Galaxy Z Fold 8: July 22 date confirmed, S Pen returns

Samsung has spent years pushing the Galaxy Z Fold toward a cleaner, slimmer silhouette, treating thinness like the ultimate expression of foldable progress. That approach gave the Fold 7 a sharper visual identity, but it also stripped away one of the features that helped define the device as a serious productivity tool. Now, with the Galaxy Z Fold 8 expected to bring back S Pen support, Samsung seems ready to revisit the balance between elegance and utility.

That shift could make the Fold 8 one of the most revealing foldables the company has made yet. A fractionally thicker body may sound minor on paper, yet in design terms it signals a broader change in priorities. The next Fold may show that maturity in foldable design comes from restoring capability, refining ergonomics, and building a device people want to live with every day.

Designer: Samsung

The Fold 7 was a genuinely impressive piece of engineering, arriving at 4.2mm when unfolded and claiming the title of the thinnest book-style foldable on the market at the time. That number made headlines and performed well in comparison videos. What it cost, though, was the S Pen digitizer layer, a piece of hardware Samsung had to physically remove to achieve that profile. For users who bought into the Fold precisely because of its large-screen, stylus-ready workflow, that tradeoff landed hard.

The S Pen on earlier Galaxy Z Fold devices was never a casual accessory. It turned the inner display into a note-taking canvas, a sketching board, and a precision annotation tool, especially useful for professionals bouncing between documents and apps on the go. Removing it reduced the Fold 7 to a premium hardware story without the software depth to back it up for power users. Thinner, yes. More complete, arguably not.

What makes the lead-up to July 22 particularly interesting is how complicated the S Pen picture has become. According to multiple leaked spec sheets and tipster reports, the standard Galaxy Z Fold 8 and the new Fold 8 Wide variant may both launch without S Pen support, with Samsung reportedly continuing its thinness-first approach for those models. The standard Fold 8 could come in at 4.1mm unfolded, the Wide at an even leaner 3.9mm (pre-empting Apple’s own wide iPhone Ultra), numbers that suggest Samsung has no intention of walking back the Fold 7 philosophy across the board. The S Pen story, if it holds, belongs to a third model entirely. A Fold 8 Ultra appears to be where Samsung is routing the stylus comeback, alongside a wider display orientation and a 5,000mAh battery that would represent the first meaningful capacity upgrade for the Fold line since the Fold 3.

The Fold 7 used a titanium backplate, a strong and lightweight choice that also happens to be poorly suited to the digitizer layer S Pen functionality requires. Reports have suggested Samsung may shift the Fold 8 Ultra to a combination of titanium and carbon fiber reinforced plastic, a material used in earlier Fold models that works far more naturally with stylus hardware. The material choice, in other words, may be less about aesthetics and more about what the device is structurally allowed to do.

Samsung is also reportedly researching a digitizer-free stylus solution that would remove the hardware dependency altogether, potentially allowing S Pen-style input on ultra-thin builds in future generations. That research, if it eventually ships in a product, would be one of the more significant industrial design developments in the foldable category, because it decouples a core productivity feature from physical bulk entirely.

What Samsung appears to be attempting with the Fold 8 lineup is something more architecturally ambitious than a single model update. A tiered approach, with the standard Fold chasing thinness, the Wide offering a tablet-like aspect ratio, and the Ultra absorbing the S Pen and flagship camera system, is a bet that different foldable buyers want fundamentally different things from the same category. Whether that structure serves users better than one well-resolved device is a question worth raising, because fragmentation across three models can dilute the identity of each one. Ask Apple how they felt about launching 3 iPhone SKUs in the same September launch. Rumor has it Ternus is changing that, and only announcing the Pro iPhones this September.

Still, the design direction Samsung is pointing toward with the Ultra is the more honest one. A foldable that accepts a few extra millimeters in exchange for a stylus, a bigger battery, and a wider display is a device making peace with what the form factor actually needs to be useful. Thinness is a compelling engineering goal. Usability is a more durable design ambition, and the Fold 8 Ultra, if the leaks hold, may finally be the version of this phone that stops apologizing for being a productivity tool.

The July 22 Unpacked event in London will confirm how much of this actually ships. But the shape of what Samsung is building already says something worth paying attention to.

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A LEGO Fan Recreated Gustav Klimt’s Iconic Artwork ‘The Kiss,’ Gold Studs and All

At the start of the twentieth century, a group of Austrian artists got tired of the stuffy academic painting establishment in Vienna and broke away to form their own movement. They called it the Secession, and their unofficial leader was Gustav Klimt, a man with a gold fixation and a habit of scandalizing polite society with erotically charged, symbol-heavy paintings. The Kiss, finished in 1908, became the movement’s defining image, a couple locked in an embrace inside a cocoon of gold ornament.

More than a century later, that same image has found an unlikely new medium. Builder CYM-Create_Your_Mind has translated Klimt’s masterpiece into a LEGO mosaic spanning 44 by 44 stud compartments, deliberately built as a perfect square to honor the artist’s own preference for square canvases, right down to a detachable minifigure of Klimt himself sitting in a chair beside the piece.

Designer: CYM-Create_Your_Mind

Klimt painted most of his major works on square canvases, a stubborn formal choice that gave his compositions a strange, almost claustrophobic intimacy. The original Kiss measures 180 by 180 centimeters, and CYM-Create_Your_Mind has mirrored that exact ratio in brick form, using pearl gold pieces across the entire background to chase the effect of real gold leaf, since Klimt was known widely enough as the Painter of Gold that his contemporaries used the nickname as a compliment and an accusation in equal measure. Getting that shimmer right in LEGO, a material with all the metallic subtlety of a cereal box, is a genuinely tricky bit of engineering, and the built up layers of gold tiles and plates manage to catch light in a way flat mosaics usually cannot.

The figures share an uncanny similarity, which is rare considering LEGO tends to abstract details – here the details really aren’t lost as much as they’ve been caricatured in brick. The man’s robe is rendered in a strict, angular pattern of black rectangles, while the woman’s dress dissolves into circles and floral bursts, a distinction Klimt used deliberately to separate masculine and feminine visual language within the same golden shroud. Around 2,850 pieces went into achieving that contrast, and the level of facial detail, from the woman’s tilted head to the man’s mostly hidden profile, holds up remarkably well at mosaic resolution, which is where most brick portraits tend to fall apart into mush. My favorite touch is the tiny tile bearing a copy of Klimt’s actual signature, tucked quietly beside the figures the way it appears in the original painting, a small detail that turns a tribute into something closer to a facsimile.

CYM-Create_Your_Mind added a separate, removable minifigure of Klimt himself, seated in a chair beside his own creation. The reasoning, as the designer explains it, comes from an image of the painter sitting quietly in his studio, a symbolic gesture toward an artist who was famously private and rarely photographed working. It is a small addition that adds a layer of narrative to what could have otherwise been a straightforward wall piece.

The project is currently sitting at 759 supporters on LEGO Ideas, with 527 days left on the clock to reach the 5,000 needed to trigger an official review. Klimt fans, art history nerds, and anyone who has ever walked past a poster print of this painting in a dorm room hallway without really looking at it now have a good excuse to look twice. You can head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote.

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Lenovo Fit a 16GB Intel Lunar Lake PC Into the Size of a Coffee Table Book

Here’s a business plan Lenovo isn’t charging me for. Take the ThinkCentre Neo 50q Gen 6, wrap it in a fake hardcover dust jacket, maybe something moody like a Wes Anderson film still or a Rothko print, and suddenly you’ve got a Windows PC that looks like Design Within Reach decor instead of IT department surplus. The dimensions practically beg for it already, a 7 by 7 inch footprint with the thickness of an actual coffee table book sitting on your shelf. Nobody’s ever accused a mini PC of being aspirational furniture before, but this one has the bone structure for it. Every competitor in this category is still shipping matte black rectangles that scream “asset tag pending,” while Lenovo accidentally built something you’d want visible on a shelf. All that’s missing is the marketing team connecting the dots.

Underneath the cosplay, the Neo 50q Gen 6 (Intel) starts at $1,179 with a Core Ultra 5 226V, 16GB of soldered LPDDR5X-8533 RAM, and a 512GB SSD, replacing the Snapdragon X1-26-100 that powered the previous version of this exact chassis. That base chip brings 8 cores, clock speeds up to 4.5 GHz, a 40 TOPS NPU for local AI tasks, and Intel Arc 130V graphics, which is a lot of silicon to hide behind a fake book cover. Stepping up to the Core Ultra 7 256V for $1,619 doubles storage to 1TB and adds a faster NPU with Arc 140V graphics. Ports hold steady across both configurations, including a 10Gbps USB-C port, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.1, HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 1.4, and Gigabit Ethernet. At 5.27 lbs, this thing has actual heft to it, further selling the illusion that you’ve got a hardback sitting there instead of a full Windows desktop.

Designer: Lenovo

Swapping Snapdragon for Lunar Lake says something about how the ARM-on-Windows experiment is actually going. Qualcomm’s chip inside the original Neo 50q promised efficiency and always-on connectivity, the same pitch Microsoft has been making since Windows on ARM first launched. Lenovo clearly wanted an Intel option sitting right next to it on the shelf rather than retiring the ARM version outright, which suggests demand for x86 compatibility hasn’t disappeared just because Copilot+ PCs got a marketing push. Lunar Lake specifically brings a 40 TOPS NPU into a category that rarely got AI acceleration until recently, putting a genuinely modern chip inside a chassis that hasn’t changed its footprint at all. That’s the quiet story buried under the spec sheet, a company hedging its bets on which architecture actually wins the office desktop in 2026.

Positioned against the rest of the mini PC market, the pricing lands in a strange middle ground. Intel NUC successors and Beelink boxes routinely undercut this by a few hundred dollars while offering comparable specs, though usually without Lenovo’s enterprise support and warranty backing. Mac mini buyers get more raw performance per dollar from Apple silicon, but obviously lose Windows compatibility entirely, which matters for any office still running legacy software. The ThinkCentre badge itself carries weight here too, since IT departments buying in bulk care more about fleet management and driver support than they do about a machine’s coffee table book cosplay. Lenovo isn’t trying to win on raw value against the Beelinks of the world. It’s selling reliability with a side of, apparently, unintentional interior design cred.

Whether Lenovo ever leans into the aesthetic angle on purpose remains the real open question here. Right now the ThinkCentre Neo 50q Gen 6 is being sold purely on specs and price, with nobody at Lenovo seemingly aware that they’ve built something small and handsome enough to just leave out in the open. Somebody in an office is going to genuinely mistake this for a book at some point, and honestly, that’s a better problem to have than another beige box nobody wants to look at. Until Lenovo catches on, you’ll just have to buy the sleeve yourself.

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