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I tested a Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 rival with a design I didnt think was ever possible
Posted onPrakhar Khanna/ZDNET Follow ZDNET:Add us as a preferred sourceon Google. Last year, Samsung closed the gap between its Fold lineup and folding phones from China with the Galaxy Z Fold 7. But Oppo has come up with another exceptional innovation that puts its new folding phone ahead of rivals. The Oppo Find N6 isn’t as…
Meet the early-adopter judges using AI
Posted onIn this, Goddard appears to be caught in the same predicament the AI boom has created for many of us. Three years in, companies have built tools that sound so fluent and humanlike they obscure the intractable problems lurking underneath—answers that read well but are wrong, models that are trained to be decent at everything…
Follow the Lego CES 2026 press conference live right here
Posted onThe Lego Group is set to host its very first press conference at CES 2026 later today — but exactly what it plans to unveil is still under wraps. The iconic toy brick maker has offered no clues about what’s on the agenda, leaving speculation wide open, from new video games to Formula 1 race…
OpenAIs Sora video generator is reportedly coming to ChatGPT
Posted onOpenAI’s Sora video generator could soon become a built-in feature in ChatGPT, as reported by The Information. Sora is currently only available on its website or as a standalone app, which has fallen shy of the popularity of ChatGPT. This update would allow users to access Sora’s video generation capabilities directly within ChatGPT itself, much…
The best way to protect your phone from a warrantless search in 2026
Posted onmonkeybusinessimages/iStock/Getty Images Plus Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. ZDNET’s key takeaways US authorities are getting more aggressive about detentions and seizures. No single law governs phone inspections. Devices configured for biometric unlocking remain highly vulnerable. What’s the best way to protect yourself from authorities who appear determined to conduct unwarranted…
Facebook tests £9.99 monthly subscription for sharing more than two links
Posted onFacebook is testing placing a limit on how many links some users can share when they post on the social media platform. Notifications seen by some users based in the UK and US say they can only share a certain number of links in Facebook posts without a subscription – which starts at £9.99 per…
