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

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

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

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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