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Samsung’s Galaxy Fold 8: A Wider, Thinner Foldable That Signals the Company’s Boldest Design Bet Yet

Samsung Electronics is preparing what may be its most dramatic redesign of the Galaxy Fold line since the original debuted in 2019. A sweeping leak has revealed detailed specifications and design changes for the Galaxy Fold 8, suggesting the South Korean tech giant is abandoning its conservative iterative approach in favor of a significantly wider, thinner form factor that could redefine what consumers expect from a foldable smartphone.

Google Is Bringing Native Call Recording Back to Android — And This Time, It’s Built Right Into the Phone App

For years, Android users who wanted to record phone calls had to rely on third-party apps of varying quality and legality. That workaround era appears to be drawing to a close. Google is preparing to integrate call recording directly into its Phone app for Android, a feature that has been spotted in development and is expected to roll out broadly in the coming months. The move signals a significant shift in how Google approaches a long-requested but legally fraught capability.

The Supercar That Won’t Go Electric: Why Lamborghini’s Retreat From Full EVs Signals a Broader Luxury Auto Reckoning

Lamborghini, the Italian maker of some of the world’s most visceral and emotionally charged supercars, has quietly shelved its plans to produce a fully electric vehicle by the end of this decade. The decision, confirmed by CEO Stephan Winkelmann, marks one of the most significant reversals in the luxury automotive sector and raises pointed questions about whether the high-end market ever truly wanted battery-powered exotics in the first place.

OpenSlack: The Open-Source Tool That Lets Companies Build Their Own Slack Alternative on Existing Infrastructure

A new open-source project called OpenSlack is turning heads among enterprise developers and IT administrators who have grown weary of mounting software-as-a-service subscription costs. Published on GitHub by developer Bilal G., the project offers a self-hosted, open-source alternative to Slack — one of the most widely used workplace communication platforms in the world — and it does so by letting organizations stand up their own messaging system on infrastructure they already control.

Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra May Let You Hide Your Screen From Prying Eyes — And an Early Video Suggests It Actually Works

For years, smartphone privacy screens have been the domain of clunky aftermarket accessories — stick-on films and tempered glass protectors that dim displays, distort colors, and generally make the user experience worse in exchange for a modicum of visual security. Samsung appears poised to change that calculus entirely with the Galaxy S26 Ultra, which is expected to feature a built-in privacy display mode that narrows the viewing angle of the screen on command, making it effectively unreadable to anyone not looking at it straight on.

Sam Altman’s Water Defense: Inside OpenAI’s Battle Over AI’s True Environmental Cost

Sam Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, took to social media this week to push back forcefully against claims that a single ChatGPT query consumes an entire bottle of water — a statistic that has circulated widely in environmental debates about artificial intelligence. But even as Altman disputed the water figures, he acknowledged what many in the industry have quietly accepted: AI’s energy appetite is enormous, growing, and demands serious attention.

Mullvad VPN Takes Its Fight Against Surveillance to British Streets After UK Broadcasters Refuse to Air Its Ad

When Swedish VPN provider Mullvad tried to run a television advertisement in the United Kingdom warning citizens about mass surveillance, it expected some friction. What it got was an outright rejection — and a decision that has since fueled one of the more provocative guerrilla marketing campaigns the privacy industry has seen in years.

Linux 7.0 Arrives: Linus Torvalds Resets the Version Number and Delivers a Massive Kernel Release

After more than three decades of development, the Linux kernel has officially crossed into version 7.0 territory. Linus Torvalds, the creator and lead maintainer of the project, announced the release of Linux 7.0-rc1 on Sunday, marking the close of the merge window for what is shaping up to be one of the largest kernel development cycles in recent memory.

Microsoft’s Hyper-V Gets a Major Linux Overhaul: What the 7.0 Kernel Changes Mean for Enterprise Virtualization

Microsoft’s long-running investment in Linux virtualization is about to take another significant step forward. A fresh batch of Hyper-V improvements headed for the Linux 7.0 kernel cycle signals that the Redmond giant continues to prioritize the performance and reliability of Linux guests running atop its hypervisor — a move that carries direct implications for Azure cloud infrastructure and the millions of Linux virtual machines it hosts worldwide.

From Meituan’s Trenches to a New AI Venture: How One Product Manager Is Betting That China’s Tech Playbook Can Reshape American Software

Yilin Zhang spent years inside one of China’s most demanding technology companies, building products that served hundreds of millions of users. Now she’s taking what she learned at Meituan — the super-app giant often described as China’s answer to a combination of DoorDash, Yelp, and Groupon — and channeling it into a new AI startup called Kuse, aimed squarely at the American market.