Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Thu, 25 Sep 2025 11:35:08 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Foldables Compared: Honor Magic V5 vs Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 | Battery Life or Camera Mastery? https://techeconomy.ng/honor-magic-v5-vs-samsung-galaxy-z-fold-7-comparison/ https://techeconomy.ng/honor-magic-v5-vs-samsung-galaxy-z-fold-7-comparison/#respond Thu, 25 Sep 2025 11:22:32 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=168097 Foldable phones have matured, they’re no longer curiosities. Today, they demand respect and I’ve spent time studying both the Honor Magic V5 and the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7. 

Here’s a look at where each shines, where each stumbles, and what’s important if you’re choosing between them.

Design & Build

I believe first impressions count. Folded feel, materials, weight, all these tell a lot.

Honor Magic V5

  • Thickness: ~8.8 mm when folded. Unfolded around 4.1 mm.
  • Weight: ~217-222 grams.
  • Build quality: solid, with IP58 & IP59 ratings (water, dust, immersion and high pressure jets) giving real protection.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

  • Thickness: ~8.9 mm folded; ~4.2 mm unfolded. Slightly thicker than Honor when closed, but very close. 
  • Weight: ~215 grams. 
  • Materials: Armor Aluminum frame, Gorilla Glass Victus 2 rear + Ceramic-enhanced glass (Ceramic 2) on cover screen. Better protection vs drops/scratches with IP48 rating.

Take on Design & Build

  • Honor V5 gets more points on thinness by a fraction. The lighter build is noticeable in-hand.
  • Samsung’s build materials are tougher. The flap & hinge are more refined.
  • If you want a phone you can pocket more easily, Honor edges it. But durability, over years, may favour Samsung.

Displays & Screen Experience

Foldables live and die by their screens. Here, size, refresh rate, brightness, cover usability matter.

The Honor Magic V5 comes with a 7.95-inch flexible OLED main screen that supports a 120 Hz refresh rate. Its cover display measures 6.43 inches, also OLED with 120 Hz. Honor claims the device can reach brightness levels of up to 5,000 nits in certain conditions, making visibility exceptionally high even under direct sunlight.

On the other hand, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 features an 8.0-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X main display with a 120 Hz refresh rate. Its cover screen is slightly larger at 6.5 inches, using AMOLED technology, also with a 120 Hz refresh rate. In terms of brightness, Samsung rates the Z Fold 7 at up to 2,600 nits peak, which is high but still below what Honor advertises.

User experience

  • Samsung’s larger inner display gives a tablet-like view. Multitasking, reading, sketching are more enjoyable.
  • Honor’s narrower fold and slightly smaller unfolded screen make it more manageable; the crease is less obtrusive, in some reviews.
  • The cover display on both is good; Samsung’s is a bit more square (better for typing, messaging) while Honor’s cover screen is slightly more compact.

Performance & Software

Power, speed, updates, and the user environment.

Honor Magic V5

  • Processor: Snapdragon 8 Elite. 
  • RAM / Storage: Up to 16 GB RAM, large storage options. 
  • Battery: 5,820 mAh. 
  • Charging: ~66 W wired fast charge; wireless charging support. 
  • Software: MagicOS 9.0.1 based on Android 15. Good features; however, some report that UI polish lags slightly behind Samsung’s long-standing refinements. 

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

  • Processor: Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy (3 nm). Strong, efficient. 
  • RAM / Storage: Options up to 16 GB RAM and 1 TB storage. 
  • Battery: 4,400 mAh. 
  • Charging: 25 W (wired), 15 W wireless; reverse wireless support. 
  • Software: One UI 8 over Android 16. Samsung has more mature foldable-specific features (multitasking, app continuity, optimised visuals). Also expectations for longer updates.

Verdict on Performance & Software

  • Honor provides bigger battery, faster wired charging. If battery life and quick top-ups are your priority, V5 is the one.
  • Samsung still leads in software maturity, updates, and foldable-tailored user experience. For power users and those invested in Samsung’s ecosystem, Z Fold 7 likely gives fewer compromises.

Camera Systems

Cameras are a major differentiator now. Let’s break down what each offers.

Honor Magic V5

  • Rear cameras: 50 MP main, 50 MP ultra-wide, 64 MP telephoto (3×).
  • Selfies: Dual 20 MP.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7

  • Rear cameras: 200 MP main with OIS, 12 MP ultra-wide, 10 MP telephoto (3× optical zoom). 
  • Front cameras: 10 MP cover-screen, 10 MP main screen selfie. 

What this means in real use

  • Samsung’s 200 MP sensor gives you huge resolution. Great for cropping, large prints, very detailed shots in good lighting.
  • Honor’s combination is balanced. The ultra-wide and telephoto are strong; the telephoto especially shines. In low light, Samsung may have an edge thanks to larger sensor and advanced image processing.
  • Selfie quality: both are decent; Samsung’s front camera setup is more refined especially in video.

Battery Life & Charging

This is where I see the biggest trade-offs.

  • Honor Magic V5 has a larger battery (~5,820 mAh) and much faster wired charging (66 W). That means quicker recharges and more headroom for demanding use. 
  • Samsung Z Fold 7 has a smaller battery (~4,400 mAh), and slower charging. 

In usage, V5 tends to last longer under mixed use (browsing, video, calls). Fold 7 is more efficient per task, and if you mostly do lighter work it will still get you through the day. But heavy usage (gaming, multitasking, long screen-on times) favours Honor.

Durability & Extras

Foldables are fragile by nature. These extras count.

  • Honor Magic V5 has strong water & dust resistance IP58 and IP59. That’s better than many foldables. 
  • Samsung Z Fold 7 has IP48 rating (splash/dust), tougher glass options, better hinge design, more durable frame materials. 

Other extras:

  • Samsung supports more mature foldable-features: multi-window modes, more refined software tools.
  • Honor has faster charging, bigger battery, slightly slimmer closed profile.

Price & Value

  • Samsung says Fold 7 is a premium flagship selling at N2.7 million to N3.45 million; 256GB to 1TB
  • Honor tends to undercut Samsung on price, offering much of the hardware but with some compromises (software polish, charging ecosystem, maybe support in some regions). The phone is selling at N2.4 million to N3.15 million

If I were buying, I’d seriously weigh whether the extra cost of the Fold 7 is worth the incremental improvements (camera, materials, brand trust) versus what Magic V5 gives you.

My Take

If I were you, here’s how I’d think:

  • Pick Honor Magic V5 if:
    1. You want a long-battery foldable, with fast charging.
    2. Slimness and weight matter (putting it in your pocket, using it on the go).
    3. You care more about raw value, strong specs per dollar, than top cinematic camera performance.
  • Pick Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 if:
    1. You want the best camera system and top image/video quality.
    2. Durability, build materials, long software updates matter hugely to you.
    3. You want the most polished foldable UI experience now, with features that work smoothly.

Both are excellent. Neither is perfect. But depending on what you care about, battery vs camera vs durability vs price, one will definitely suit you more.

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Leaks: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Might be the Thinnest Foldable Yet https://techeconomy.ng/leaks-samsung-galaxy-z-fold-7/ https://techeconomy.ng/leaks-samsung-galaxy-z-fold-7/#respond Fri, 04 Jul 2025 13:44:05 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=162421 With just days to go until Samsung’s Unpacked event on July 9, 2025, in Brooklyn, all eyes are on the Galaxy Z Fold 7, and if the growing pile of leaks is anything to go by, Samsung is about to redefine the competition in the foldable phone market with its thinnest and most refined device yet.

Leaked images circulating online, notably from tipster @Jukanlosreve, show a much slimmer and more polished Z Fold 7

The device reportedly measures just 4.2mm when open and 8.9mm folded, slimmer than any Galaxy Fold released so far, and thinner than its immediate predecessor, the Z Fold 6. 

This places Samsung in a head-to-head race with Chinese brands like Honor and Oppo, whose ultra-thin foldables have dominated the segment in recent months.

Samsung Accidentally Confirms Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7 Names via App Listing

In the leaked photographs, the Fold 7’s SIM tray appears to hug the frame tightly, hinting at the extremely compact internal design. The speaker grilles and microphone placements also suggest Samsung has optimised every inch of the chassis. 

One of the most interesting changes is the rear camera layout; gone are the chunky black rings seen on the Fold 6. In their place are sleeker silver rings that encircle each lens, an aesthetic choice that complements a striking new blue colour option dubbed “Blue Shadow”.

According to documentation from the EU’s smartphone product label, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 will deliver 40 hours and 28 minutes of battery life per charge and maintain 80% battery health after 2,000 cycles. 

It’s been assigned an IP48 rating, making it resistant to water immersion, though still vulnerable to dust, and given a Class A drop resistance score. Repairability, however, is rated Class C, pointing to the fact that fixing it won’t be especially easy or cheap, which is still a common issue for foldable devices.

Internally, the Fold 7 is expected to come with upgraded displays: an 8-inch inner screen and a 6.5-inch cover screen, both slightly larger than those on the Fold 6. Rumours are swirling that a 200MP main camera sensor may be onboard, the same one featured in the Galaxy S25 Ultra, although Samsung has not confirmed this.

Software-wise, the Fold 7 will launch with One UI 7 built on Android 15. Samsung plans to expand its integration of AI capabilities with this device, including tools for real-time translation, smart note summarisation, and multitasking enhancements. In some markets, the device may ship with a bundled Google AI Pro subscription.

This year’s Unpacked event won’t stop with the Fold 7. Samsung is also tipped to unveil the Galaxy Z Flip 7, a new Watch 8 series, and potentially the company’s first tri-fold device, a prototype that may be branded the Galaxy G Fold. Updates on Project Moohan, Samsung’s XR headset collaboration with Google, are also expected.

The Korean tech giant appears to be betting big on its foldable devices in 2025. With leaks laying bare nearly every detail, the only surprises left may be in the price and availability.

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Samsung Accidentally Confirms Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7 Names via App Listing https://techeconomy.ng/samsung-accidentally-confirms-galaxy-z-fold-7-and-flip-7/ https://techeconomy.ng/samsung-accidentally-confirms-galaxy-z-fold-7-and-flip-7/#respond Fri, 06 Jun 2025 11:30:37 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=160178 Samsung has confirmed the names of its upcoming foldable phones, Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7, through a quiet update to its own Galaxy Store

This didn’t come from leaks or tech analysts this time; the company itself gave it away.

In an apparent oversight, the beta version of Samsung’s Internet Browser app was listed with explicit mention of support for the “Fold7 and Flip7”. 

This listing, spotted by GalaxyClub, remains visible in the Galaxy Store at the time of reporting. Although the company has not officially announced the devices, this accidental reveal leaves little to imagination.

I verified that the listing appears when using a Galaxy device running One UI 8, currently in beta and only available on the Galaxy S25 series. Anyone on older software simply won’t see it. This means the leak was hidden in plain sight, visible only to users who knew where (and how) to look.

Interestingly, there’s no indication that this browser version is functionally different from the one used on existing devices. It’s likely the browser has been optimised for the Fold 7 and Flip 7 display formats, but technically it remains version 28.0.2.43, the same as its standard counterpart. We don’t know if these upcoming phones ship with unique browser features.

This also confirms, in practical terms, that the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7 will launch with Android 16 and One UI 8 pre-installed. That had been speculated for some time, but the app listing now settles the matter.

What about the long-rumoured Fold Ultra or the cheaper Flip FE? Samsung did tease a device bearing the “Ultra” name recently, leading to speculation about a premium foldable model. But there’s nothing in the Galaxy Store listing that supports the existence of such a device. It appears, for now, that “Ultra” might have been just marketing noise.

At this point, we can expect at least two models, the Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7, at Samsung’s next Unpacked event. Sources suggest the event is scheduled for early July and might take place in New York, but there’s still no official word from Samsung.

As for the tri-fold model rumoured for later in the year? We’ve heard whispers that it might be launched exclusively in South Korea and China, but at this stage, nothing is confirmed.

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