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Vivo X Fold 5 set to rival iPhone with Apple Watch sync, AMOLED panels and more: All you need to know

Vivo X Fold 5 set to rival iPhone with Apple Watch sync, AMOLED panels and more: All you need to know

Hindustan Times10-06-2025

Vivo is preparing to launch its new foldable smartphone, the X Fold 5, which follows the X Fold 3 released last year. Though Vivo has not announced the exact launch date, the device is expected to debut later this month. Ahead of the launch, Vivo product manager Han Boxiao shared several key details about the upcoming model.
The Vivo X Fold 5 will feature an 8T LTPO AMOLED display on both the inner and outer screens. The display is designed to deliver a local peak brightness of up to 4,500 nits. It will include high-frequency PWM dimming at full brightness and carry the TÜV Rheinland global eye protection 3.0 certification, aimed at reducing eye strain during prolonged use. The display will also offer a high pixel density and resolution, with Zeiss Master Colour technology to ensure accurate colour reproduction.
Also read: Oppo Reno 14 Pro confirmed to feature a 50MP ultra-wide lens, 6,200mAh battery, and more
Vivo confirmed that the X Fold 5 will operate effectively even in temperatures as low as -30 degrees Celsius. This performance is supported by the second-generation semi-solid battery technology, which enhances battery stability by extending the solid electrolyte layer from the positive to the negative electrode compared to the previous generation.
On the other hand, it will carry an IPX8 rating, meaning it can handle water immersion up to 3 meters deep. The device will also feature IPX9 and IPX9+ ratings for resistance to high temperature, high pressure, and underwater folding. Additionally, Vivo also claims it will be the first foldable smartphone with an IPX5 dustproof folding screen.
Also read: Vivo V50e review in 10 points: What's good and what's not
One of the notable features will be the phone's ability to pair with the Apple Watch. Users will be able to view incoming calls, messages, and health data collected by the watch directly on the X Fold 5. The health data will sync with Vivo's Health app. The phone will also integrate iCloud directly into its file management system. Furthermore, when connected with an iPhone, the foldable will allow users to view SMS and verification codes received on the iPhone simultaneously on the X Fold 5.
Also read: Samsung Galaxy S25 review: Flagship features in a handful package
Leaks reveal that the device will include a 6.53-inch outer AMOLED display and an 8.03-inch inner AMOLED screen, both supporting 2K resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. It will run on the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset, promising a 30 percent performance boost and 20% better power efficiency over the previous generation.
For photography, the device is expected to feature a triple 50MP including a primary sensor, an ultra-wide lens, and a 3x periscope telephoto lens, along with a 32MP front-facing camera. Additionally, the phone might offer up to 16GB of RAM and 512GB of internal storage.
In terms of design, the X Fold 5 is said to be slimmer than its predecessor, measuring 4.3mm when folded and 9.3mm when unfolded, compared to 4.7mm and 10.2mm, respectively, on the X Fold 3.

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iFold coming? Apple's first flip iPhone could debut soon, but it won't be cheap - specs, camera and all details
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Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

iFold coming? Apple's first flip iPhone could debut soon, but it won't be cheap - specs, camera and all details

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The $1,999 Liberty Phone is made in America. Its creator explains how.
The $1,999 Liberty Phone is made in America. Its creator explains how.

Mint

time5 hours ago

  • Mint

The $1,999 Liberty Phone is made in America. Its creator explains how.

Next Story Ben Raab , The Wall Street Journal Purism's Liberty Phone, priced at $1,999, is the most advanced U.S.-made smartphone but lacks competitive specs compared to the iPhone. Limited by domestic supply chains and higher costs, it sources components globally. Despite scaling potential, Purism sells fewer than 100,000 units, as many parts still come from Asia. The phone's unique features cater to security-conscious users. Purism's $1,999 Liberty Phone is assembled in the U.S. with parts from the U.S. and elsewhere, including China. Photo: Purism Gift this article It is possible to build a smartphone in the U.S. right now. But it won't be as sleek or as powerful as an iPhone, and it will cost a lot more. It is possible to build a smartphone in the U.S. right now. But it won't be as sleek or as powerful as an iPhone, and it will cost a lot more. Todd Weaver's company, Purism, developed the Liberty Phone, the closest anyone has gotten. It has specs that would have been more impressive a decade ago, and it costs $1,999. President Trump has threatened steep tariffs on foreign-made smartphones to pressure companies like Apple to shift manufacturing stateside. Meanwhile, the Trump Organization is promoting a 'Made in the U.S.A." phone for $499 with specs that deem it unlikely to be built here anytime soon. Supply-chain analysts agree it's impossible to match Asia's production quality and scale for now. But Weaver's Liberty Phone, not the Trump phone, offers a unique look at the realities of domestic manufacturing. And why nobody else is doing it. The Liberty Phone's motherboard is built in-house, the chip comes from Texas, and the assembly is done at Purism's facility in Carlsbad, Calif. But not all of its parts are U.S. made: Other components come from China and other Asian countries. 'I've been working on this for 10 years and we've done everything we possibly can to build from U.S. manufacturing," Weaver says. 'There are just some parts that don't yet have a supply chain. We're gonna keep incrementing there until we can get to that point." Weaver says he can produce Liberty Phones at a rate of about 10,000 a month, but so far, he's sold fewer than 100,000. By comparison, Apple shipped around 225 million phones in 2024, according to market analyst firm Canalys. The Liberty Phone also doesn't run on Android or iOS. Its processor, produced by Dutch semiconductor firm NXP in Austin, Texas, is designed for cars, not smartphones. It runs on Purism's own PureOS, which is limited to calling, texting and web browsing, plus some basic apps like a calculator. Purism founder Todd Weaver holds up the Liberty Phone's motherboard, manufactured at the company's California facility. Photo: Purism The screen and battery come from China and the rear-facing camera comes from South Korea. Weaver says a fully U.S.-made phone is limited by a lack of domestic infrastructure. There are no companies mass-producing smartphone screens in the U.S., for example. Complications like this, even at Purism's small scale, help explain why Apple and others haven't made a serious attempt at producing premium smartphones in the U.S. 'Even if the specs were less impressive, it would take many, many years to be fully sourced out of the U.S. and not practical," says Jeff Fieldhack, a research director at Counterpoint Research. 'Cost aside, we don't have factories here building application processors, high-end displays or most of the other things in your smartphone." Weaver says the Liberty Phone costs about $650 to make. The iPhone 16 Pro Max, a much more powerful device, was estimated to cost around $550 to make in China last fall, according to TechInsights. Purism's higher U.S. labor costs are partially offset by cheaper, lower-quality parts: a basic camera, low-resolution screen and half the RAM. Weaver says the Liberty Phone isn't built to compete with an iPhone right now. He says the $1,999 retail price reflects a securely sourced phone with a vetted supply chain. About half of Purism's customers are government agencies across the U.S., he says. 'On the consumer side, it's security geeks, parents who want a phone for their kid, elderly people or people who want to avoid big tech," says Weaver. 'Someone who needs a wicked-strong camera is not our audience." Weaver estimates he could scale to building 100,000 phones a month within six months. But getting there would require investment to cover new machines, more line operators and added floor space. He has no traditional venture-capital funding, relying only on revenue and crowdfunding. Tariffs likely won't affect his costs at his current production rates because he ordered a large batch of parts when he started and still has them in supply at his facility. Weaver says that a long-term tariff on imported electronics could make the Liberty Phone's manufacturing cost more competitive, since the cheap components would only see marginal increases, and more components are likely to be built in the U.S. soon. While companies like Intel already manufacture chips in the U.S. and firms like TSMC and Micron are building domestic facilities, Fieldhack says those efforts are a small fraction of global production. Companies lack incentives to move more to American soil. 'A lot of it isn't leading edge, the cost is still high, and it would still take a long time," he says. Write to Ben Raab at Topics You May Be Interested In Catch all the Business News , Corporate news , Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.

From killer drones to robotaxis, sci-fi dreams are coming to life
From killer drones to robotaxis, sci-fi dreams are coming to life

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From killer drones to robotaxis, sci-fi dreams are coming to life

The world is on fire, and that's giving some of the richest men the audacity of hope. Hope that their billions, brains and brashness can usher in a new world filled with robot cars, killer drones and solar power. In other words: hard tech. These sci-fi dreams—made popular by Elon Musk—have been building for some time. But they have become harder to ignore in the past month, with gambits from the likes of Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey and Daniel Ek. They're all pouring money into efforts that a few years ago would have seemed like the stuff of science fiction but are now becoming very real. Their collective interest is giving hard tech a moment, not unlike the rush of investment and entrepreneurs to software with the debut of the iPhone and the rise of mobile computing. The enthusiasm for hard tech is fueled, in large part, by breakthroughs in artificial intelligence. It holds the eventual promise of greater autonomy for physical machines and new advances in science. Today's hard-tech moment, which is intertwined with the AI boom, presents the opportunity to change entrenched industries: defense, transportation, energy production and more. And with that, possibly create new winners. This past week, for example, Ek, who created his fortune with streaming music service Spotify, turned his attention to drone technology. It's an area that has taken on greater attention after high-profile drone attacks were used by Ukraine in Russia and by Israel in Iran. Ek's investment firm, Prima Materia, led a 600 million euro fundraising round, equivalent to $691.4 million, for Helsing, a German defense-tech startup developing AI drones. 'There's an enormous realization that it's really now AI, mass and autonomy that is driving the new battlefield," Ek told the Financial Times. Weeks earlier, the prospect of military application for another avant-garde hardware dream—extended-reality battlefield goggles—reunited Zuckerberg and Luckey, two billionaires who had a public break a few years earlier. Zuckerberg and Luckey's companies, Meta Platforms and defense-tech firm Anduril Industries, respectively, are teaming up to try to win a Pentagon contract for rugged headsets that could help soldiers on the battlefield. And Musk has said Tesla soon expects to begin public rides in the automaker's robotaxis in Austin, Texas. If the chief executive pulls it off, it could be a huge step in the company's pivot to robotics, which Musk has suggested could lead to humanoid robots outnumbering people. The imagination is seemingly the only limit amid the cocktail parties in San Francisco these days. Engineers talk giddily about how they see ways AI can aid in developing new lifesaving drugs and creating new materials that might be lighter and stronger for aerospace. It's a remarkable shift from a couple of years ago, when tech was seen as the problem—taking jobs, spreading hate, ruining the environment. Marc Andreessen, the Silicon Valley venture capitalist who foresaw software 'eating the world," pushed back against cynicism in a lengthy 2023 essay titled 'The Techno-Optimist Manifesto." He argued that our societies are built on technology, which he called 'the glory of human ambition and achievement, the spearhead of progress and the realization of our potential." His firm, Andreessen Horowitz, launched an effort, dubbed 'American Dynamism," aimed at investing in founders involved in national interests, including aerospace, defense and manufacturing. The firm is a backer of such companies as Anduril, OpenAI and SpaceX. The effort comes as a new jingoism has emerged globally amid geopolitical tensions and renewed inward-facing domestic politics. Whether it is Ek investing in a European tech firm building drones for use in Ukraine against Russia or venture capitalist David Sacks leading the Trump administration's efforts to outpace China's AI development, new tech is suddenly the solution. Hardware, plus the huge cash requirements for complicated manufacturing, has long been seen as more risky for Sand Hill Road venture capitalists eager for a quick return on investment. In software development, moving fast and breaking things can work. In hardware, things often just break. On Wednesday, SpaceX's Starship spacecraft exploded into a giant fireball during a routine test, one of many setbacks as the company works to develop technology to travel to Mars. Still, Musk's other successes give entrepreneurs permission to dream big. This past week, Altman, OpenAI's CEO, was busy talking about his vision for a new personal AI device that could change how we interact with computers. His comments, made on his brother's podcast, came on the heels of OpenAI's data-center deal in the Middle East. The company also acquired Jony Ive's startup for $6.5 billion, part of an effort that tasks the former Apple design star with overseeing a consumer device to rival the iPhone. 'As OpenAI gets into a place of more resources and more potential, we can just do more things," Altman said. 'I would love to go build the Dyson sphere on the solar system and, like, you know, make the world's gigantic data center with the entire energy output of the sun."Building a Dyson sphere, a hypothetical structure that surrounds a star to capture its energy, might be a couple of decades off, he acknowledged. Still, on Earth, Altman is among those who are investing in ways to better capture solar energy as entrepreneurs look at the incredible demand for electricity in a future where cars, robots and AI data centers are all thirsty for juice. Hannan Happi's startup Exowatt is working to meet that need. He has seen the change in investor interest in hardware. Roughly a decade ago, he co-founded a drone company that was later sold to defense contractor Sierra Nevada. Then in 2023, he co-founded Exowatt, a solar company that aims to provide energy for AI data centers. 'I think investors this time around are less skittish about hardware aspects of our business," Happi told me. So far, he's raised $90 million. 'Every round we've raised has been oversubscribed," he said. 'We're just about to finish another fundraising event that we didn't even initiate—it just came together—and I think part of that is because we're riding the AI infrastructure wave." It's a good time to be working on hard things. Write to Tim Higgins at

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