in a May 22, 2019, email to an embassy staffer based in New Zealand. “The staff member in question seems to have had a role in facilitating this.”
Two days later, a top embassy staff member in Apia wrote to Scott Brown, then the Republican U.S. president’s ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa, alerting him to Kennedy’s trip and Harding’s involvement.
“The real reason Kennedy is coming is to raise awareness about vaccinations, more specifically some of the health concerns associated with vaccinating (from his point of view),” the embassy official, Antone Greubel, wrote. “It turns out our very own Benjamin Harding played some role in a personal capacity to bring him here.” Greubel wrote that he told Harding to “cease and desist from any further involvement with this travel,” though the rest of the sentence is redacted.
Now, I have zero problem believing that Kennedy is lying about all of this. Lying is just what he does. And regularly. I also put the blood of all those dead children, and any long term health issues in the thousands of others, partially on Kennedy’s ledger. This is all simply common sense.
But the real travesty is something quite similar is happening right here, right now. The measles outbreak in America is speeding up, not slowing down. Kennedy, as with Samoa, is taking zero responsibility for it. If he’s taking any real concrete actions to combat it, I don’t know what those would be, nor would I understand why they’ve been hidden so completely from public visibility. Kennedy once opined that maybe it would be better if everyone just got measles.
If that is his real goal, it appears we’re on our way. But somebody besides a couple of press outlets should be investigating Kennedy for lying to Congress, at a minimum. And perhaps having a hand in the deaths of children, as well.
Filed Under: health & human services, lies, measles, perjury, rfk jr., samoa, vaccines
Tech
Why Navy Planes Recently Flew In Formation Over The USS Gerald R. Ford
Military flyovers are an impressive sight, especially when viewed from sea level. This usually requires being on terra firma during a major sporting event, patriotic holiday, or military funeral; but anyone in the Caribbean Sea on or near the world’s largest aircraft carrier in late January got a free show courtesy of the U.S. Navy Carrier Air Wing 8 as part of a ceremony marking a change of command. Photos appear to show seven fighters, a Grumman E2D early warning aircraft, and two SeaHawk helicopters flying directly over the USS Gerald Ford. The official procedure to hand command over from Capt. Rick Burgess to Capt. David Skarosi was held on board the ship May 12, 2025 while it was docked safely at the Naval station in Norfolk, Virginia.
Capt. Skarosi was in command when the ship headed to the North Atlantic less than six weeks later. The massive carrier paid a visit to the Arctic Circle before heading to the Mediterranean, where it stayed through November 2025. At that point, the Navy’s top brass decided to send it back across the ocean to the Caribbean to support U.S. Southern Command operations there.
Why did the Navy have a change-of-command ceremony?
The ship’s original six-month mission has been extended twice, and as of this writing, the carrier and crew have been at sea for 230 days. That’s not uncharted territory for the Gerald Ford, though. It was previously on continuous deployment from May 2, 2023, through January 17, 2024 — a stretch of 239 days — under the command of Capt. Burgess. Although Capt. Skarosi remains in charge of the ship, the ceremonial flyover in January was to mark a change of command for the entire Carrier Air Wing 8.
Show of force 💪⚓
U.S. Navy Carrier Air Wing 8 aircraft fly in formation over the world’s largest aircraft carrier, Ford-class aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78), during Carrier Air Wing 8’s aerial change of command ceremony while underway in the Caribbean Sea.
U.S…. pic.twitter.com/19AxRbd9Tg
— U.S. Navy (@USNavy) January 28, 2026
A January 28 post to the U.S. Navy’s X account showed two F-18E Hornet fighters zooming low along the ship’s deck and used the hashtag PeaceThrough Strength to lend an element of ‘show of force’ to the proceedings. The Gerald Ford, along with its aircraft and personnel, has been busy in the region in the first few weeks of the year. The ship can carry up to 90 aircraft at once, and at least one MH-60 SeaHawk helicopter took part in a right of visit boarding operation on January 15. Ford class carriers are an upgrade over the older Nimitz class, thanks to a state-of-the-art electromagnetic launch and arrestor system that replaced older cable catapults.
Tech
One Day, One Robot, Zero Laundry Duty

Maker Nick Maselli created a pretty decent laundry folding robot prototype in under 24 hours for a client who simply needed the job done. He named it Sourccey, and it’s essentially a movable, cylindrical box with a dome on top, two articulated arms, and a center vertical lift to access items. The majority of the structural components, from arm parts to outer enclosures, were created using a 3D printer that produced PLA filament. The fact that it can print so quickly allows them to swap items out throughout the build window.
A Raspberry Pi 5 handles all computational tasks, including taking feeds from four cameras, controlling the motor drivers, running a display, speakers, and microphone, and overseeing the entire operation. Its power source is a 12 volt, 10 amp hour lithium iron phosphate battery, which was chosen for its safety and longevity. A custom power distribution board, combined with voltage converters, ensures that everything receives a constant supply without overloading.
Unitree G1 Humanoid Robot(No Secondary Development)
- Height, width and thickness (standing): 1270x450x200mm Height, width and thickness (folded): 690x450x300mm Weight with battery: approx. 35kg
- Total freedom (joint motor): 23 Freedom of one leg: 6 Waist Freedom: 1 Freedom of one arm: 5
- Maximum knee torque: 90N.m Maximum arm load: 2kg Calf + thigh length: 0.6m Arm arm span: approx. 0.45m Extra large joint movement space Lumbar Z-axis…

To achieve proper folding, the arms use several servos for ultra precise, coordinated motion. A vertical Z-axis actuator runs through the center, allowing the arms to reach up and grab objects from the floor or a table. The grippers at the ends hold the fabric tight. Getting all of stuff sorted requires careful wiring and safety features like as fuses to keep everything stable.

The way it folds a towel or whatever it is avoids all the hard-coded stuff and instead relies entirely on artificial intelligence. A human demonstrates how to perform the move first, which serves as training data for the AI model, which then trains overnight on several powerful GPUs. Once it’s all done, the model is deployed back to the Raspberry Pi, and Sourccey can then do its thing independently: cameras spot a towel, work out where it is and what it looks like, grab it, and then execute the folding sequence it learned on the Pi, but here’s the thing, it’s not just tough on this one task, it can handle the natural give in fabric because it’s using vision to guide the whole process and learned patterns rather than just being told exactly what

The entire build took less than 24 hours, with the hardware assembled during the day and the AI training taking place at night. There were a few hiccups along the way, such as a missing motor clip that needed to be resoldered and a defective 3D-printed bit that needed to be reprinted, as well as a couple of team members calling it a day early, which cut into their time, but despite the rush, everything seemed to work fine and the prototype completed the task.
[Source]
Tech
Honor’s upcoming Magic V6 could have the best foldables beat in one key area
Honor’s Magic V6 is set to debut next month, and leaks suggest it will be the fastest‑charging foldable yet.
This is thanks to 120W wired charging and a battery capacity of up to 7150mAh. This marks a huge leap over the Magic V5 and rivals like Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold.
The mobile phone brand has confirmed that the Magic V6 will be unveiled a day before MWC 2026 officially begins, positioning it as one of the headline launches of the event.
Certification from China’s CCC authority reveals support for 120W wired charging, which is nearly double the 67W maximum offered by the Magic V5.
This upgrade could make the V6 the quickest foldable to recharge, a significant advantage in a category where battery life and charging speeds remain pain points. For comparison, Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold7 is still capped at 25W wired charging, while Google’s Pixel 10 Pro Fold manages 39W, and Oppo’s Find N5 sits in the 67W range.
The leak also indicates that Honor will release two versions of the Magic V6, labelled PNM‑AN10 and PNM‑AN20, with the latter expected to include Beidou satellite messaging support. This feature could appeal to users who value connectivity in remote areas, though it is unlikely to be a mainstream selling point in the UK.
More universally appealing is the rumoured battery capacity: the flagship model may carry a 7150mAh cell, while cheaper variants could ship with a slightly smaller 6,850mAh unit. Either way, the combination of high‑capacity batteries and ultra‑fast charging should deliver a practical improvement in day‑to‑day usability.
Performance is another area where Honor appears determined to compete. All Magic V6 models are expected to run Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset, which integrates Oryon Gen 3 cores capable of up to 4.6GHz and offers multi‑core performance that rivals Apple’s A19 Pro.
This SoC also supports advanced AI features and high‑bandwidth LPDDR5X memory, ensuring the V6 will be competitive with other 2026 flagships. Combined with rumours of a 200MP primary camera and periscope lens, the Magic V6 could be one of the most technically ambitious foldables yet.
Finally, the timing of the launch gives Honor a chance to capture attention before rivals announce their own MWC updates. If the Magic V6 delivers on its charging promises, it could set a new benchmark for foldables and force competitors to rethink their approach.
Tech
Top book-style and clamshell foldables
Foldable smartphones have gone from strength to strength in the past couple of years; these once-chunky, fragile devices are now slimmer, more robust and more capable, and that means they’re more tempting than ever.
The question is, which foldable should you buy? While there was initially a limited number of foldable available, that number has greatly expanded in the past 12 months. Whether you’re looking for the slimmest book-style foldable around, a compact clamshell-style foldable that fits in the palm of your hand or something that helps you multitask on the go, there’s a foldable for your needs.
Generally, it’s worth keeping in mind that foldable phones are still more fragile than regular smartphones with the flexible nature of foldable screens means that there is more potential for damage, but this could be a worthy trade-off depending on your needs.
In fact, durability issues and premium prices are the main reasons why we’ve yet to give any foldable the coveted five-star rating and remain key reasons to opt for a traditional flagship – though a couple of foldable entries have come closer than ever, suggesting that foldables are slowly but surely closing the gap.
You can see a selection of some of the most impressive regular phones we’ve tested in our best iPhone, best Android phone and best smartphone guides for context.
However, if that doesn’t put you off, keep reading. In this list, we’ve detailed the top-performing foldables we’ve tried and tested.
Best foldable phones at a glance
SQUIRREL_ANCHOR_LIST
Learn more about how we test phones
All the phones included in our Best foldable phone list have been thoroughly tested and used by one of our expert reviewers.
We don’t review phones based purely on benchmark scores or marketing hype. We use them as our everyday device for the review period, which is usually at least five days but can often be much longer if the device requires it.
Whenever you read a phone review published on Trusted Reviews, you should be confident that the reviewer has put their personal SIM card into the phone, synced across their most-used apps and logged into all their typical accounts. We do this so you’ll feel confident in our review and trust our verdict.
Our review process includes a mixture of real-world tests, more than 15 measured tests, and industry-standard benchmarks. We believe this gives the most rounded view of a device.
Pros
- Excellent and brighter external display
- Solid camera performance
- Unique finish options
- Smooth performance
Cons
- Only 3 years of Android OS updates
- Moto AI still needs work
- No telephoto lens
Pros
- Lightest book-style foldable around
- Ultra thin design makes it really nice to use
- Larger, wider, wholly more useful screens
- Same main camera as Galaxy S25 Ultra
Cons
- Relatively small 4400mAh battery
- Slow 25W wired charging
- Zoom camera could be better for the price
Pros
- Larger cover screen is a much-needed improvement
- More convenient 21:9 ratio screen is much easier to use
- Improved camera performance
- Fast, flagship performance with strong battery life
Cons
- Cover screen software could be better
- Samsung software is full of duplicate/redundant apps
- No dedicated zoom camera
Pros
- Really solid, durable build for a foldable
- IP68 is the highest dust-water resistance in a folding phone
- Gorgeous, colour-rich displays with great stereo sound
Cons
- It’s big and heavy
- Underpowered compared to competitors
- Zoom and ultrawide cameras are underwhelming in lower light
Pros
- Bright displays
- Excellent cameras
- Proper two-day battery life
- Solid performance across the board
Cons
- MagicOS is still a letdown
-
Excellent and brighter external display -
Solid camera performance -
Unique finish options -
Smooth performance
-
Only 3 years of Android OS updates -
Moto AI still needs work -
No telephoto lens
Samsung may have been the first company to truly bring new-age flip phones to the masses, but it’s Motorola that’s taken the torch and run with it, emboldening the concept with key areas of innovation that have culminated thus far in the outstanding Motorola Razr 60 Ultra.
The key headline here is that both the internal and external displays have been given several upgrades. For starters, the internal display is now slightly bigger, moving from 6.9-inches to 7-inches, so you have more space than ever to help make gaming and watching films feel even more immersive.
The brightness of that internal display has also shot up to 4500nits, making it easier than ever to use outdoors against direct sunlight. The 4-inch external display hasn’t been left behind either, with that also seeing a brightness boost, going from 2400nits to now 3000nits, which really goes a long way towards making the more compact screen pop.
Even with those screen upgrades in tow, Motorola hasn’t forgotten about the one thing that should always be the focus of any foldable device: durability. Thankfully the company has introduced a new titanium-infused hinge which not only feels more sturdy than before, it has also allowed the phone to now carry an IP48 dust and water resistance rating, which significantly outperforms the IPX8 rating of the Razr 50 Ultra.
Powering all of this is the super fast Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, which has a sizeable 16GB RAM to lean on for everyday operations. You won’t have any issues playing the latest games here, and with 512GB storage as standard, you won’t be running out of room where apps are concerned either.
SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207648
-
Lightest book-style foldable around -
Ultra thin design makes it really nice to use -
Larger, wider, wholly more useful screens -
Same main camera as Galaxy S25 Ultra
-
Relatively small 4400mAh battery -
Slow 25W wired charging -
Zoom camera could be better for the price
The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 marks a genuine leap forward for Samsung’s book-style foldable, finally delivering the ultra-slim, lightweight design many have been waiting for.
Shedding much of the bulk and weight of its predecessors, the 4.2mm-thick Fold 7 is now among the thinnest foldables around, and at 215g, it’s both lighter than the book-style competition and even the Galaxy S25 Ultra. It makes it a joy to handle, and it’s almost unnoticeable in the pocket as a result.
Samsung has also nailed the usability of both displays this year. The wider 6.5-inch cover screen is genuinely practical for everyday tasks, while the 8-inch internal panel feels more solid with a way less intrusive crease. Both screens are bright, vibrant and ideal for everything from gaming to multitasking.
Camera performance is another highlight, with the main 200MP sensor borrowed from the S25 Ultra delivering sharp, detailed shots that put the Fold 7 on par with regular bar phones. General performance is equally impressive, thanks to the Snapdragon 8 Elite and up to 16GB of RAM.
Battery life and charging remain the main drawbacks with a 4400mAh cell and 25W charging falling far behind rivals. Still, for most users, the Fold 7 will comfortably last a day, and the overall package is compelling enough to make it the standout book-style foldable of 2025.
SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207783
-
Larger cover screen is a much-needed improvement -
More convenient 21:9 ratio screen is much easier to use -
Improved camera performance -
Fast, flagship performance with strong battery life
-
Cover screen software could be better -
Samsung software is full of duplicate/redundant apps -
No dedicated zoom camera
The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 takes the crown for the best design in the foldable space, with a slimmer, lighter build and a hinge that feels both robust and satisfyingly smooth.
The new 4.1-inch cover screen finally makes the Flip genuinely useful when closed, and the wider 6.9-inch internal screen is a joy to use, with a less noticeable crease and a more comfortable aspect ratio for typing and media.
Powered by the Exynos 2500, the Flip 7 delivers fast, reliable performance for everyday tasks, and the 4300mAh battery is the biggest yet in a Flip, easily lasting a full day as a result.
Camera performance has also been improved, with more natural colours and solid results in most conditions, though the lack of a zoom lens remains a limitation.
The software, meanwhile, is packed with features and offers seven years of updates, but the cover screen experience still trails behind Motorola’s Razr 60 Ultra in terms of flexibility and ease of use.
Still, if you want a foldable that nails the basics and looks fantastic doing it, the Z Flip 7 is a great choice.
SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10207784
-
Really solid, durable build for a foldable -
IP68 is the highest dust-water resistance in a folding phone -
Gorgeous, colour-rich displays with great stereo sound
-
It’s big and heavy -
Underpowered compared to competitors -
Zoom and ultrawide cameras are underwhelming in lower light
If you want a foldable but are concerned about its durability, then the Pixel 10 Pro Fold is an easy recommendation. Not only does it sport a thick frame that feels reassuringly sturdy in hand, but it’s the first foldable with an IP68 rating.
In addition, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold benefits from a new dual-layer protection over the display and a redesigned hinge which, according to Google, can handle up to 10 years’worth of folding and unfolding.
Otherwise, its 6.4-inch OLED cover display is brilliant for quick uses, thanks to its convenient aspect ratio that makes quickly replying to messages, following a route on Google Maps or operating the camera easy without needing you to open the phone up.
Even so, the main draw is undoubtedly the eight-inch square OLED panel which is great to use and offers a vibrant picture quality. Sure, you will have to overlook the visible crease, but it’s still a great display for streaming, gaming and multitasking between apps too.
The Pixel series has a reputation for being among the best camera phones, and although the Pixel 10 Pro Fold might not be as impressive as the Pixel 10 Pro XL, it still performs admirably. While its 48MP main lens is supported by measly 10.8MP telephoto and 10.5MP ultrawide lenses, the 10 Pro Fold can still take a good shot in most conditions.
Powering the Pixel 10 Pro Fold is Google’s Tensor G5 chip, which although doesn’t achieve particularly high benchmarking scores, still performs well in everyday use – and especially when running Google’s AI toolkit. In fact, arguably one of the reasons to opt for the Pixel 10 Pro Fold is its range of AI features from Magic Editor and Camera Coach for photography, to Live Translate and the use of Gemini.
Like the rest of the Pixel 10 series, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold’s battery life is decent enough as it should comfortably see you through a day’s use. Charging speeds aren’t particularly fast, with 30W support, but it’s enough to see a 50% charge in about 30 minutes.
If you want to finally embrace a foldable smartphone but worry about its longevity, then the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold is a brilliant choice.
-
Bright displays -
Excellent cameras -
Proper two-day battery life -
Solid performance across the board
-
MagicOS is still a letdown
Building upon the already excellent foundations of the Honor Magic V3, the V5 doesn’t just take Honor’s foldable range to a new level, it elevates the market as a whole to show just how far the engineering in this sector has come. This is the phone that other foldables will be emulating for quite some time to come.
The biggest boon with the Magic V5 is just how sleek the whole thing is. With the slimmest version being just 8.8mm thick and weighing only 217g, it honestly doesn’t feel like you’re carrying a foldable phone as it’s barely that much bigger than a standard candy-bar style phone. That lightweight frame also makes it easy to use when unfolded, as it never leads to fatigue of holding the device as you enjoy the benefits of the larger display.
Speaking of displays, while the outer display is near identical to the one from the V3, the interior 7.95-inch panel has been given a serious spec boost to pack the same 5000 nits peak brightness as the outer display. This degree of parity between the two screens now means that you’re getting a top-shelf experience regardless of which one you’re looking at.
Also helping the phone to stand out against its closest competitors is the use of the super fast Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset which doesn’t just allow the device to blitz through tasks such as writing up emails or scrolling through social media – it also enables a superior gaming experience too. We were able to get through a couple of rounds of Call of Duty Mobile running with impressive levels of performance, which is only made all the more immersive when you play on the larger display.
Maybe what is most perplexing about the Honor Magic V5 is that, in spite of its super slim frame and all of the tech that’s been crammed in here from the flagship level chipset to the versatile camera array, it still manages to bring the heat where battery life is concerned. With a massive 5820mAh cell that uses silicon carbon technology, the Magic V5 can last for up to two days at a time, so you never have to worry about serious battery drain when running intensive apps.
FAQs
Apple hasn’t released or announced any intention to make a foldable phone yet, however rumours swirl that we’ll see a big play for this category from the Cupertino company in the coming years. For now, all the best foldable phones run on Android.
Test Data
| Motorola Razr 60 Ultra | Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 | Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 | Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold | Honor Magic V5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geekbench 6 single core | 2828 | 2318 | 2251 | 2317 | 1151 |
| Geekbench 6 multi core | 8552 | 8828 | 7584 | 6251 | 4818 |
| 1 hour video playback (Netflix, HDR) | 6 % | 8 % | 7 % | 7 % | – |
| 30 minute gaming (light) | 5 % | 7 % | 6 % | 5 % | – |
| Time from 0-100% charge | 80 min | 87 min | 89 min | – | 70 min |
| Time from 0-50% charge | 39 Min | 31 Min | 28 Min | – | 30 Min |
| 30-min recharge (no charger included) | 40 % | 49 % | 54 % | – | 50 % |
| 15-min recharge (no charger included) | 23 % | 24 % | 29 % | – | 29 % |
| 3D Mark – Wild Life | 6294 | 5574 | 4896 | 3328 | – |
| GFXBench – Aztec Ruins | 105 fps | 70 fps | 109 fps | 49 fps | 60 fps |
| GFXBench – Car Chase | 95 fps | 71 fps | 107 fps | 52 fps | 74 fps |
Full Specs
| Motorola Razr 60 Ultra Review | Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Review | Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 7 Review | Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold Review | Honor Magic V5 Review | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK RRP | £1099.99 | £1799 | £1049 | £1749 | £1699.99 |
| USA RRP | – | $1999 | $1099 | $1799 | – |
| Manufacturer | Motorola | Samsung | Samsung | Honor | |
| Screen Size | 7 inches | 8 inches | 6.9 inches | 8 inches | – |
| Storage Capacity | 512GB | 256GB, 512GB, 1TB | 256GB, 512GB | 256GB, 512GB, 1TB | 512GB |
| Rear Camera | 50MP + 50MP | 200MP + 12MP + 10MP | 50MP + 12MP | 48MP + 10.8MP + 10.5MP | 50MP wide, 64MP telephoto, 50MP ultra-wide |
| Front Camera | 50MP | 10MP + 10MP | 10MP | 10MP | Dual 20MP cameras |
| Video Recording | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| IP rating | Not Disclosed | Not Disclosed | Not Disclosed | IP68 | IP57 |
| Battery | 4700 mAh | 4400 mAh | 4300 mAh | 5015 mAh | 5820 mAh |
| Wireless charging | Yes | Yes | – | Yes | Yes |
| Fast Charging | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Size (Dimensions) | 74 x 7.1 x 171 MM | 143.2 x 4.2 x 158.4 MM | 75.2 x 6.5 x 166.7 MM | 150.4 x 5.2 x 155.2 MM | 74.3 x 8.8 x 156.8 MM |
| Weight | 199 G | 215 G | 188 G | 258 G | 217 G |
| ASIN | B0F68G1YR8 | – | – | – | – |
| Operating System | Android 15 | OneUI 8 (Android 16) | OneUI 8 (Android 16) | Android 16 (Material 3 Expressive) | MagicOS |
| Release Date | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 | 2025 |
| First Reviewed Date | 20/05/2025 | 17/07/2025 | 09/07/2025 | 08/10/2025 | 28/08/2025 |
| Resolution | 2992 x 1224 | 2184 x 1968 | 2640 x 1080 | 2076 x 2152 | x |
| HDR | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Refresh Rate | 165 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz | 120 Hz |
| Ports | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C |
| Chipset | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite | Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy | Samsung Exynos 2500 | Google Tensor G5 | Snapdragon 8 Elite |
| RAM | 16GB | 12GB, 16GB | 12GB | 16GB | 16GB |
| Colours | Pantone Rio Red, Pantone Cabaret, Pantone Mountain Trail, Pantone Scarab | Blue Shadow, Silver Shadow, Jet-black, Mint | Blue Shadow, Jet Black, Coral Red, Mint | Moonstone, Jade | Black, Ivory White, Dawn Gold, Reddish Brown |
| Stated Power | 68 W | 25 W | – | 30 W | – |
Tech
You’ll soon make WhatsApp video calls right in your browser
WhatsApp web video calls are starting to roll out, so you can place voice and video calls straight from a browser tab. You won’t need the desktop app for the basics anymore, at least if the feature has reached your account.
The first wave is limited to one-to-one chats. Open a conversation, tap the call icon, and you can start a voice or video call without leaving WhatsApp Web. Group calls aren’t part of this initial release.
This is a practical fix for people who live in the browser all day, and it’s especially useful on Linux, where WhatsApp still doesn’t offer an official desktop app.
The web version gets serious
WhatsApp has been building toward this for roughly a year, aiming to make the web experience feel closer to its desktop apps instead of a messaging-only companion. The big change is that calling now sits alongside chat in the same window, which reduces friction when you’re working on a laptop.
Security doesn’t shift with the move to the browser. Calls on WhatsApp Web keep end-to-end encryption, using the Signal protocol WhatsApp already uses across messages, calls, and status updates.
WhatsApp Web also supports screen sharing, but only during a video call. If your goal is to show a document or walk someone through a settings menu, you’ll need to start a video session even if you don’t plan to be on camera.
The next milestone is bringing group calling to the web. The same report points to group calls with up to 32 participants, plus extras like call links and scheduled calls, once that phase is ready.
What you should do now
WhatsApp has begun its gradual rollout of native voice and video calling for beta users. If you’re in the WhatsApp Web beta, the simplest check is inside a one-to-one chat. If you see calling controls, you can use the browser for voice and video calls, plus screen sharing during video.
If you don’t see it yet, you’re likely still waiting on the wider rollout, and WhatsApp hasn’t said which browsers or platforms get priority first. For now, treat web calling as the fast option for one-to-one chats, and keep the phone app handy if group calls are part of your routine.
Tech
Tem raises $75 M to automate energy markets with AI-first platform

London-based energy software company Tem has closed a $75 million Series B round led by Lightspeed Venture Partners, with additional funding from AlbionVC, Atomico, Hitachi Ventures, Schroders Capital, Voyager Ventures, Allianz, and others. The round reportedly values the company at more than $300 million and will fund its expansion into the United States and Australia. Tem builds an AI-native energy platform designed to automate the pricing, matching, and execution of electricity transactions, a market that has long relied on manual processes and legacy infrastructure. Its core system uses machine learning to forecast supply and demand, match buyers with suppliers, and…
This story continues at The Next Web
Tech
Lockheed Martin’s LampreyMMAUV Can Launch Underwater Drones in Contested Waters

Lockheed Martin’s Lamprey Multi-Mission Autonomous Undersea Vehicle (MMAUV) challenges traditional methods for operating underwater drones in adverse environments. This stealthy autonomous vehicle attaches to a larger ship or sub, travels quietly to remote locations, and is ready to enter without using up its own power.
Lockheed Martin engineers drew inspiration from nature for the basic idea, similar to how lampreys and remoras employ hosts for free rides. They did the same thing with the Lamprey, using a docking system that clicks onto the hull of a surface ship or submarine, requiring no alterations to the host vessel. As it travels, it includes built-in generators that use the energy from the host’s movement to fully recharge its batteries, ensuring that it reaches at its destination with all of the necessary power.
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Once in position, the Lamprey breaks free and begins to operate on its own. Its boxy hull includes a 24 cubic foot cargo bay with plenty of capacity inside for the operator to arrange to suit the mission, and no defined limits on what can be stored within. You can equip it with lightweight torpedoes to destroy submarines, retractable tubes that launch up to six aerial drones for surveillance or attack, and just about any other type of equipment you might think of.

With four thrusters, it can move in any direction, while the onboard computers handle navigation, steering it through hazardous waters. A retractable mast rises to the surface to send a signal, while data is transmitted below through seabed nodes or to adjacent aircraft such as an F-35.

The Lamprey’s capabilities are nearly limitless, as it can acquire information using its own sensors (which could include sonar, radio signals, or optical gear) or drop down sensors to the seafloor to monitor objects. It can use a variety of technology to monitor large areas of the floor, then silently collect the data and go, or stay and observe. This indicates that commanders can keep an eye on areas where humans cannot reasonably be kept for a lower cost than a manned submarine.

The Lamprey is designed with two main roles in mind: in a scenario where you need to get in and out without being noticed, it’s great for stealthy surveillance, long-term watching, and precise strikes; however, if you need to disrupt the enemy, it can also do that by deploying decoys, delivering attacks, or just generally causing havoc.
Lockheed Martin had total control over the Lamprey’s development budget, allowing them to complete tasks far faster than they could otherwise. According to Paul Lemmo, VP of Sensors, Effectors, and Mission Systems, this speed enabled them to design a platform capable of detecting threats, manipulating them, creating diversions, and defending itself against attacks.
[Source]
Tech
Fugitive behind $73M ‘pig butchering’ scheme gets 20 years in prison
A dual Chinese and St. Kitts and Nevis national was sentenced to 20 years in prison in absentia for his role in an international cryptocurrency investment scheme (also known as pig butchering or romance baiting) that defrauded victims of more than $73 million.
In pig butchering scams, criminals use messaging apps, dating platforms, and social media accounts to build trust with their targets before introducing fraudulent investment schemes. In the end, rather than investing the funds to deliver the promised huge profits, the scammers drain victims’ cryptocurrency wallets.
42-year-old Daren Li pleaded guilty in November 2024 to conspiracy to launder funds obtained through “pig butchering” scams operated from centers in Cambodia after his April 2024 arrest at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
However, Li fled in December 2025 after cutting off his ankle monitor, becoming a fugitive before sentencing in California federal court. In addition to the 20-year prison sentence, he also received three years of supervised release after the prison term.
“As part of an international cryptocurrency investment scam, Daren Li and his co-conspirators laundered over $73 million dollars stolen from American victims,” said Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the Criminal Division. “The Court’s sentence reflects the gravity of Li’s conduct, which caused devastating losses to victims throughout our country.”
Court documents revealed that Li and co-conspirators were part of an international crime syndicate that used a network of money launderers to move millions stolen from dozens of victims to U.S. bank accounts linked to approximately 74 shell companies, then transferred funds to domestic and international accounts and cryptocurrency platforms to conceal their origins.
He instructed accomplices to open bank accounts and transfer more than $73 million to Deltec Bank in the Bahamas for conversion into cryptocurrency, including Tether. The investigators also discovered more than $341 million in cryptocurrency in one of the crypto wallets the fraud ring used for money laundering.
Li is the first defendant directly involved in receiving victim funds to be sentenced among eight co-conspirators who have also pleaded guilty.
The Justice Department charged four additional suspects in December with involvement in another pig butchering scheme linked to over $80 million in losses.
The FBI’s 2024 Internet Crime Report noted that investment scammers stole over $6.5 billion from 47,919 victims, up from $4.57 billion in 2023.
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