Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide Leaks Show a Foldable With iPad-Like Proportions

Book-style foldables have had a proportions problem since the beginning. The tall, narrow inner displays most of them unfold to have always felt more like stretched phones than proper mini-tablets, making tasks like reading or taking notes feel a little off. Years of refinement have addressed crease visibility and hinge durability, but the shape of the inner screen has largely stayed the same.

That might be changing, at least according to leaked CAD-based renders spreading on the Web like wildfire. The renders point to a device called the Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide, a book-style foldable that reportedly trades the Fold lineup’s tall proportions for a shorter, wider form factor. Samsung hasn’t confirmed any of this, and the final design could change.

Designer: Steve Hemmerstoffer/OnLeaks (Renders) via AndroidHeadlines

The leaked dimensions put the Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide at 123.9mm x 161.4mm x 4.9mm when unfolded and 123.9mm x 82.2mm x 9.8mm when folded, with the camera bump reaching 14.6mm at its thickest point. Those numbers describe a device that’s noticeably shorter and wider than the standard Galaxy Z Fold8, which reportedly unfolds to a taller 158.4mm x 143.2mm footprint.

The inner screen is reportedly a 7.6-inch display with a 4:3 aspect ratio, far closer to a classic tablet format than anything in Samsung’s current foldable lineup. Unfold it, and instead of a tall phone stretched sideways, you’d have something that feels at home for reading, video calls, or running two apps side by side. That ratio changes how you’d actually use it.

Google Pixel Fold (2023)

Google explored something similar with the first Pixel Fold in 2023, which had a 7.6-inch inner display with a 6:5 aspect ratio and unfolded to 139.7mm x 158.7mm. The Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide’s rumored 4:3 ratio would push the open screen more into landscape territory, and at a reported 9.8mm when folded, it would still be considerably thinner than the Pixel Fold’s 12.1mm.

The cover display follows the same logic. At 5.4 inches on an 82.2mm-wide body, it would carry a more usable, phone-like aspect ratio than the narrow cover panels on existing Z Fold devices. The trade-off, per the leak, is a dual-camera rear setup rather than the triple-lens arrangement on the standard Galaxy Z Fold8, which is worth noting for photography-focused buyers.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7

The timing of these leaks adds context. Samsung is reportedly planning to launch the Galaxy Z Fold8 Wide this summer alongside the standard Fold8 and Flip8, positioning the wider device as a direct answer to Apple’s anticipated iPhone Fold. The rumored internals include a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy chipset, a 5,000 mAh battery, and 45W wired charging.

Until Samsung makes an official announcement, none of this is confirmed, and CAD-based renders drawn from supply chain data don’t always reflect what ships. What these leaks do suggest, though, is that Samsung is seriously exploring a foldable form factor that puts the open screen first, with proportions that actually match what a device meant to be used open should look like.

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The AI Gadget Concept That Shows You the Real Price Before You Buy

If you’ve ever ordered something from an international retailer only to be blindsided by a customs bill at your door, you already know the frustration that designers Taehyeong Kim and Yu Jeong Choi were sitting with when they created zena. It’s a concept device that reads like the future of shopping, but it addresses a problem that is very much happening right now.

The premise is deceptively simple. You point zena at a product, it scans it, and within seconds you have a full breakdown: the item’s price, real-time exchange rates across multiple currencies, applicable duties, and the best purchasing options available. Not the price the retailer wants you to see. The actual, landed cost. The number that follows you home.

Designers: Taehyeong Kim, Yu Jeong Choi

The design team’s background research puts the stakes into perspective. Citing Avalara’s 2024 global consumer survey, their project notes that 68% of shoppers reported a negative experience tied to unexpected cross-border costs. 75% said they wouldn’t repurchase from a retailer after a customs surprise. And 49% refused delivery altogether. That last number is staggering when you sit with it. Nearly half of the people who encountered surprise fees just sent the package back. That’s not only a UX failure. That’s an industry-wide trust problem that e-commerce at large seems unmotivated to solve. So two industrial designers from Daegu, Korea, decided to take a direct swing at it.

The way they’ve approached the physical design is just as compelling as the concept itself. Zena is small, handheld, and wears its function confidently. The camera module sits on a rotating head at the top, giving it a form that feels like a high-end digital camera crossed with a barcode scanner from a much more considered future. It comes in matte black, soft silver, and a sage green that is genuinely lovely, with a woven lanyard strap running through a flush metal eyelet on the side. That strap detail alone signals that these designers cared about the object beyond its utility. It’s the kind of quiet decision that separates a good concept from a great one.

The docking station is worth mentioning too. Docked, zena tilts its camera head upward like it’s curious about something, giving it a personality that feels almost alive. It sits on a desk in a way that makes you want to look at it, which is more than you can say for most gadgets. The dock functions as a charging station as well, which means the device is always ready to go when you reach for it.

On the software side, the UI is clean and intentional. Once zena scans a product, it surfaces the item’s name, price, color options, and a list of purchase prices sorted by country and currency, with duty percentages clearly noted beside each one. A real-time exchange rate graph runs alongside. You pick your preferred price, preferred purchase location, and complete the transaction immediately. The workflow is scan, search, analyze, buy. No extra apps, no tab-switching, no mental math in a foreign currency.

The part that sticks with me is how practical this feels specifically as a travel companion. Imagine walking through a boutique in Tokyo or a market in Paris and actually knowing, before you commit, whether you’re getting a fair price or paying for the privilege of proximity. Right now that calculation happens mostly in your head, half-guessed and usually wrong.

Zena isn’t something you can buy yet. It’s a concept living on Behance for now. But it speaks to a real gap in how we shop globally, and it does so in a package that respects both form and function equally. In a design space full of concepts that look polished but feel purposeless, this one carries a clear point of view. Kim and Choi aren’t just designing a gadget. They’re designing against a system that has been profiting from consumer confusion for years. That’s the kind of ambition that deserves more than just a scroll-past.

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EU says Pornhub and others failed to stop minors accessing adult content

The European Commission (EC) accused four porn platforms of not doing enough to prevent minors from accessing their content. In its preliminary findings of a 10-month investigation, the European Union's regulatory arm said Pornhub, Stripchat, XNXX and XVideos have breached the Digital Services Act (DSA).

The EC said the platforms have an ineffective “self-declaration“ measure — they only require users to make a single click to state they are over 18. Nor do efforts like content warnings, page blurring and "restricted to adults" labels "effectively prevent minors from accessing harmful content." As such, the EC said the platforms are failing to protect the wellbeing and rights of minors, and it demanded that they put privacy-preserving age verification systems in place.

Furthermore, the EC said the quartet did not use objective and thorough methodologies to fully assess the risks to minors accessing content on their platforms. The regulator determined Stripchat, Xvideos and XNXX either misrepresented or failed to take into account consultations with organizations that specialize in children's rights and age verification systems in their risk assessments. It also suggested that the platforms' risk assessments "disproportionately emphasized business-centric concerns, such as reputational damage, rather than focusing on the societal risks to minors."

The platforms now have the chance to review the EC's preliminary findings and respond to them. They can implement measures to remedy the alleged DSA breaches as well. However, if the Commission confirms that the platforms failed to adhere to the DSA and it decides to issue a non-compliance decision, the porn providers could be on the hook for fines of up to six percent of their global annual turnover.

“In the EU, online platforms have a responsibility. Children are accessing adult content at increasingly younger ages and these platforms must put in place robust, privacy-preserving and effective measures to keep minors off their services,” Henna Virkkunen, the European Union’s executive vice-president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy, said in a statement. “Today, we are taking another action to enforce the DSA — ensuring that children are properly protected online, as they have the right to be.”


This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/eu-says-pornhub-and-others-failed-to-stop-minors-accessing-adult-content-155632108.html?src=rss

AMD’s Ryzen 9950X3D2 chip features an incredible 208MB of on-chip cache

AMD just revealed the Ryzen 9950X3D2 Dual Edition desktop processor, which is a beastly follow-up to last year's 9950X3D. This is the company's first desktop processor where both chiplets have been equipped with AMD's proprietary 3D V-Cache technology, which seems like a boon for gamers. Each chiplet includes 104MB of cache, offering an incredible 208MB total on-chip cache.

"208MB of cache means more game data, more assets and more working data sitting right next to the CPU cores," AMD Senior VP Jack Huynh explained in an announcement video.

Just like last year's release, the 9950X3D2 features a 16-core processor based on the Zen 5 architecture. This new release has increased to a 200W TDP, compared to the 170TDP of the original. This could indicate an increase in speed and performance, but with more heat output. 

A comparison chart.
AMD

AMD says the chip will be great for both gaming and for creative workloads, like compiling game engines, running AI models and rendering 3D objects. The company says it can deliver a five to 10 percent performance boost when using applications like Unreal Engine, Chromium, Blender and DaVinci Resolve.

Last year's 9950X3D chip was already an absolute powerhouse, so we are looking forward to putting this one through its paces. The Ryzen 9950X3D2 chip will be available on April 22, though we don't have a price just yet. The standard 9950X3D currently costs around $675.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/amds-ryzen-9950x3d2-chip-features-an-incredible-208mb-of-on-chip-cache-154137156.html?src=rss

Two Players, One Set: The DJ Concept Built for Connection

Most DJ setups are built for one person. One set of decks, one headphone jack, one vision for how the night should sound. That has always made DJing feel like a solo art form, even when it happens in a room full of people. Twin, a concept design by Eunjung Jang, myyung kyun seo, workplace 42, and kmuid graduate, challenges that assumption from the ground up, and it does so with one of the more elegant design ideas I’ve come across in this space.

The premise is simple but kind of radical: two DJs, one device. Twin is a modular controller system made up of two mirrored player decks and a shared mixer at the center. Each player gets their own jog wheel, multi keys, sub display, tempo control, cue, play/pause, and hot cue functions. The mixer module in the middle gives both players access to EQ knobs, channel faders, and a crossfader. When connected, the whole system clicks together into one clean unit. When you want to go your separate ways, the modular sections split apart. The physical design of the hardware itself communicates the whole concept: together or apart, the choice is always yours.

Designers: Eunjung Jang, myyung kyun seo, workplace 42, kmuid graduate

Design-wise, Twin is stunning in the way that restrained things often are. The palette is muted and deliberate, soft white surfaces with sage green accents on every button and control. It reads less like audio equipment and more like something you’d find at a thoughtful design boutique. That’s not a small thing. DJ gear has historically leaned toward the dark, chunky, and maximalist, which works for club installs but can feel genuinely intimidating on a bedroom shelf. Twin looks like it belongs in your living room, which I suspect is very much part of the point.

The companion app is where the concept gets more layered. It functions as a music discovery and preparation tool, letting users dig for tracks, organize mix sets, and explore music by genre or BPM. But the feature that really elevates the ecosystem is the host matching function. Once you’ve built your mix set, the app can connect you with another user whose taste overlaps with yours or even challenges it. You might find someone who plays in the same sonic neighborhood. You might find someone who pulls you somewhere you wouldn’t have gone alone. That’s a genuinely compelling proposition, because so much of what makes music culture feel alive is the exchange between people, not just the output.

The cultural observation sitting underneath all of this is sharp. The designers frame it as a shift from DJing as performance to DJing as personal culture, and that read is accurate. DJing has moved off the stage and into living rooms, rooftops, and small friend groups. It’s become a hobby the way cooking or photography is a hobby: creative, expressive, and something you naturally want to share with someone you like. Most existing hardware wasn’t designed with that in mind. The market is still dominated by solo setups built for beatmatching, not for conversation. Twin reframes the whole activity as something inherently collaborative, and the design backs that idea up at every level.

To be fair, this is still a concept. There’s no price, no release date, and no guarantee it ever makes it to production. The gap between a polished Behance presentation and a product you can actually hold in your hands is a wide one, and modular hardware with tight tolerances, seamless physical separation, and a fully realized app ecosystem is a genuinely hard engineering problem. But the idea itself is solid, and the execution at the concept stage is considered enough to take seriously. These are the kinds of concepts that tend to influence the industry even when they don’t ship.

Twin reads like a proposal for where DJ culture could go next. Not bigger, not more complicated, but more connective. Built around the belief that the best music moments happen between people, not just for them.

The post Two Players, One Set: The DJ Concept Built for Connection first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung’s ‘King of Sensors’: The Galaxy S27 Ultra’s Camera Just Leaked

Samsung’s ‘King of Sensors’: The Galaxy S27 Ultra’s Camera Just Leaked Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra

The Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of Samsung’s flagship smartphones. After four generations of iterative improvements, Samsung has introduced a suite of meaningful upgrades that focus on camera innovation, ecosystem integration, and cross-platform functionality. These advancements aim to elevate your experience while addressing long-standing challenges in the premium smartphone […]

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Ultimate Seedance 2 & Nano Banana 2 Workflow for Short Films With AI

Ultimate Seedance 2 & Nano Banana 2 Workflow for Short Films With AI Storyboard grid created in Nano Banana 2 with sequential frames that keep locations and props consistent.

AI filmmaking integrates structured processes with platforms like Seedance 2.0 and Nano Banana 2, as demonstrated by CyberJungle in their recent short film project. Seedance 2.0 enables detailed camera setups and consistent character modeling, while Nano Banana 2 emphasizes precise storyboarding and micro-shot planning. CyberJungle highlights how these platforms can be used together to handle […]

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Forget the iPhone 18 Pro: The $1,999 iPhone Fold (Ultra) Brings Touch ID and Apple’s Biggest Battery Ever

Forget the iPhone 18 Pro: The $1,999 iPhone Fold (Ultra) Brings Touch ID and Apple’s Biggest Battery Ever iPhone Fold

Apple is preparing to enter the foldable phone market with the highly anticipated iPhone Fold, set for release in December 2026. This device represents a significant step forward, combining advanced hardware with Apple’s renowned iOS ecosystem to deliver a premium experience. Designed for users who value both innovation and functionality, the iPhone Fold features a […]

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IKEA’s $7.99 Chair-Shaped Hooks Are Going Viral for the Second Time

Wall hooks are one of those home essentials that nobody really thinks about until they need them. Most are utilitarian at best and forgettable at worst, designed to hold things rather than be noticed. The category hasn’t changed much in decades, and the average hook aisle still feels like it’s catering to a warehouse. Most people end up choosing between something functional and something they’d actually want to look at.

IKEA has always been good at finding solutions for these small, overlooked problems, and the FJANTIG hooks are a pretty solid example of that. Designed by M. Mulder and M. Vinka, they’re miniature chair-shaped wall hooks that come in a pack of three and retail for just $7.99. They’ve been around for a while, but they’ve been quietly gaining momentum on social media, and it’s easy to see why.

Designers: M. Mulder, M. Vinka (IKEA)

Each of the three hooks takes the shape of a different miniature chair, with distinct backrest designs: one has vertical slats, another a solid panel, and the last a loop. They’re made from reinforced polypropylene in a matte black finish and sized just right to sit unobtrusively on any wall. The hook itself is the chair’s back, so you drape things over it just like a real chair.

They earn their keep quickly once you find the right spot. Hang a row in an entryway, and you’ve got an instant home for keys, dog leashes, and lightweight bags. Put them in a kid’s room for tiny backpacks and jackets. These hooks aren’t new and have been at IKEA for years, but social media attention is giving them an entirely unexpected second life online.

The spray-painting trick is probably the most useful thing to know about these hooks. Because they only come in black, a coat of primer followed by whatever color fits your wall can make them feel genuinely custom. You can brush-paint them for more detailed finishes, or try a wood-grain effect for a warmer, natural look. The polypropylene surface takes paint well, which opens up a surprising amount of creative options.

Designer: Victoria

At $7.99 for a set of three, they’re about as low-risk as home décor gets. Each hook measures roughly 4¾ inches tall, which means they’re genuinely miniature and won’t dominate a wall even when grouped together. Mounting hardware isn’t included, so you’ll need to pick up screws separately, and IKEA does note that the right fastener depends on your wall type. It’s worth using appropriate anchors to keep them secure.

What makes these hooks work beyond the novelty is that they stay interesting even when there’s nothing on them. That’s a rare quality for a functional object. Most hooks disappear into the wall when empty. These just sit there looking like a tiny curated display of chairs, which is probably why people keep buying multiple sets and spreading them across rooms, rather than keeping to just the one pack.

The post IKEA’s $7.99 Chair-Shaped Hooks Are Going Viral for the Second Time first appeared on Yanko Design.

Claude AI Just Learned How to Use Your Mouse & Keyboard

Claude AI Just Learned How to Use Your Mouse & Keyboard A phone and Mac showing a task moving between devices with Dispatch, keeping context without retyping details.

Claude Cowork 2.0 introduces direct computer control, a feature that allows users to assign tasks like managing files, navigating applications and drafting documents directly to the AI. According to Universe of AI, this system integrates with platforms such as Google Calendar and Slack while accommodating manual workflows when necessary. To ensure transparency and security, every […]

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