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Smartphone più venduti del mese: vince Galaxy S26 grazie ai Tab in omaggio | VIDEO

3 June 2026 at 20:00

Se già a marzo e aprile il Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra era tra i più acquistati, a maggior ragione non poteva che continuare il trend. Il motivo è semplice: al prezzo di circa 999€ in offerta, Samsung ha aggiunto anche un tablet, il Galaxy Tab S10 FE+, che da solo vale circa 500€. Rivendendolo, il conto è presto fatto: S26 Ultra rimane in tasca a circa 499€. Un prezzo ridicolo, impossibile da battere persino per i brand cinesi che ultimamente provano a offrire anche le TV assieme a uno smartphone top di gamma, rispetto ai più modesti auricolari, tablet e simili.

Certo, se si fa un giro sui vari mercatini e siti di rivendita, di Galaxy Tab S10 FE+ ce ne sono così tanti che probabilmente lo venderete al più a 300€, ma anche così, il prezzo effettivo dello smartphone resta ghiottissimo. Lo stesso discorso si applica ai Galaxy S26 che seguono a ruota con un’offerta simile: un uno‑due che al momento nessun concorrente riesce a replicare con la stessa efficacia.

Attenzione però alle sorprese: per la prima volta vediamo comparire iPhone Air, che sta vendendo sempre di più. Con l’avvicinarsi dell’estate, avere uno smartphone così sottile e leggero in tasca è un vero toccasana, un fattore che può spostare parecchi acquisti.

(aggiornamento del 03 June 2026, ore 18:03)

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Motorola's 2026 Razrs are almost worth buying just for their stunning looks… almost

27 May 2026 at 12:00

For the last several years, Motorola's smartphone headliners were the Razr flip phones, but 2026 is different. This time around, Moto's first tablet-style foldable, the Razr Fold, somewhat overshadows the flip phones, but a bulky $2,000 folding phone that isn't made by Samsung occupies the smallest niche in the smartphone market. A Razr flip phone is much more practical, both financially and logistically. But are these phones actually worth buying over a flat phone?

Smartphones are no longer something you need to convince people to buy. Unless you're going out of your way to exclude technology from your daily life, a smartphone is just a necessary convenience. The way some companies market their phones—making relatively boring phones look like a lifestyle choice—doesn't really take this into account. However, Motorola knows what a Razr is.

Razr Ultra open in hand All the Razrs are big phones when you open them up (Razr Ultra seen here). Credit: Ryan Whitwam

These phones are first and foremost about vibes. They're fun and colorful; there are desk clock displays, mini apps for the outer display, and a quirky camcorder camera mode. Foldables are universally gadgety and visually interesting, but the Razrs take this to the extreme with unique textures and Pantone-certified colorways. That gives the Razrs a selling point before you even get to the specs or hardware. And they need that because the speeds and feeds are nothing special.

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© Ryan Whitwam

Motorola's 2026 Razrs are almost worth buying just for their stunning looks… almost

27 May 2026 at 12:00

For the last several years, Motorola's smartphone headliners were the Razr flip phones, but 2026 is different. This time around, Moto's first tablet-style foldable, the Razr Fold, somewhat overshadows the flip phones, but a bulky $2,000 folding phone that isn't made by Samsung occupies the smallest niche in the smartphone market. A Razr flip phone is much more practical, both financially and logistically. But are these phones actually worth buying over a flat phone?

Smartphones are no longer something you need to convince people to buy. Unless you're going out of your way to exclude technology from your daily life, a smartphone is just a necessary convenience. The way some companies market their phones—making relatively boring phones look like a lifestyle choice—doesn't really take this into account. However, Motorola knows what a Razr is.

Razr Ultra open in hand All the Razrs are big phones when you open them up (Razr Ultra seen here). Credit: Ryan Whitwam

These phones are first and foremost about vibes. They're fun and colorful; there are desk clock displays, mini apps for the outer display, and a quirky camcorder camera mode. Foldables are universally gadgety and visually interesting, but the Razrs take this to the extreme with unique textures and Pantone-certified colorways. That gives the Razrs a selling point before you even get to the specs or hardware. And they need that because the speeds and feeds are nothing special.

Read full article

Comments

© Ryan Whitwam

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