The Galaxy A3x series is finally starting to look like a modern phone, thanks to one long-awaited design upgrade Samsung introduced today. The company just unveiled the Galaxy A35, and one design improvement that really stands out in the eyes of anyone who knows the recent history of the A3x series is the Infinity-O display.
Samsung’s new Galaxy A35 is the first in its line to adopt a circular cutout for the selfie camera, or what Samsung calls an Infinity-O design.
Stepping into the modern design era
The Galaxy A5x series has had an Infinity-O display since the Galaxy A51, but the Galaxy A3x lineup had to work with the Infinity-U cutout for a few more years. Not anymore!
The lower-mid-range series has finally adopted the selfie cutout, and this design element is likely here to stay for Galaxy A3x generations to come. It certainly is one of the striking design elements separating the new Galaxy A35 from its predecessors.
Conversely, it is one characteristic that blends the Galaxy A35 into the pot of similar-looking higher-end phones, like the Galaxy A55, S23 FE, and even Galaxy S24.
The one design element that separates the Galaxy A35 from other, more expensive Samsung phones is the so-called Key Island that raises the side buttons from the otherwise flat frame. But put the right Samsung case on the Galaxy A35, and at a glance, most people will likely mistake it for a higher-end model.
As for other design elements, the Galaxy A35 still has a plastic frame, but it’s been elevated to a full-glass sandwich build with an unspecified type of glass protection at the back and Gorilla Glass Victus+ at the front. But, who knows?! The next generation A3x models might very well adopt a metal frame, much like the Galaxy A55 did this year.
Edge Lighting used to be a Good Lock-exclusive feature, but it has since been simplified and added to One UI as a regular option. What is Edge Lighting? If the name didn’t give it away, Edge Lighting allows you to add visual effects on and around the edges of your Galaxy phone’s screen.
These visual effects show up when you receive notifications on your Galaxy phone and vary from simple effects at the edge of the screen to more intricate designs featuring fireworks, bubbles, and so on. Here’s all you need to know to add Edge Lighting effects to your Galaxy phone.
Beautify your Galaxy device with light effects
To enable Edge Lighting effects, first, open the Settings app on your Galaxy phone and access “Notifications.” Then, go to “notification pop-up style.” And finally, tap “Edge lighting style” to access the customization menu.
In total, you can choose one of eleven Edge Lighting effects. Some are just edge effects while others include extra elements, like ripples, spheres, and so on. Some are single-tone while other effects are multi-colored.
You can go one step further with these Edge Lighting effects by customizing colors (via the “Color” tab) and characteristics such as transparency, width, and duration (via the “Advanced” tab).
NOTE: The screenshot used in this article are based on One UI 6.1 for the Galaxy S24 series. Other One UI versions might offer different options.
It hasn’t been long since your Galaxy A52 received its third and likely last major firmware update. Samsung rolled out Android 14 and One UI 6.0 for the Galaxy A52 earlier this month, and now, the company has turned its full attention to its latest Galaxy A55 model. And maybe you should, too.
Samsung announced the Galaxy A55 today, and it might be the perfect upgrade for Galaxy A52 users who are ready to move on. Granted, your Galaxy A52 barely received Android 14, so it’s not out of the game yet, but the clock is ticking fast and the Galaxy A55 looks very appealing for many reasons.
Galaxy A55 — Better everything
Whether or not you think it’s time to upgrade the Galaxy A52, there’s no other way to put it: The Galaxy A55 is plain better in virtually every way.
Samsung’s new phone has a metal frame, which is a first for the series. It also has Gorilla Glass Victus+ protection for the front and back panels, and it looks like a modern device with flat surfaces, rounded corners, and independent camera cutouts instead of a camera housing.
More importantly, the Galaxy A55 has a brighter screen (1000 nits HBM) with Vision Booster technology for improved visibility and color accuracy. And as you know, the Galaxy A52’s display can’t go higher than 90Hz if it’s not the 5G variant, whereas the Galaxy A55 can go up to 120Hz.
Samsung’s new mid-range phone also has a bigger 5,000mAh battery and improved connectivity features, including Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.3 instead of version 5.0. The newer Bluetooth standard is faster and more reliable, offers better location-based features, and improves audio quality.
In terms of cameras, the Galaxy A55 exemplifies why more megapixels aren’t always better, especially when it comes to mid-range phones. Even if your Galaxy A52 has a 64MP primary shooter, the Galaxy A55’s 50MP camera is bound to take better photos and videos thanks to improved processing and nightography.
And if you feel like your Galaxy A52 is not powerful enough or doesn’t offer a smooth One UI experience, the Galaxy A55 might just fix that. The new model sports a minimum of 8GB of RAM instead of 4GB and can go as high as 12GB.
In addition, the Galaxy A55 has an Exynos 1480 chip, which is based on a 4nm process and boasts an AMD RDNA-based GPU.
So, what do we make of Samsung’s new phone? It’s pretty good! Nevertheless, maybe you could squeeze one more year of usage out of your Galaxy A52 if you really want to and try to enjoy the last Android 14 update. Maybe you can even push it to the launch of the Galaxy A56 next year.
On the other hand, if you are looking for worthwhile improvements right now, the Galaxy A55 is here and offers plenty of upgrades inside and out. It’s in a different league.
Your Galaxy A53 might be starting to look like a classic in this multitude of highly-optimized Samsung phones with a similar design, which could work in its favor if you intend to use it until Samsung stops supporting it roughly two-to-three years from now.
But if you don’t intend to squeeze everything out of the Galaxy A53 for two more generations of Android OS updates, now might be a good time to consider a phone upgrade before you can say goodbye to any chance of a decent trade-in deal on your aging phone.
Samsung has just announced the Galaxy A55 today, and although you might not want to hear this, the truth is that the A55 is vastly superior to the A53, even more so than the Galaxy A54 was last year.
Samsung upgraded the Galaxy A55 inside-out, and the phone brings a few new goodies never-before-seen in the Galaxy A5x series.
The Galaxy A55 sets new build quality standards
Starting from the outside in, the Galaxy A55 looks more modern than the Galaxy A53, as it adopts Samsung’s new design formula based on flat surfaces and no unnecessary camera housings. But assuming that doesn’t make a difference to you, the build quality might.
As you’re likely aware, your Galaxy A35 has a plastic frame, which serves it fine but doesn’t provide that much protection or inspire much confidence. Well, the Galaxy A55 changes that, as it is Samsung’s first Galaxy A5x phone to boast a metal frame.
The Galaxy A55 elevates the build quality even further, as it adopts Gorilla Glass Victus+ on both the front and the back.
Your Galaxy A53 has Corning Gorilla Glass 5 display protection and a plastic back, but with its new upgraded build, the Galaxy A55 blurs the line between mid-range and premium phones like no other A5x before it.
You can ditch the Galaxy A53 if you want more power and better connectivity
Even if the improved build quality isn’t enough to make you want to ditch the Galaxy A53 in favor of the Galaxy A55, the latest hardware improvements might. They affect the display, performance, and even cameras.
The Galaxy A55 has a brighter screen (1,000 nits) than your Galaxy A53 (800 nits) and uses Vision Booster technology, which makes it easier to read and more color-accurate, even in direct sunlight.
Samsung’s new mid-range phone also boasts a minimum of 8GB of RAM, whereas you could be using a 4GB Galaxy A53. And, there’s more. In some markets, the Galaxy A55 is available with a whopping 12GB of RAM, which should fix any and all multitasking issues. Remember that not even the base Galaxy S24 flagship variant offers 12GB, which makes the Galaxy A55 that much more interesting.
As far as raw performance goes, the Galaxy A55 has a new Exynos 1480 chip, manufactured on a 4nm process. It’s the first mid-range Samsung SoC to boast an AMD RDNA-based graphics chip. Combined with 8GB or 12GB of RAM, this silicon might do enough to elevate the mid-range Galaxy Ax experience to a level where UI performance issues are a thing of the past.
And if you care about mobile photography, the Galaxy A55 should offer better performance and improved nightography. It can even record Super HDR videos in low light and offers OIS and VIDS when capturing 4K videos.
The Galaxy A53 might have more megapixels and one extra (depth) camera, but in practice, the Galaxy A55 should be visibly superior thanks to newer technologies and better image processing.
Last but not least, if you do upgrade to the Galaxy A55 and leave your Galaxy A53 behind, you’ll benefit from faster Wi-Fi 6 connectivity (up from Wi-Fi 5) and Bluetooth 5.3, which is more energy-efficient and plain better than Bluetooth 5.1 (it can even deliver better sound quality).
All things considered, the Galaxy A53 may have served you well for the past two years, and it still has two more major Android OS upgrades planned. Nevertheless, the Galaxy A55 might turn out to be the upgrade you never knew you needed or wanted.
Samsung has unveiled its new mid-range smartphone, the Galaxy A35, featuring a modern design and camera improvements. It succeeds the Galaxy A34, bringing a faster processor and brighter 120Hz OLED screen. It is also among the first mid-range phones with One UI 6.1 pre-installed.
Let us have a look at what the Galaxy A35 has to offer.
Galaxy A35 has a faster processor (Exynos 1380) and improved camera quality
The Galaxy A35 has a more modern-looking design. It has a screen with a punch-hole-shaped cutout for the selfie camera. While it still uses a plastic frame, Samsung has used a glass back on its new mid-ranger and Gorilla Glass Victus+ for display protection. It also has the company’s new ‘Key Island‘ design, which raises the part of the frame near the power and volume keys.
It has a 6.6-inch Super AMOLED with Full HD+ resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. It also has the Vision Booster mode, which can raise the brightness to 1,000 nits under direct sunlight. There is an in-display optical fingerprint reader, stereo speakers, and an IP67 rating (for dust and water resistance).
Samsung has improved the Galaxy A35’s camera capabilities. It features a 50MP primary camera with OIS, an 8MP ultrawide camera, and a 5MP macro camera on the rear. On the front, it has a 13MP selfie camera. It can record 4K videos at 30 frames per second using its front and rear (50MP) cameras. The company says VDIS improves video stabilization, while Super HDR Video improves colors and dynamic range.
The Galaxy A35 comes equipped with the Exynos 1380 processor, 6GB/8GB RAM, 128GB/256GB internal storage, and a microSD card slot. Thanks to the new 5nm processor, the phone should offer 18% improved CPU performance and 15% faster GPU performance, which is decent enough for gaming. This is the same chipset that was used in the Galaxy A54 last year.
This new mid-range phone’s connectivity features include GPS, 5G, a dual-SIM card slot (and eSIM), Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3, NFC, and a USB Type-C port. It is powered by a 5,000mAh battery and supports 25W fast charging.
The phone will be available in four colors: Ice Blue, Lavender, Lemon Yellow, and Navy Blue.
Galaxy A35 runs One UI 6.1 out of the box and will get four Android OS updates
The A35 runs Android 14-based One UI 6.1 and will get four major Android OS updates and security updates for five years.
It has Samsung Knox and Samsung Knox Vault. Auto Blocker, Samsung’s new security measure to stop app installation from unauthorized sources, is also present on the Galaxy A35. It offers app security checks and blocks malicious commands from entering the phone when it is connected to an external device using a USB cable.
TM Roh, President and Head of Samsung MX (Mobile eXperience), said, “With the Galaxy A series, we are expanding our latest technologies to a wider audience so that more people can benefit from them. We are excited to open up even more possibilities on the Galaxy A series this year, including offering Samsung Knox Vault for the first time on this lineup. We’re proud to enable Galaxy A series users to safely and reliably enjoy outstanding mobile experiences.“
Alongside the Galaxy A35, Samsung unveiled the Galaxy A55, its new mid-range phone. It is the company’s most premium-looking and feeling mid-range phone yet.
The Galaxy A55 features a metal frame, a powerful new processor, and some camera features usually found on premium Galaxy S series phones.
Galaxy A55 has a metal frame, Exynos 1480 chip with AMD GPU
Samsung has used a metal-and-glass body for the Galaxy A55. It is the first Galaxy A series phone to feature a metal frame, and its front and rear are covered by glass. As usual, this new mid-range Galaxy A phone features an IP67 dust and water resistance rating.
It has a 6.6-inch Full HD+ Super AMOLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, Vision Booster, and Gorilla Glass Victus. Its peak screen brightness can reach up to 1,000 nits under direct sunlight and even higher in HDR scenes. It has stereo speakers for a more immersive media consumption experience. The phone has an under-display optical fingerprint reader.
The 4nm Exynos 1480 processor powers the Galaxy A55. It has four high-performance Cortex-A78 CPU cores clocked at 2.75GHz, four power-efficient Cortex-A55 CPU cores clocked at 2GHz, and the Xclipse 530 GPU based on AMD’s RDNA 2 architecture. It is said to have a 15% faster CPU and a 32% faster GPU, so playing high-end games shouldn’t be an issue.
The phone has 8GB/12GB RAM and 128GB/256GB internal storage. It is the first Galaxy A series phone with up to 12GB RAM. A microSD card slot allows for further storage expansion.
Samsung is shipping the Galaxy A55 with Android 14-based One UI 6.1 pre-installed. The mid-range phone, like others from Samsung, will get four major Android OS updates and security updates for five years. It features Auto Blocker, Samsung Knox, and Samsung Knox Vault.
Galaxy A55 has Nightography camera with Super HDR videos
The Galaxy A55 has improved overall cameras. It has three cameras on the rear: a 50MP primary camera with OIS and autofocus, a 12MP ultrawide camera, and a 5MP macro camera. On the front, it has a 32MP selfie camera. The 50MP and 13MP cameras can record 4K 30fps videos with VDIS (EIS for video stabilization).
The advanced AI ISP inside the Exynos 1480 brings improved low-light images on a Galaxy A series phone for the first time. Thanks to Nightography, the Galaxy A55 also has Night Portrait mode. It is also the first Galaxy A phone with 12-bit Super HDR Video for a wider dynamic range and deeper colors.
The phone is powered by a 5,000mAh battery and supports 25W fast charging. Its connectivity features include GPS, 5G, a dual-SIM card slot, eSIM, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3, NFC, and a USB Type-C port. The phone will be available in four colors: Ice Blue, Green, Lilac, and Navy.
In December 2023, Samsung launched the Galaxy A15 5G, and by the end of that month, we learned that it was developing the Galaxy M15 5G, which would be a rebranded variant of the A-series device and a successor to last year’s Galaxy M14 5G. Well, almost two and a half months after that news broke out, Samsung has finally launched the Galaxy M15 5G.
The Korean tech giant didn’t make an announcement about the launch of the device. Instead, it silently listed the phone on the company’s official website for Iraq and Levant. The Galaxy M15 5G, as we had expected, is a rebranded variant of the Galaxy A15 5G, and as such, the M-series device has the same specifications as the A-series device, except for the battery capacity, the design of the back panel, thickness, and weight.
While the Galaxy A15 5G has a 5,000mAh battery, the Galaxy M15 5G features a 6,000mAh battery. With that, the M-series device weighs 17 grams more than its A-series cousin, tipping the scale at 217 grams, and has a 0.9mm additional thickness, measuring 9.3mm. To differentiate the two, Samsung is offering the Galaxy M15 5G with a different rear design; it has a chequered pattern instead of the Galaxy A15 5G’s plain back.
Galaxy M15 5G specifications
Like the Galaxy A15 5G, the Galaxy M15 5G has a 6.5-inch Super AMOLED display with Full HD+ resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate, which is a huge departure from the LCD on the Galaxy M14 5G. You get three cameras at the rear; a 50MP wide sensor, a 5MP ultrawide camera, and a 2MP macro camera. For selfies, you get a 13MP sensor. The primary camera at the rear and the selfie camera can record videos at FHD resolution and 30fps.
Powering the new M-series device is the MediaTek Dimensity 6100+ SoC. The device listed on Samsung’s website has 4GB RAM and 128GB storage. However, we assume that the company will offer it in other memory configurations when it makes the phone available to purchase. While the tech giant hasn’t revealed which version of Android the new phone comes with, we are assuming that it will ship with Android 14 (One UI 6.0).
On the connectivity front, you get options similar to other mid-range Samsung phones, including dual-SIM 5G, Wi-Fi 5, Bluetooth 5.3, GPS, USB Type-C port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. The Galaxy M15 5G supports 15W wired charging, which is 10W less than what the Galaxy A15 5G can handle. Other features include a side-mounted fingerprint scanner. Samsung is offering the phone in three colors: Dark Blue, Light Blue, and Gray.
Pricing and availability
Samsung has neither revealed the price of the Galaxy M15 5G nor any details about when the company will make it available for purchase. That being said, expect it to cost slightly less than the Galaxy A15 5G and go on sale in the next couple of weeks. Also, expect Samsung to launch the phone in other countries, including India, very soon.
This weekend, we’re tracking a new sale at Samsung with savings on the company’s best smartphones, smartwatches, tablets, and laptops. These discounts are part of Samsung’s larger Discover Samsung Spring Sale, which we started covering last week with deals on monitors, storage, audio, and more.
Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with some of these vendors. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.
The best monitor deal from our original post is still live today: you can get the ViewFinity S9 5K Smart Monitor for $899.99, down from $1,599.99. At $700 off this a very solid second-best price on the 2023 display, which has a matte display, modular 4K SlimFit camera, and support for Thunderbolt 4.
Additionally, when you sign up to learn more about Samsung’s upcoming TV and audio product lineup, you can get $100 off your purchase. The new slate of Samsung TVs and audio equipment is set to be unveiled on March 21, and this $100 discount offer will be available through that date.
Smartphones
Samsung’s newest smartphones launched back in January and you can get some pretty big discounts on the devices right now. Most of these offers do require you to trade in an existing smartphone and will be applied as credits on your bill, and Samsung covers discounts from carriers including AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, and US Cellular.
Smartwatches
In terms of smartwatches, Samsung has the Galaxy Watch6 and the Watch5 on sale, with up to $400 in savings. You can get these smartwatches with a straight cash discount, or opt for a cellular plan and gain access to more savings with an eligible trade-in.
Tablets
Similar to the Galaxy smartphones, Samsung is offering discounts on both cellular and Wi-Fi models of the Galaxy Tab line. If you go with the Wi-Fi models, you can get about $100 off the base price of Galaxy Tab S9 Series, depending on the model.
If you opt for the cellular devices from participating carriers, you can get more in savings in the form of bill credits after eligible trade-ins.
Laptops
Samsung has a few laptop deals with solid discounts shared below, but it’s worth again noting that if you have a device to trade in you can get even bigger markdowns on these computers. For the Galaxy Book 4, Samsung is also offering a free 2TB portable SSD ($219.99 value) with purchase of select models.
Head to our full Deals Roundup to get caught up with all of the latest deals and discounts that we’ve been tracking over the past week.
My Dad has a Galaxy S22, and he’s perfectly content, but it’s time for him to upgrade. He’s paid off the phone with Verizon and they owe him a new one. I suggested an iPhone 15, for my own sanity as his tech support, but he’s staying loyal to Samsung, so I offered to help him set up a Galaxy S24. He refused. That phone has AI, he says, and he doesn’t want an AI phone. I get it, but I’m here with news that AI has been greatly exaggerated. There is nothing to worry about when it comes to AI on your phone.
Actually, there is no artificial intelligence (AI) on your phone. I’ll tip my hat to Samsung on this one, they have been calling their new features “advanced intelligence,” and that’s an apt distinction. If you have concern over general AI and what it means to the future of humanity, I can assure you that your concept of AI does not come close to what you’ll find on a smartphone today.
Do you see artificial intelligence in this phone? Nope (Image credit: Google)
Before I get into what AI on a smartphone really is, let’s put away concerns. AI is not going to make decisions for you, not in any way. It won’t make phone calls, or send text messages. It won’t change anything, you still make all the changes.
The new AI features on the Samsung Galaxy S24 and Google Pixel 8 make suggestions – for photos or text messages – but they don’t take any action until you press the buttons first, then hit “Done” when you’re done. You can’t make the AI work by accident. It won’t work without you.
This ‘AI’ isn’t thinking. It doesn’t have ideas. It isn’t dreaming. It isn’t a brain or a mind in any way. It’s a computer, which means it’s just a bunch of very tiny switches, and little more.
The AI doesn’t judge you. Don’t do anything weird, though, because all of your input is going through Google or Samsung, and they will totally judge you, especially if you use AI for anything untoward. Actually, I’m much more worried about the way bad people will use AI than I am worried about bad AI itself.
AI is happening behind the scenes
So, what is AI on a smartphone today? What are the new AI features that Samsung and Google brag about? There are two ways to think about AI on smartphones today. There’s AI that happens in front of you, and AI that is happening in the background.
Do you wish that your phone would learn some of your habits, so you didn’t have to repeat yourself? Like, you open the same apps every morning, but you forget to add those apps to your homescreen. You end up searching for Calendar every time you need a calendar. Nowadays, your phone will have some box where it recommends apps. Instead of searching, Calendar will just be there. That’s AI.
Apple’s iPhone uses AI behind the scenes for recommendations (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
Doesn’t it seem like your phone often recommends just the right app at the right time? Have you ever gone to check your balance right outside your bank ATM and your phone is offering you the banking app? Has it offered Yelp or Uber Eats around dinner time? That’s AI, and it’s nothing to worry about.
There are tons of optimizations, recommendations, and behind-the-scenes features that are learning your patterns and making the phone better as a result. That’s AI. When these companies use the term AI, what they really mean is ‘very advanced pattern recognition.’
At best, it happens where you can’t see, and your phone just works better, offering you the features you need at the right moment, or saving power so the battery lasts longer. Then there is the AI that you can see, that gets in your face.
AI that makes suggestions and changes things
So far, these are mostly editing and suggestion features. They work pretty well. Your phone can help you with your writing, your photos, and even your ideas. It can edit and make suggestions on how to make that writing, those photos, and even those ideas better.
The way this happens is through ‘very advanced pattern recognition.’ There’s no actual intelligence, and certainly no ‘artificial intelligence,’ in the way we might imagine an intelligent computer with its own thoughts and ideas. The Terminator isn’t living inside your Galaxy S24 Ultra.
When Samsung’s new Galaxy AI suggests edits to a text message, it is using its training experience reading millions of text messages. Samsung fed those messages into a very smart computer, a computer great at ‘very advanced pattern recognition,’ and now that computer can make text messages that match a situation.
Galaxy AI makes wallpaper, it doesn’t want to end humanity (Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
Google fed millions of photos into a very smart computer. Now Google Photos can look at your image and determine how it is like all of the other photos it has seen. It can suggest edits to make your picture more like the millions of photos it knows. It can change your background or add and remove people, because it knows what photos are supposed to look like, and it can make yours match what it knows.
That’s all it knows. It doesn’t think, or create anything truly new. It just has millions upon millions of examples that it learned, and it is very good at creating an average idea from those examples. Even better, every time the AI makes a bad suggestion, it gets a little better next time. Just a little. Like I said, it’s pattern recognition, so every opportunity helps it recognize a more complicated pattern.
It’s very cool technology, and getting more useful all the time, but it’s nothing to worry about, not yet. The worst case scenario for AI right now is for humans to use it for nefarious purposes. The AI can make writing suggestions, so if you are writing a scam email, it may help with that. If you are creating a fake photograph, AI can help with that. It isn’t the AI technology that is frightening. Sadly, it’s those people who use technology that we should worry about.
Samsung would like to see the Galaxy Z Flip 5 in the hands of as many customers as possible. And as the Discover Spring Sale event nears the end, the company has revealed a limited-time one-day deal for the iconic foldable flip phone.
Whether you already own the Galaxy Z Flip 5 and recommend it to a friend or family member, or you’d like the flip phone for yourself, now might be a great time to jump on this offer.
With this one-day Discover Spring deal, you can save $720 on the 512GB Galaxy Z Flip 5 by taking advantage of an enhanced trade-in discount of up to $600 and an extra $120 price cut that applies at checkout — essentially a free memory upgrade from 256GB to 512GB.
You can buy the 512GB Galaxy Z Flip 5 for as low as $400
The Galaxy Z Flip 5 is one of the most interesting smartphones you can buy, even if it doesn’t yet have Galaxy AI features. It enables unique use cases through Flex Mode and Cover Screen Widgets, and no slab-type phone can emulate the Flip 5 experience.
Flex Mode leverages the phone’s foldable design to split app UIs between the screen’s two folding halves, which leads to unique use cases. For example, you can open the Galaxy Z Flip 5 at a 90-degree angle and hold it like a camcorder as you record videos with the Camera app.
Cover Screen Widgets are just as unique to the Galaxy Z Flip 5. They are full-screen minimalistic applets for the Cover Screen. They allow users to access various functions and features without flipping open the phone.
Hit the Buy button below to take advantage of this Discover Samsung Spring Sale deal and save up to $720 on the 512GB Galaxy Z Flip 5 today only!