LG has launched its new 27-inch gaming monitor, the UltraGear 27G610A, in China. The monitor is now listed on JD.com for 1,199 yuan ($175), offering a high-refresh-rate QHD display designed for gamers.
LG UltraGear 27G610A Specifications
The UltraGear 27G610A boasts a 2560 x 1440 resolution on a 16:9 IPS panel. It offers a blazing-fast 200Hz refresh rate and a 1ms GtG response time, minimizing motion blur and ghosting.
In terms of color accuracy, the panel covers 99% of the sRGB color gamut and supports VESA DisplayHDR 400 certification. The monitor delivers a peak brightness of 400 nits, which improves visibility in well-lit environments and supports HDR content. These features make the monitor suitable for gaming, content consumption, and light creative work.
LG has integrated gaming-focused features to enhance the user experience. The monitor supports AMD FreeSync Premium, reducing screen tearing and stuttering with compatible GPUs. It also offers Black Stabilizer for better visibility in dark scenes, Dynamic Action Sync to minimize input lag, and a built-in Crosshair mode to boost accuracy in shooting games.
The UltraGear 27G610A has a slim design with three-sided narrow bezels, creating an immersive viewing experience. The ergonomic stand supports a height adjustment of up to 110mm, tilt adjustment from -5° to 20°, swivel adjustment from -30° to 30°, and pivot rotation for vertical viewing. The display also supports VESA 100 x 100mm wall mounting.
LG has included multiple connectivity options. The monitor comes with one DisplayPort 1.4, two HDMI 2.1 ports, and a 3.5mm headphone jack.
In related news, JapanNext has introduced a 31.5-inch 6K IPS monitor featuring 500 nits brightness, 90W USB-C charging, and KVM support, while AOC has unveiled a new 27-inch QD-OLED gaming monitor with a 280Hz refresh rate and a 0.03ms response time.
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Red Magic has announced the launch of the Red Magic Cooler 8 Pro, which will go on sale at 7:00 PM on March 9. The cooler is priced at 269 yuan (approximately $39) and is now available for pre-orders across all platforms. This device serves as the successor to the Magnetic Cooler 6 Pro, which debuted last year.
According to images on the pre-order page, the Red Magic Cooler 8 Pro offers 36W of cooling power, capable of reducing temperatures by up to 80°C under specific test conditions. It features an advanced thermoelectric cooling module, designed to actively dissipate heat and stabilize device performance during heavy usage, such as gaming or multitasking.
Under controlled conditions, the cooler can achieve a minimum temperature of -25°C, making it an excellent choice for maintaining full-frame-rate performance during demanding mobile gaming sessions. Despite its powerful cooling, the Cooler 8 Pro operates at a minimal noise level of 36dB.
Internal tests reveal impressive results: the cooler reduced the surface temperature of a constant 10W heat source from 95°C to 15°C in just 20 minutes.
The Cooler 8 Pro has been demonstrated on an iPhone in promotional images, confirming its MagSafe compatibility. It is expected to work with a wide range of devices, including the latest Pixel phones, Xiaomi models, and other smartphones with protective cases.
The Cooler 8 Pro brings several upgrades over its predecessor, the Cooler 6 Pro, which featured 30W cooling power and was priced at 239 yuan (approximately $34). The Cooler 6 Pro could reduce device temperatures by up to 41°C (minimum -16°C) and included a larger TEC plate, a graphene-infused heat sink, and a seven-blade fan for enhanced cooling and quiet operation (35dB).
Oppo is taking an unusually open approach ahead of the Oppo Find N6 launch. With the device expected to debut on March 17, the company recently invited a member of the media into its production facilities to showcase the engineering work behind what it claims is a significantly reduced display crease.
The foldable crease has long been one of the category’s most persistent compromises. Oppo says it has spent the past three years refining its hinge and display assembly process, developing multiple prototypes along the way. According to the company, the latest iteration is built with alignment tolerances as tight as 0.03mm. It’s a level of precision intended to reduce visible indentation from the start and slow down long-term wear.
Durability testing appears to be a major focus. Oppo demonstrated an automated folding rig designed to simulate extended use, pushing devices through up to 300,000 fold-and-unfold cycles. During the media visit, the reporter was shown a unit that had already passed roughly 170,000 cycles. Even at that stage, the crease repirtedly remained minimal. Independent testing will ultimately determine how that translates to everyday use, but the company is clearly confident in its results.
The Find N6 has also reportedly passed TÜV Rheinland certification, with Oppo suggesting it achieved one of the flattest foldable displays evaluated so far. The inner display is expected to measure around 8.12 inches, paired with a 6.62-inch cover screen.
Leaked details suggest Oppo is aiming for a well-rounded flagship. The device is rumored to feature a Hasselblad-branded camera system built around a 200MP main sensor. It’s also expected to run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 platform and pack a sizeable 6,000mAh battery with 80W fast charging — notable figures for a slim book-style foldable.
By offering a behind-the-scenes look at production and stress testing, Oppo appears keen to differentiate the Find N6 in an increasingly competitive foldable market. Samsung, Honor, and other brands continue to refine hinge and display technology, and expectations are rising with each generation.
ASUS has launched its 2026 Creator series in India under the “Built for Originals” campaign. The lineup includes the ProArt GoPro Edition PX13, a limited-edition ROG Flow Z13-KJP created with KOJIMA PRODUCTIONS, and the TUF Gaming A14 (2026). All three devices are powered by AMD Ryzen AI Max+ processors with dedicated NPUs rated up to 50 TOPS, targeting creators, gamers, and hybrid users who need AI acceleration alongside high CPU and GPU performance.
ProArt GoPro Edition (PX13)
The ProArt GoPro PX13 focuses on portability and creator workflows. It runs on the AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 processor with 16 cores and 32 threads, paired with AMD Radeon 8060S integrated graphics and up to 128GB LPDDR5X memory. Storage includes a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD with expansion up to 2TB through an M.2 2230 slot.
The device features a 13.3-inch 3K OLED touchscreen with a 16:10 aspect ratio, 0.2ms response time, 60Hz refresh rate, 400 nits brightness (500 nits HDR), 100% DCI-P3 coverage, Pantone validation, and HDR True Black 500 certification. Touch and stylus support are included.
It weighs about 1.13 kg with an aluminum chassis and a 360° hinge. The laptop includes a backlit keyboard with Copilot key, Precision touchpad with DialPad support, FHD IR webcam with Windows Hello, Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4, and ports including USB-A 3.2 Gen2, dual USB-C with DisplayPort and Power Delivery, HDMI 2.1 FRL, 3.5mm jack, DC-in, and MicroSD 4.0.
Creator tools include StoryCube AI, MuseTree, ProArt Creator Hub, ScreenXpert, GlideX, and a dedicated GoPro hotkey. Buyers receive a hard-shell carry case with modular foam. An optional GoPro MAX2 bundle offers a 360 camera, extension pole, two Enduro batteries, and a 64GB microSD card at a discounted price. The package also includes a three-month Adobe Creative Cloud subscription and one year of GoPro Premium+.
ROG Flow Z13-KJP Limited Edition
The ROG Flow Z13-KJP is a 2-in-1 tablet-style gaming device designed with KOJIMA PRODUCTIONS and Yoji Shinkawa. It features a CNC-milled aluminum body with carbon fiber accents, custom keycaps, and laser-etched vents.
It uses the AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395 processor with Radeon 8060S graphics and 128GB LPDDR5X memory. Storage is a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD with expansion up to 2TB through a single M.2 slot. Cooling is handled by a vapor chamber and dual Arc Flow Fans.
The 13.4-inch 2.5K ROG Nebula touchscreen supports a 16:10 ratio, 180Hz refresh rate, 3ms response time, 500 nits brightness, 100% DCI-P3 color, Adaptive-Sync, Dolby Vision HDR, and stylus support. Connectivity includes Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4.
The device weighs around 1.72 kg and includes a 70Wh battery with fast charging. Ports include USB-A 3.2 Gen2, dual USB-C with DisplayPort and Power Delivery, HDMI 2.1 FRL, and microSD UHS-II. It also features a 13MP rear camera, 5MP IR front camera, Dolby Atmos speakers, Aura Sync lighting, and support for the XG Mobile external GPU.
The box includes themed packaging, a custom carrying case, and a Steam code for DEATH STRANDING 2: ON THE BEACH. Pre-orders also offer extended warranty and accidental damage protection through coupons.
TUF Gaming A14 (2026)
The TUF Gaming A14 targets entry and mid-range creators and gamers. It runs on the AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 392 processor with 12 cores and 24 threads, Radeon 8060S graphics, and 32GB LPDDR5X quad-channel memory. Storage includes a 1TB PCIe 4.0 SSD with support for up to 4TB across two M.2 slots.
The 14-inch 2.5K IPS display has a 16:10 ratio, 165Hz refresh rate, 400 nits brightness, and fast response time. The device weighs 1.48 kg and measures 1.69–1.99 cm thick. It includes a 73Wh battery with fast charging that reaches 50% in about 30 minutes and supports 45W to 100W charging.
Connectivity includes Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3. Ports include USB4 Type-C with DisplayPort and Power Delivery, USB-C 3.2 Gen2, two USB-A 3.2 Gen2 ports, HDMI 2.1 FRL, and microSD UHS-II. Other features include a backlit keyboard with Copilot key, FHD IR webcam, Dolby Atmos speakers, AI noise canceling, Microsoft Pluton security, and Secured-core PC Level 3 compliance.
Pricing and Availability
The ROG Flow Z13-KJP starts at Rs. 3,79,990, with pre-orders from February 26, 2026, and availability from March 4, 2026. The ProArt GoPro PX13 starts at Rs. 3,34,990, while the TUF Gaming A14 starts at Rs. 1,79,990. Both are available from February 26, 2026.
All models include Microsoft Office Home 2024 lifetime access and Microsoft 365 Basic with 100GB cloud storage for one year. They are sold through ASUS Exclusive Stores, ROG Stores, ASUS Hybrid Stores, Reliance Digital, Croma, authorized partners, ASUS eShop, Flipkart, and Amazon India.
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The Huawei MatePad Mini features an 8.8-inch Flexible OLED PaperMatte Display with a 16:10 aspect ratio, 2.5k resolution, and a 92% screen-to-body ratio. It offers 1800 nits peak brightness, a 120Hz refresh rate, and anti-glare technology with an optical film for improved eye comfort and reduced reflections.
Huawei hasn’t revealed any details about the chipset yet, but the MatePad Mini runs on the HarmonyOS 4.3 operating system. It offers advanced multitasking capabilities and productivity tools, including support for the Huawei M-Pencil Pro, enabling precise note-taking and sketching.
The tablet features a dual rear camera setup, including a 50MP main sensor with an f/1.8 aperture and an 8MP ultra-wide macro lens with an f/2.2 aperture. The rear cameras support up to 4K video recording with OIS. For selfies and video calls, it features a 32 MP front camera.
The tablet comes with a 6400mAh battery with 66W Huawei SuperCharge support. Huawei claims the device features a smart power conservation system designed to maintain battery health over three years of use.
The MatePad Mini weighs approximately 255 grams and measures just 5.1 mm in thickness. Huawei has designed the tablet with a magnesium alloy frame and a 3D vegan fiber back panel, combining durability with a lightweight build.
The device also includes Wi-Fi 7 connectivity, Bluetooth 5.2, dual speakers, and multiple sensors such as a fingerprint scanner, gyroscope, and ambient light sensor.
Availability
We don’t know the pricing yet, but in China the MatePad Mini starts at 3,999 yuan (around $584). The tablet is available in two color options: Spruce Green and Graphite Black. It is offered in multiple configurations, with RAM options of 8GB or 12GB and up to 256GB of internal storage.
It also comes with accessories such as the Huawei M-Pencil Pro and Folio Cover that are sold separately.
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Xiaomi has started rolling out the HyperOS 3.0.15.0 update for its flagship Xiaomi 17 Ultra. This 9.4GB update brings various system optimizations, camera upgrades, and security enhancements. The Leica Edition of the device includes an exclusive feature, which we will discuss at the end.
What’s new in this update?
The update improves the camera experience on the Xiaomi 17 Ultra. Xiaomi has added a new front-and-rear dual-view mode, which allows users to record video simultaneously using both cameras. The 200MP mode now includes a standard watermark option.
Xiaomi has optimized Dolby Vision recording, boosting brightness and dynamic range for improved video quality. The update also refines motion photo functionality by enabling it by default during video recording, with the option to switch to static photos in the camera settings.
Xiaomi has made improvements to the system as well. The update enhances the auto-brightness feature in night scenes, creating a better viewing experience in low-light environments. It fixes occasional app launch issues that caused temporary unresponsiveness. The package also includes the February 2026 security patch, which strengthens the device’s protection against vulnerabilities.
The Leica Edition of the Xiaomi 17 Ultra adds a Leica Instant Mode 1× tap-to-zoom feature. While the exact functionality remains unclear, it seems designed for quick, street-style photography, potentially enabling users to switch between focal lengths instantly with a single tap.
Xiaomi is holding an event on February 28, where it will launch several new products globally, including the Xiaomi 17 Ultra smartphone, the Redmi Buds 8 Pro earbuds, UltraThin Magnetic Power Bank 5000 15W, and the Xiaomi Tag tracker. The company will also showcase its latest AIoT products. The event will begin at 2 PM CET in Barcelona.
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Amazfit has launched the Amazfit Active 3 Premium, a compact smartwatch aimed at beginner runners and users who combine running with strength or studio workouts. The watch focuses on structured training, navigation, and health tracking while keeping the design simple enough for everyday use.
The Active 3 Premium includes built-in running workouts and Zepp Coach adaptive training plans. These plans adjust based on performance and recovery and support goals ranging from 5K to full marathon distances. Running metrics include posture tracking, running power, lactate threshold, ground contact time, rhythm analysis, and balance monitoring. These insights help users understand effort, improve form, and reduce injury risk over time. The watch also supports virtual pacer, smart trajectory correction, track run mode, and running gear management.
For navigation, the device uses six satellite positioning systems with offline maps, turn-by-turn directions, automatic rerouting, and point-to-point route planning. Users can search points of interest directly from the watch. The 4GB internal storage allows maps and audio, such as podcasts to be stored locally for phone-free workouts.
The smartwatch has a 45mm stainless steel frame with four physical buttons and weighs 38g without the strap. Dimensions are 45 × 45 × 11mm. It uses a 1.32-inch AMOLED display with 466 × 466 resolution, 353 PPI, and up to 3,000 nits brightness. The screen is protected by sapphire glass. Water resistance is rated at 5ATM. Color options include Apex Silver, Atlas Blue, and Aero White.
Battery capacity is 365mAh. Typical battery life is up to 12 days, heavy use up to 7 days, always on display up to 4 days, and continuous GPS up to 24 hours. GPS power saving mode can reach up to 76 hours, or 10 hours when GPS is used with music playback.
Health tracking is powered by the BioTracker PPG sensor with continuous heart rate, blood oxygen, stress, and skin temperature monitoring. Sleep tracking includes heart rate variability, breathing quality, sleep stages, naps, and sleep score. BioCharge provides a daily readiness score based on activity and recovery. Additional metrics include VO₂ Max, training load, training effect, and training stress balance. One tap measurement can check heart rate, stress, blood oxygen, and breathing rate in 45 seconds.
The watch supports more than 170 sports modes, including running, cycling, swimming, strength training with auto recognition of 25 movements, HYROX training, indoor workouts, winter sports, and ball sports. Bluetooth peripherals such as heart rate belts, power meters, cadence sensors, and action cameras are supported.
Smart features include Bluetooth calling through a built-in microphone and speaker, Zepp Flow voice assistant, notifications, music control, camera control for iOS, quick replies on Android, and Find My Phone. The device runs with the Zepp app and supports Android 7.0 or later and iOS 14.0 or later. Data can sync with Strava, TrainingPeaks, Runna, and Intervals.icu, Apple Health, and Google Fit.
Pricing & availability
The Amazfit Active 3 Premium is available starting February 26, 2026, for $169.99 through Amazfit and Amazon.
Huawei is hosting a major global launch event today, where the company has already unveiled the Watch GT Runner 2. But it’s the flagship Mate 80 Pro that is the big story today. It’s the first time since the Mate 50 Pro in 2022 that Huawei introduced its Mate smartphone in the international market.
In any case, it shares most of its specifications with the Chinese counterpart. The device measures 161.85mm in height, 76mm in width, and 7.95mm in thickness, and weighs around 219 grams.
The phone features a 6.75-inch LTPO OLED display with a resolution of 2832 × 1280 pixels and a pixel density of 460ppi. It supports a 1–120Hz adaptive refresh rate and 1440Hz high-frequency PWM dimming. Huawei is also promising up to 1.07 billion colors and 3000 nits of brightness.
One key difference between regions is software. The global Mate 80 Pro runs EMUI 15.0, while the Chinese version ships with HarmonyOS 6.0. It comes in a single 16GB RAM and 512GB storage configuration. There’s no microSD card slot, so what you buy is what you keep.
The Mate 80 Pro includes a 50-megapixel main camera that supports variable aperture ranging from f/1.4 to f/4.0 and optical image stabilization. It’s joined by a 40-megapixel ultra-wide camera and a 48-megapixel macro telephoto camera with 4x optical zoom and up to 100x digital zoom.
On the front, there’s a 13-megapixel wide-angle selfie camera with autofocus. Both front and rear cameras support 4K video recording.
The phone packs a 5,750mAh battery (rated capacity 5,620mAh) and supports 100W wired and 80W wireless charging.
The Mate 80 Pro also carries IP68 and IP69 ratings for dust and water resistance, including protection against high-pressure water jets and submersion up to six meters for 30 minutes under specific conditions.
Connectivity includes Wi-Fi 7 support, Bluetooth 6.0, USB-C with USB 3.1 Gen 1 speeds, NFC, and a wide range of global positioning systems, including GPS dual-band and NavIC. The phone is available in both single and dual SIM models, depending on the region.
Huawei hasn’t revealed the pricing details yet, but the Mate 80 Pro will be available for purchase in Black, Green, and Gold starting today.
Nothing is preparing to expand its audio lineup again, this time with a more affordable pair of over-ear headphones. The upcoming Nothing Headphone (a) is set to debut on March 5, 2026, during the company’s “Built Different” event.
The event will also introduce the Nothing Phone (4a) and Nothing Phone (4a) Pro, suggesting Nothing is continuing its push to build a broader, connected ecosystem rather than focusing on standalone devices.
The Headphone (a) appears to be a more accessible alternative to the original Nothing Headphone (1), which launched at €299. This new model is expected to come in at €159 in Europe and £149 in the UK, roughly half the price of the flagship version.
To reach that price point, Nothing is reportedly opting for a plastic construction instead of more premium materials. That doesn’t necessarily mean it will feel cheap, but it does signal a clear shift toward the mid-range segment.
In terms of design, the company isn’t toning things down. The Headphone (a) is expected to arrive in pink, white, black, and yellow — in line with Nothing’s bold, playful aesthetic. The semi-transparent styling that defines the brand is also likely to remain intact.
On the technical side, leaks point to a custom 40mm dynamic driver, Bluetooth 5.3 support, and dual-device pairing. Battery life could reach up to 35 hours with active noise cancellation enabled, which is competitive at this price. There’s some speculation that the ANC system may be less advanced than the one found in the Headphone (1), possibly as part of the cost-saving strategy.
If that trade-off holds true, the Headphone (a) may appeal most to users who want solid sound quality and long battery life without paying for top-tier noise isolation.
Nothing has been steadily growing its portfolio, and launching a more affordable over-ear option alongside mid-range smartphones reinforces that strategy. We’ll get full confirmation of specs, pricing, and availability on March 5. For now, the Headphone (a) looks like Nothing’s attempt to hit a sweet spot — stylish, capable, and easier on the wallet.
Honor is starting to lift the curtain on its next foldable, the Honor Magic V6, ahead of its global debut at MWC 2026. With just days to go before the March 1 launch in Barcelona, the company has shared early camera samples and revealed a new color option, both clearly meant to build anticipation.
Honor Magic V6
On Weibo, Honor’s imaging team posted a set of sample photos taken with the upcoming Magic V6. The company continues to lean on its AiMAGE branding, first introduced at MWC last year, which blends on-device AI processing with cloud-assisted enhancements. According to Honor, this setup improves clarity, zoom performance, and overall scene optimization.
The shared images highlight strong detail retention and balanced color reproduction, at least in the curated examples shown. Telephoto shots appear sharp, and low-light scenes seem well controlled. Of course, these are official samples, so real-world performance will need independent verification. Still, the message is clear: Honor wants the Magic V6 to compete not just with other foldables, but with top-tier slab flagships on camera quality.
Alongside the imaging teasers, Honor also unveiled a new “Red Rabbit” color variant. The finish features what the company describes as eco-friendly velvet leather with a nano-coating for durability. Visually, it’s a deep red tone accented with gold detailing around the circular camera module.
Under the hood, the Magic V6 is confirmed to run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, bringing expected gains in performance and power efficiency.
At the launch event today, Huawei officially released the Huawei Watch GT Runner 2. As the name implies, it’s a running-focused smartwatch with precision tracking, structured marathon training, and a lighter overall design.
At the center of the pitch is what Huawei calls an industry-leading 3D floating antenna system. The company says this setup improves positioning accuracy by 20 percent compared to previous models, even in dense urban areas, near tall buildings, or inside tunnels.
The watch supports dual-band GPS (L1 + L5) and works with multiple satellite systems, including GLONASS, BeiDou, Galileo, QZSS, and NavIC.
Huawei Watch GT Runner 2 Design and Display
The design has also been reworked with runners in mind. The watch case, bezel, crown, and buttons are made from titanium alloy, and the body measures 43.5mm by 43.5mm with a thickness of 10.7mm.
At around 34.5 grams (without the strap), it’s notably light for a watch in this category. Huawei pairs it with a new AirDry woven strap that uses a hollowed design for improved breathability. The company claims it boosts airflow by 25 percent compared to earlier straps. There’s also a fluoroelastomer strap included for workouts where sweat and water are more of a concern.
The display is a 1.32-inch AMOLED panel with a 466 x 466 resolution and a peak brightness of up to 3000 nits. The glass on top is second-generation Kunlun Glass, which checks out durability.
The Runner 2 is all about running!
But the bigger story here is software. The wearable comes with a DSM-Firmenich Running Team co-developed Intelligent Marathon Mode, which offers structured race preparation.
Runners can access major marathon events or create custom ones, generate tailored training plans, and track advanced metrics like lactate threshold, running power, training intensity, and a Running Ability Index. The watch can also predict finishing times based on historical data and training trends.
During races, the watch can display real-time pace charts, estimated finish times, and your gap against a target time. There’s also a digital pacer and fueling reminders designed to keep energy levels steady during long efforts. Post-run, the Huawei Health app breaks down performance data and provides form insights and recovery guidance.
Beyond running, the watch supports over 100 sports modes, including trail running, swimming, cycling, golf (with access to over 17,000 courses in select markets), and freediving up to 40 meters. It carries a 5 ATM and IP69 rating, although Huawei notes it’s not designed for hot showers or deep scuba diving.
Health and wellness features
As for health tracking, the watch includes ECG monitoring, heart rate variability tracking, blood oxygen measurement, sleep tracking with breathing awareness, and stress insights. Huawei is careful to note that these features are for reference only and not intended for medical diagnosis.
The Huawei Watch GT Runner 2 has a rated battery life of up to 14 days under light use, 7 days under typical use, and up to 32 hours in outdoor workout mode with precise positioning enabled.
You can charge it wirelessly, and the watch supports NFC payments, Bluetooth calling, standalone music playback, and QR code scanning. It works with both Android and iOS devices, though some features, like custom video watch faces and music syncing, are limited when paired with iPhones.
Huawei Watch GT Runner 2 Price
The Watch GT Runner 2 retails at £350 and will go on open sale starting today. You can choose from Dawn Orange, Dusk Blue, and Midnight Black colors.
When three phones share the same flagship DNA, the real question isn’t which one is better; it’s what actually changes as you move up the lineup. The Samsung Galaxy S26, S26+, and S26 Ultra look similar at first glance, but the upgrades are carefully layered to match different types of users. From display sharpness and battery growth to camera flexibility and productivity features, each step adds a specific kind of value. This comparison breaks down how those upgrades differ, what they mean in real-world use, and which model makes the most sense depending on how a phone is actually used day to day.
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Major Features:
Feature
Galaxy S26
Galaxy S26+
Galaxy S26 Ultra
Upgrades
Display Size & Resolution
6.3″ FHD+
6.7″ QHD+
6.9″ QHD+ + Anti-Reflective
Bigger and sharper screens improve media viewing, gaming, and multitasking comfort
Display Treatment
Standard flagship panel
Same as S26
Gorilla Armor 2 + DX coating
Ultra reduces reflections: better outdoor visibility and long viewing sessions
Build Experience
Compact flagship feel
Larger immersive feel
Productivity-focused with stylus
Upgrade shifts from portability to immersion to productivity use
Processor & Performance
Flagship chipset
Same performance level
Same chipset + higher RAM option
Ultra handles heavier multitasking and sustained workloads better
RAM & Storage Options
Up to 12GB / 512GB
Up to 12GB / 512GB
Up to 16GB / 1TB
Ultra better suited for creators, pro workflows, and heavy storage users
Main Camera
50MP
50MP
200MP
Ultra enables higher detail capture and better crop flexibility
Zoom System
3x telephoto
3x telephoto
3x + 5x periscope
Ultra adds real long-range photography versatility
Ultrawide Camera
12MP
12MP
50MP
Ultra improves detail and low-light ultrawide shots
Selfie Camera
12MP
12MP
12MP
No upgrade: same front camera experience across all
Battery Capacity
4300mAh
4900mAh
5000mAh
Bigger models support longer heavy usage sessions
Wired Charging
25W
45W
60W
Faster charging reduces downtime, especially for power users
Wireless Charging
15W
20W
25W
Upgrade improves convenience for desk and bedside charging
Extra Features
Core flagship features
Adds UWB
Stylus + UWB + pro display
Ultra adds productivity and pro-level usability tools
Price (Approx)
$900 / ₹88,000
$1100 / ₹1,20,000
$1300 / ₹1,40,000
Price increases match upgrade depth and target usage
Disclaimer: Specifications and features listed are based on available information at the time of writing and may vary by region, software updates, or official announcements.
The Galaxy S26 series follows a clear upgrade ladder rather than three completely different designs. The S26 acts as the baseline flagship with premium glass and Armor Aluminum 2, focusing on comfort and everyday practicality. Moving to the S26+, the main change is scale; it feels more immersive without dramatically changing the design philosophy. The S26 Ultra introduces the biggest functional upgrade: Gorilla Armor 2 with anti-reflective coating and built-in stylus support. This shift makes the Ultra less about style and more about productivity and precision input. The upgrade path here is practical, compact usability on S26, a larger media-focused experience on S26+, and professional utility on Ultra.
Display Quality
All three use Dynamic LTPO AMOLED 2X panels with 120Hz refresh rates and high peak brightness, so smoothness and color quality stay consistent. The main upgrade difference is resolution and usability. The S26 sticks with FHD+ for efficiency, while the S26+ and Ultra move to QHD+ for sharper text and better large-screen clarity. The Ultra adds anti-reflective treatment, which noticeably improves outdoor visibility and long viewing sessions.
Verdict
Design upgrades mainly scale from comfort to immersion to productivity, while display upgrades focus on sharper visuals and improved real-world readability as you move up.
2. Specifications Including Battery
Performance
Performance differences are subtle because all models use flagship-level chipsets and the same software support window. The S26 and S26+ share identical performance configurations depending on region, meaning real-world speed is nearly the same between them. The Ultra’s upgrade lies less in raw speed and more in sustained performance and higher memory options, which benefit heavy multitasking, long gaming sessions, and advanced editing workloads. The progression is about workload capacity rather than basic performance gains.
Battery and Charging
Battery upgrades follow a clear usage-based ladder. The S26’s smaller battery targets normal daily use with moderate charging speeds. The S26+ adds capacity and faster wired charging, which better supports heavier media consumption and longer screen time. The Ultra improves further with the fastest wired and wireless charging, reducing downtime for power users. These upgrades mainly affect convenience rather than fundamental endurance differences.
Verdict
Performance upgrades emphasize consistency across the lineup, while battery improvements primarily support heavier usage patterns and faster top-up convenience.
3. Camera
Main and Secondary Lenses
The biggest upgrade differences in the series appear in the camera system. The S26 and S26+ share identical hardware, meaning the move from base to Plus does not change photographic capability. Both focus on reliable flagship photography with 3x zoom and strong video features. The S26 Ultra introduces meaningful hardware upgrades: a 200MP main sensor, dual telephoto setup including a 5x periscope, and a higher-resolution ultrawide. These changes expand shooting flexibility rather than just improving quality, enabling better long-distance zoom, higher-detail crops, and more creative framing options. The upgrade here is clearly aimed at users who push mobile photography further.
Selfie Camera
All three use the same 12MP dual-pixel autofocus selfie camera, so selfie quality and video performance remain consistent across the lineup. This keeps the front-camera experience equal regardless of model choice.
Verdict
Camera upgrades are concentrated entirely on the Ultra, while S26 and S26+ maintain the same reliable flagship camera experience.
4. Pricing
The pricing structure reflects how upgrades are distributed. The Galaxy S26 starts at about $900 / ₹88,000, establishing the core flagship experience. The S26+ moves to roughly $1100 / ₹1,20,000, where the extra cost mainly pays for a larger, sharper display and bigger battery rather than performance or camera improvements. The S26 Ultra reaches around $1300 / ₹1,40,000, with pricing tied to significant camera upgrades, stylus integration, premium display treatment, and higher memory options.
Is the Price Justified?
The S26+ feels like an upgrade for comfort and endurance rather than capability. The Ultra’s price increase is easier to justify for users who will actively use Zoom flexibility, stylus features, or heavy multitasking. The value depends less on raw specs and more on whether those functional upgrades match daily usage.
Verdict
Pricing directly mirrors upgrade intent: screen and battery improvements in the middle tier, and feature-driven professional upgrades at the top.
Disclaimer: Prices are approximate and may vary based on country, region, and applicable taxes.
5. Conclusion
The S26 lineup is structured around progressive upgrades rather than drastic differences. The S26 provides the full flagship foundation. The S26+ upgrades the viewing and battery experience without changing core performance or cameras, making it a lifestyle upgrade for media-heavy users. The S26 Ultra introduces the most functional upgrades, advanced cameras, an anti-reflective display, stylus integration, and higher-end hardware options, targeting users who treat their phone as a productivity or creative tool. The lineup feels intentionally tiered so buyers can choose upgrades based on usage rather than marketing labels.
Verdict
The differences between S26, S26+, and S26 Ultra are less about which is “best” and more about how upgrades align with usage: Galaxy S26 is best suited for users who want a clean flagship experience without extra complexity, ideal for everyday performance, compact handling, and long-term reliability.
The S26+ fits users who consume more content, game longer, or simply prefer a bigger and sharper screen with stronger battery comfort, making it the most balanced upgrade for mainstream buyers.
The S26 Ultra is clearly built for power users, creators, and multitaskers who will actually use advanced zoom cameras, stylus features, and top-tier hardware.
S26 for simplicity, S26+ for balance, Ultra for maximum capability.
The foldable phone market has been chasing the same goal for years: reduce the crease enough that you barely notice it. Now, if recent leaks are anything to go by, Oppo may be getting closer than most.
A real-life photo of the upcoming Oppo Find N6 have surfaced online, showing a noticeably flatter inner display. The crease is almost invisible when looking straight on.
Oppo hasn’t shared full technical details yet, but teasers point to a redesigned hinge system, reportedly built with a titanium alloy structure. The company is also said to be using a new ultra-thin glass designed to better resist long-term deformation. Whether that involves new materials or refinements to lamination isn’t clear, but the goal is obvious: make the display look and feel as close to a traditional slab phone as possible when opened.
Oppo is reportedly planning a March 17 launch in China, potentially beating several key competitors to market. Samsung’s next book-style foldable, expected to follow the current Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7, likely won’t arrive until mid-year. Google’s next Pixel foldable is also expected later in the summer. Meanwhile, Honor’s Honor Magic V6 is rumored for a similar March window, setting up direct competition.
If the Find N6 delivers on what these early glimpses suggest, it could raise the bar for crease reduction in book-style foldables. That would be particularly significant as Apple is widely rumored to be preparing its own foldable iPhone in the coming years, with heavy focus reportedly placed on minimizing the fold line.
Of course, real-world impressions will matter more than carefully framed demo shots. Lighting, display angle, and even screen content can influence how visible a crease appears. Still, the early signs suggest Oppo is pushing hard on hinge and display engineering.
More details are expected soon. For now, the Find N6 looks poised to deliver one of the flattest foldable displays we’ve seen so far.
Xiaomi has officially launched the Redmi Buds 8 Lite, also known as the Youth Edition, in China. The earbuds are priced at 139 yuan (approximately $20), making them an affordable option in the active noise cancellation (ANC) market. Xiaomi initially introduced the earbuds globally in January for €22.9.
Redmi Buds 8 Lite Specifications
The Redmi Buds 8 Lite features 42dB wide-frequency active noise cancellation with hybrid ANC technology to reduce low-frequency sounds like subway noise and air conditioning. It includes dual-mic AI noise reduction for clear call quality in noisy environments and a wind-noise reduction algorithm for outdoor use, resisting wind speeds up to 6m/s.
Xiaomi has included a 12.4mm titanium-diaphragm dynamic driver in the earbuds. The earbuds also support AAC and SBC codecs, maintaining sound quality even at lower bitrates.
The Redmi Buds 8 Lite offers up to 36 hours of battery life with the charging case and 8 hours of playback on a single charge. Fast charging provides 2 hours of listening time from a 10-minute charge.
The Redmi Buds 8 Lite offers dual-device connectivity, which allows users to pair two devices simultaneously and switch between them without delays. The Xiaomi Earbuds app enables users to adjust noise cancellation levels, customize EQ settings, and modify gesture controls.
Redmi has designed the earbuds for comfort and practicality. Each earbud weighs 4.5 grams and comes with multiple ear tip sizes to ensure a secure fit. The earbuds have an IP54 rating for dust and water resistance, making them suitable for everyday use.
The Redmi Buds 8 Lite supports Bluetooth 5.4 for reliable connectivity. The earbuds come in three colors: Blue, Black, and White.
In related news, Oppo has recently introduced the Enco Air 5 Pro with LHDC 5.0 audio, AI call noise reduction, and up to 54 hours of battery life, while the Realme Buds T500 Pro has surfaced in leaks featuring 50dB ANC, Bluetooth 6.1, and a 56-hour battery rating
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
Samsung has increased prices for several Galaxy A and F series smartphones in India. A leaked internal pricing document from tipster AN Leaks shows the new rates, though Samsung hasn’t made any official announcement. The changes appear to be live in some stores, but online platforms haven’t fully updated their listings yet.
Galaxy A56 5G and A36 5G Get Price Bumps
The Galaxy A56 5G now costs more for its higher storage options. The 8GB + 256GB version is priced at ₹44,999, and the 12GB + 256GB model costs ₹48,999. Both variants are about ₹1,000 more expensive than before.
Sasmsung Galaxy A56 (left) and Galaxy A36 (right)
The Galaxy A36 5G also saw similar increases. The 8GB + 256GB variant jumped from ₹35,499 to ₹36,999. The 12GB + 256GB option now costs ₹40,499. Again, this is roughly ₹1,000 more per variant.
Galaxy F17 5G Prices Go Up Too
The Galaxy F17 5G also got pricier. The 4GB + 128GB variant now costs ₹16,499, while the 6GB + 128GB version is ₹17,999. Both are about ₹1,000 higher. The 8GB + 128GB model is priced at ₹19,999, which is a bigger jump of ₹1,500 from its earlier price.
Online Stores Still Show Old Prices
Checking major online shopping sites shows that many devices still display the older prices. This means the price increase might be rolling out slowly or could be limited to physical retail stores right now.
Second Price Increase This Year
This isn’t the first time Samsung raised prices in 2026. Reports from January suggested the Galaxy A56, Galaxy A36, and Galaxy F17 5G already had price hikes. Other leaks mention possible increases for more Samsung phones later this year, but nothing is confirmed.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
With the Galaxy S26 Ultra, Samsung isn’t just pushing spec upgrades; it’s trying to redefine what a flagship phone should proactively do for you. This year’s Ultra focuses heavily on smarter AI, better video capabilities, and meaningful hardware tweaks rather than just bumping numbers. While it might look iterative at first glance, some of these additions are genuinely interesting.
A Slimmer Ultra Than Ever
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra
At just 7.9mm thick, the Galaxy S26 Ultra is the slimmest Ultra model Samsung has released to date. That might not sound dramatic, but in the world of large, camera-heavy flagships, shaving off thickness without sacrificing battery or thermals is a big deal. Despite the slimmer profile, the phone still packs top-tier hardware and doesn’t downsize the battery.
Built-In Privacy Display
One of the most anticipated additions is the new Privacy Display. This is the first time Samsung has integrated built-in privacy screen functionality directly into a flagship phone. Using a combination of hardware filtering and software controls, the display restricts viewing angles so that on-screen content is much harder to see from the sides.
Galaxy S26 Ultra’s privacy display feature
If you often work in cafés, airports, or public transport, this could be a genuinely practical feature. Unlike clip-on privacy protectors, this one is native and toggleable. It’s subtle, but it signals Samsung thinking beyond just brightness and resolution.
Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 for Galaxy
Under the hood, the S26 Ultra runs on the custom Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Mobile Platform for Galaxy. As the name suggests, this version is tuned specifically for Samsung’s flagship. Performance improvements focus on sustained workloads rather than just peak benchmarks. That matters for gaming, 4K and 8K video recording, and AI-driven processing tasks that run continuously in the background. Thermal management has also been improved, which pairs well with the phone’s thinner design.
Camera Upgrades: Low Light and Pro Video
Samsung is clearly doubling down on mobile videography this year. The S26 Ultra features wider apertures across parts of its camera system, improving low-light photography. Night shots are brighter and cleaner, but the bigger story might be “Nightography Video.” Samsung claims significantly improved clarity in dim environments, reducing noise and maintaining detail when recording at night. Video stabilization also gets an upgrade through improved Super Steady technology, helping smooth out handheld footage without over-cropping.
Perhaps most notably, the S26 Ultra is the first Galaxy smartphone to support the Advanced Professional Video (APV) standard. This allows for more efficient compression while maintaining high video quality, which could be a big deal for content creators who want pro-grade results without enormous file sizes. Even the front-facing camera benefits from AI ISP improvements, promising more natural skin tones and better detail retention in mixed lighting.
Agentic AI
Samsung is branding its next phase of intelligence as “Agentic AI.” The idea is simple: instead of waiting for you to trigger features, the phone anticipates and assists. “Now Nudge” delivers contextual suggestions at relevant moments, while “Now Brief” provides real-time summaries and updates throughout the day. Think less reactive notifications and more proactive guidance.
Bixby has also evolved into a more conversational device agent. You can adjust settings, navigate menus, and manage tasks using natural language without needing to memorize specific commands. The goal is frictionless interaction.
Samsung has also expanded “Circle to Search” and deepened integrations with AI platforms like Gemini and Perplexity. Native AI photo editing tools have been refined as well, making object removal, generative fill, and scene adjustments more seamless.
Super Fast Charging 3.0
Charging gets a meaningful bump with Super Fast Charging 3.0. Using Samsung’s new 60W charger, the S26 Ultra can reportedly reach 75% in 30 minutes. That’s not industry-leading on paper, but it strikes a balance between speed and battery longevity. In an era where 200W charging exists, Samsung appears to be prioritizing sustained battery health over headline-grabbing numbers.
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Samsung has never been the most aggressive player when it comes to battery innovation. While most of its rivals are chasing bigger numbers year after year, Samsung is definitely moving more cautiously. Now, though, a senior executive has confirmed that change is coming.
Speaking at a media roundtable ahead of Galaxy Unpacked 2026, Moon Sung-Hoon, Executive Vice President and Head of Samsung Electronics’ Smartphone R&D Team, said the company is actively preparing a smartphone that uses silicon-carbon anode battery technology. According to Moon, such a device will arrive “in due course,” suggesting the tech is progressing internally, even if it’s not ready for prime time just yet.
Silicon-carbon batteries have become increasingly common among Chinese smartphone brands. By replacing traditional graphite anodes with silicon-carbon composites, these batteries can store more lithium ions in the same physical space. The result? Much higher capacities without dramatically increasing thickness or weight.
Moon acknowledged that the company may appear slower than competitors in adopting newer battery chemistry, but emphasized that safety, durability, and long-term stability remain priorities. That caution is understandable given Samsung’s history, particularly the lessons learned from the Galaxy Note 7 incident years ago. New battery technologies must pass strict internal testing, especially in areas like swelling resistance, lifespan, and charge cycle reliability.
That conservative strategy is evident in the just-launched Galaxy S26 series. Only the base model received a modest battery bump, while the Galaxy S26 Ultra and its Plus sibling retained familiar capacity figures.
That said, Moon’s comments confirm that Samsung is not ignoring the shift toward silicon-carbon chemistry. It’s simply taking its time. With brands like Honor, Oppo, OnePlus, and Xiaomi pushing 7,000mAh-plus batteries and longer endurance, the pressure on Samsung is mounting.
For Galaxy fans who feel battery upgrades have been incremental in recent years, this could signal a more meaningful leap on the horizon. There’s no concrete launch timeline yet, but the direction is clear: Samsung is working on it.
Xiaomi has introduced a new high-capacity water purifier in China. The Mijia Water Purifier 2 1200G comes with a long-life reverse osmosis system and what it describes as baby-grade healthy water.
At the core of the device is a 7-year long-lasting RO system. The purifier uses a 12-page high-precision RO membrane paired with a PPC filter cartridge. It also introduces what the company calls “Zero Stagnant Water 3.0” technology, which is designed to reduce leftover water sitting inside the system between uses.
Xiaomi claims the purifier has received professional maternal and infant certification, and that the filtered water does not contain scale inhibitors. The rated total purification capacity is 6,500 liters.
A 7-year RO system with app control
The Mijia Water Purifier 2 1200G (model MR1282-A) supports a clean water flow rate of 3.2 liters per minute and operates at 180W. It works with inlet water pressure between 0.1 and 0.4 MPa and has a working pressure range of 0.4 to 0.9 MPa. The unit weighs 11.9kg and measures 163 × 445 × 379 mm.
On the smart side, the purifier includes an IPX7-rated waterproof faucet with touch controls for dispensing water. It can display real-time TDS (total dissolved solids) values and connects over 2.4GHz Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11b/g/n). Through the Mijia app, users can remotely check water quality data and other system information.
The purifier is designed for use with municipal tap water that meets China’s GB 5749 standard. Xiaomi says the output water meets the requirements of the country’s hygiene and safety standards for reverse osmosis drinking water treatment devices.
The purifier is priced at 1,999 yuan (~ $290), though Xiaomi is offering a pre-sale price of 1,499 yuan (~ $299). Its first official sale is scheduled for March 7.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
Samsung has just expanded its accessory ecosystem for the Galaxy S26 series with a clever new companion. The Galaxy S26 Ultra and its siblings just got a new 25W Magnetic Charger, and now, the brand has also released a new power bank with built-in magnets and a kickstand.
Magnetic Snap-On Power for the Samsung Galaxy S26 Series
This official Samsung magnetic power bank is specially engineered for the Galaxy S26 series and other Qi2-compatible phones. It uses magnetic alignment to attach securely to the smartphone’s back, ensuring proper positioning for efficient power transfer without reels of cable or fidgeting to find the right spot. Built into the back of the power bank is a fold-out kickstand, letting you prop your phone up at a comfortable angle, which makes it handy for video calls, streaming, gaming, or more.
Samsung Qi2 Magnet Power Bank
Samsung’s Qi2 Magnet Wireless Battery Pack houses a sizeable 5,000mAh battery pack. It supports wireless output up to 15W when magnetically connected to compatible devices like the Galaxy S26 Ultra, Galaxy S26+, and Galaxy S26. Keep in mind that these models don’t have built-in magnets like the Google Pixel 10 lineup or iPhones. So you will need a dedicated case with magnets.
For example, popular case brand Spigen have already released several magnetic cases and accessories. If you need a faster charging option, the power bank also offers 25W wired fast charging with its USB Type-C port. In other words, users can charge two devices at the same time. Samsung has released this Qi2 Magnet Wireless Power Bank in a single gray color option. As of right now, the pricing and launch details for this power bank are still at large.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
For the past few years, Vivo has launched its Ultra-branded flagship around a month after Oppo’s Ultra offering in China. However, this year may be different, as reliable tipster Digital Chat Station claims that the Vivo X300 Ultra will debut before the Oppo Find X9 Ultra. Here’s a look at when these devices are expected to hit the Chinese market.
Vivo X300 Ultra, Find X9 Ultra launch time frame (rumored)
DCS revealed that the Vivo X300 Ultra will be announced in March, which could be in the second half of the month. He claims that this Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5-powered phone will feature the world’s first 200-megapixel Sony LYT-901 primary camera. It is also said to include a 3.5x periscope telephoto lens using a 200-megapixel Samsung HPB sensor, along with what is described as the strongest ultra-wide camera in the smartphone industry.
Oppo Find N6 and Find X9 Ultra launch timeframe (rumored)
DCS claims that March will also see the arrival of the Oppo Find N6 foldable phone. A recent report revealed that it is slated to debut on March 17. He also mentioned that the Find X9 Ultra will be announced in April.
While it is not mentioned in the leak, there is a possibility that the vivo X300 Ultra could be accompanied by the Vivo X300 Max, and the Find X9 Ultra and Find X9s Pro may debut together in April.
Interestingly, both Ultra editions are also said to be heading to the global market in the coming months. While the X9 Ultra has not yet appeared on any global certification platform, the vivo X300 Ultra has already been approved in Indonesia and Europe, possibly hinting at a global launch in the second quarter of this year.
For more daily updates, please visit our News Section.
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