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Samsung’s $400 Tab Keyboard Costs More Than Apple’s: Worth It?

The tablet-as-laptop pitch has been a hard sell for years, and a lot of the blame lands on the accessories. Keyboard covers for Android tablets have historically been thin on features and even thinner on build quality, which makes the whole productivity argument feel shakier than it should. Samsung’s $1,200 Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra is serious hardware, and for a while, its keyboard options weren’t keeping up.

The Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra Pro Keyboard is Samsung’s answer to that. Available in Gray and Silver for $399.99, it connects via pogo pins at the rear of the tablet, with no Bluetooth pairing or cables required. Opening the lid wakes the device, and closing it puts everything to sleep, so the whole thing behaves less like an accessory and more like a laptop right from the start.

Designer: Samsung

The build quality reflects the price in most of the right ways. The body is aluminum alloy, the hinge is reinforced metal, and a secondary kickstand at the rear props the whole assembly into a stable, laptop-like posture at whatever angle you prefer. The result looks noticeably more considered than Samsung’s Book Cover Keyboard Slim, which never really felt like it belonged on a $1,200 device.

The 80-key layout goes beyond a standard QWERTY arrangement. A dedicated DeX key switches the Tab S11 Ultra into Samsung’s desktop mode, where apps run in freely movable windows, closer in feel to Windows than Android. A Galaxy AI key gives you one-press access to AI tools without switching apps, and three customizable function keys can each be mapped to open whatever you need most.

For long stretches of writing or working across multiple documents, those shortcuts matter more than they might look on a spec sheet. The pogo pin connection also eliminates the Bluetooth pairing and dropout issues that plague most wireless keyboard accessories. And since the Pro Keyboard draws power directly from the tablet, there’s no separate battery to charge, and nothing to run out at an inconvenient moment.

The trackpad is 14.6% larger than the one on Samsung’s previous keyboard accessory, a small percentage that translates to real estate you’ll actually notice in DeX mode. The extra surface area gives you more room for precise gestures and window management, and that significantly reduces the number of times you’re forced to reach up and touch the screen during long work sessions.

At $399.99, the Pro Keyboard is nearly twice the price of Samsung’s own Book Cover Keyboard Slim and $50 more than Apple’s Magic Keyboard for the 13-inch iPad Pro. Adding it to the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra’s $1,200 starting price puts the total at around $1,600, which puts you in comfortable MacBook Air territory, minus the dedicated operating system and the convenience of a unified device.

There are also some obvious gaps at this price. The Pro Keyboard has no backlighting, a noticeable oversight for anyone who regularly works late or in dim spaces. It also doesn’t protect the back of the tablet, which is a curious omission for a $400 accessory. And since it’s designed exclusively for the Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra, there’s no using it with anything else in Samsung’s lineup.

The post Samsung’s $400 Tab Keyboard Costs More Than Apple’s: Worth It? first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung’s Galaxy A Phones Now Get IP68 and 6-Year Updates From $449

Mid-range smartphones have been getting very good, very quickly. Most now check the boxes for performance, camera quality, and even design, but the compromises tend to show up later. Software support runs out too soon, water resistance gets downgraded to save costs, or the storage fills up faster than expected. It’s a category where the spec sheet looks promising right up until the parts that actually matter start falling short.

Samsung’s Galaxy A57 5G and Galaxy A37 5G tackle those exact issues. Rather than simply refreshing the hardware, these two phones address the pain points that tend to sour long-term ownership, from shorter software cycles to inadequate protection from the elements. Samsung describes both as the most capable Galaxy A devices yet, and for once, that kind of claim holds up when you look at what’s actually new.

Designer: Samsung

The Galaxy A57 5G leads with a noticeably slimmer build, now at just 6.9mm and 179 grams. A 13% larger vapor chamber helps keep the new Exynos 1680 processor running cool through long gaming sessions or extended recordings. The display also gets slimmer bezels and a bright Super AMOLED+ panel with Vision Booster, so the screen stays readable whether you’re inside at your desk or standing in direct sunlight.

Storage is where the A57 5G makes history for the Galaxy A line. It’s the first A-series phone to offer a 512 GB option, a welcome change for anyone managing a large photo library or shooting high-resolution video regularly. The triple-camera setup, led by a 50 MP main sensor with a 12 MP ultrawide and a 5 MP macro, handles everything from wide-angle landscapes to fine close-up detail.

The Galaxy A37 5G takes a different route to earn its upgrade. Its primary camera now uses a larger 50 MP sensor with support for 10-bit HDR video recording, improving low-light performance and color depth over its predecessor. More significantly, the durability rating jumped from IP67 to IP68, and it now ships with Gorilla Glass Victus+ on both the front and back, which is a notable step up at this price.

Both phones run One UI 8.5 with a broader set of Awesome Intelligence (get it? “AI”?) features. The camera uses AI-based subject and scene recognition to balance skin tones and create cleaner background separation automatically. Circle to Search has also been updated with multi-object recognition, so you can search an outfit, its accessories, and the surrounding backdrop all at once, rather than hunting for each element separately or toggling between searches.

What gives both phones long-term value is Samsung’s commitment to six generations of Android OS updates and six years of security support. Add to that 5,000 mAh batteries and IP68-rated protection across both models, and these are phones clearly meant to outlast the typical mid-range upgrade cycle. The Galaxy A57 5G starts at $549.99 and the Galaxy A37 5G at $449.99 in the US, with availability beginning April 9, 2026.

The post Samsung’s Galaxy A Phones Now Get IP68 and 6-Year Updates From $449 first appeared on Yanko Design.

Galaxy Z Fold 8 Renders: Same Look, Bigger Battery, and S Pen Is Back

Foldable phones have reached a point where the form factor itself is no longer the talking point it once was. The big, dramatic “look how it folds” moment has settled into a quieter rhythm of iterative refinement, with each generation tweaking dimensions and chasing thinner profiles. Most buyers know what a modern book-style foldable looks like, and the language of change has shifted from shape to substance.

That’s the situation shaping the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 conversation right now. Leaked CAD-based renders show a design that’s nearly indistinguishable from the Z Fold 7 pictured above: same flat sides, same sharp corners, same camera layout. The cover screen sits at 6.5 inches and the inner display at 8 inches, both unchanged. If you handed someone these renders without context, they’d probably just guess it was another angle of last year’s model.

Designer: Steve Hemmerstoffer/OnLeaks (Renders) via AndroidHeadlines

There’s one notable external difference, though, and it actually goes in the wrong direction. The leaked dimensions put the Z Fold 8 at 4.5mm thick when open and 9mm folded, compared to the Fold 7’s 4.2mm and 8.9mm. That’s a slight regression for a phone that went to considerable lengths to slim down the year prior. It’s not dramatic, but for a device that made a point of its thinness, it’s worth flagging. That said, the 4.5mm figure includes the protruding bezels around the display; it’s actually just 3.9mm thin.

The likely reason for that extra thickness is one of the better leaks so far: the possible return of S Pen support. Samsung dropped the stylus from the Fold 7, and that’s been a consistent complaint from the people who actually used it for note-taking or sketching on that wide inner canvas. If the S Pen does come back, a fraction of a millimeter is a fair trade for most of those users.

The battery theory, however, is probably more probable. A jump from 4,400 mAh to a rumored 5,000 mAh would mark the first capacity upgrade since the Galaxy Z Fold 3, and pairing that with 45W wired charging, up from 25W, addresses one of the more persistent frustrations with this lineup. Spending less time near an outlet matters more on a device you’re likely using across more tasks throughout the day.

The camera is also in line for a significant upgrade, according to the same leak. The main sensor is rumored to still be 200MP, and the ultrawide jumps from 12MP to 50MP. That ultrawide improvement in particular has been a long time coming. The gap between the Fold’s main and ultrawide cameras has been noticeable enough that it’s affected how people use the phone outdoors.

All of this is still leak territory, of course, pulled from CAD renders and a specs tipster ahead of what’s expected to be a July 2026 Unpacked announcement. Samsung hasn’t confirmed any of it, and final specs frequently shift between early renders and launch day. The Z Fold 8 is shaping up to be a phone that looks familiar and updates what actually needs updating, but none of that is official yet.

Galaxy Z Fold7

The post Galaxy Z Fold 8 Renders: Same Look, Bigger Battery, and S Pen Is Back first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung invente le frigo publicitaire

J’adresse aujourd’hui mes félicitations à Samsung qui vient de disrupter le concept du “payer pour se faire emmerder” car selon Android Authority , l’entreprise coréenne lance un programme pilote pour afficher des publicités sur ses frigos connectés Family Hub. Oui, ces machins qui coûtent entre 1800 et 3500 dollars pour des options inutiles. Car oui, visiblement, dépenser le prix d’une bagnole d’occasion pour ranger ses légumes dans le bac à bière, c’est pas assez rentable pour les gens de Samsung.

Bref, vous venez de claquer 3000 balles dans un frigo qui a plus d’options qu’une Tesla, vous vous rendez en slip dans la cuisine à 3h du mat’ pour boire un verre d’eau et là, BOUM BADABOUM, une grosse publicité pour des somnifères ou de la camomille sur l’écran de votre frigo. Parce que oui, Samsung sait que si vous êtes debout à cette heure-là, c’est que vous dormez mal…

Samsung justifie cette merveille technologique en expliquant que, je cite, ça “renforce la valeur” pour les clients. Renforcer la valeur. Genre tu paies 3000€ et on te rajoute des pubs gratos pour que tu en aies plus pour ton argent. C’est comme si Ferrari te disait “on va mettre des stickers Carrefour sur ta voiture pour améliorer ton expérience de conduite”.

Le plus drôle, c’est qu’en avril dernier, The Verge rapporte que Jeong Seung Moon, le responsable R&D des appareils numériques chez Samsung, avait affirmé qu’ils n’avaient “aucun plan” pour mettre des pubs. Et nous voilà 5 mois plus tard avec Ô surprise, les pubs aqui rrivent. C’est ce qu’on appelle du marketing agile. Ou du foutage de gueule, selon votre religion.

Les pubs s’affichent uniquement quand l’écran est inactif (pour le moment) par contre, si vous mettez le mode Art ou vos photos de famille, y’aura pas de pub. Bien sûr, vous pouvez les fermer, mais vous ne pouvez pas les désactiver complètement. Snif…

Bref, aujourd’hui j’ai une petite pensée pour tous les pimpims qui ont acheté ces frigos en pensant impressionner leurs invités. “Regardez très cher, mon réfrigérateur new génération dispose d’un écran tactile de bonne facture !” “Cool, ça sert à quoi ?” “Hé bien, voyez-vous, c’est pour afficher de la réclame pour du dentifrice pendant que je cherche le beurre salé

Ouais c’est la classe internationale, j’avoue.

Perso, je suis pas contre la pub sur le réfrigérateur mais seulement si la bouffe qui se trouve dedans est offerte en échange par Samsung. Là je serais OK. Mais si j’ai payé le matos, je vois pas pourquoi je me taperais ça. Après peut-être que Samsung a remarqué que Microsoft faisait la même sur Windows et que personne ne se plaignait. Allez savoir…

Bref, cette innovation Samsung, personne n’en voulait mais vous l’aurez quand même… et attendez un peu qu’il verrouille la porte vous obligeant à mater 3 pubs avant de vous donner l’accès au reste du rosbeef… Tout est possible…

Voilà, alors pour le moment, c’est un programme pilote qui durera plusieurs mois et si ça marche, ils étendront le système à toute la gamme… Donc brûlez votre frigo les gens, vous êtes notre dernier rempart !

Bon, moi je retourne à mon vieux frigo qui fait du bruit mais qui a l’immense avantage de ne pas essayer de me lobotomiser pour des trucs inutiles. Il garde mes bières au frais et ferme sa gueule, c’est tout ce que je lui demande !

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