Smartphones

Power Mac Center iPhone 16 preorder offers, launch details

Place preorders now to save

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iPhone 16

Power Mac Center is offering Apple regulars the chance to save up to PhP 54,700 on the iPhone 16 series by placing preorders before the flagship smartphones officially launches next week.

Customers placing preorders via the Power Mac Center Web Store ahead of its official launch can get up to PhP 10,000 off on any iPhone 16 series model when they pay via non-installment modes of payment.

Meanwhile, in-store customers can choose to pay via straight cash or credit card installments of up to three months only with partner banks to save the same amount.

SEE ALSO: iPhone 16 series: Philippines price, preorder, general availability

Moreover, customers will get a free Anything Else Dual Port 30W Wall Charger for preorder transactions at any PMC or The Loop store nationwide. They may also preorder via The Loop Lazada and Shopee stores or SM Malls Online.

The iPhone 16 series offers above run until October 16 for online purchases and until October 17 for in-store preorders.

Device trade-in offers

For current iPhone users looking to upgrade to the iPhone 16, PMC also offers device trade-in with exclusive offers from October 10 to 31, 2024.

Customers can get up to a PhP 54,700 trade-in value when they trade a previous iPhone 15 device. They can also get an extra PhP 1,000 trade-in value with their iPhone 14, iPhone 13, iPhone 12, or iPhone 11 model and purchase any iPhone 16 variant.

As a bonus, PMC offers a year of Mobile Care unlimited diagnosis and complimentary training via Basecamp.

iPhone 16 Series launch

The iPhone 16 series will be officially launched at midnight on October 18 in four key PMC locations: Greenbelt 3, SM Mall of Asia, Robinsons Galleria Cebu, and SM Lanang Premier Davao.

The launch will be celebrated with performances from key artists. There will also be interactive games for a chance to win special prizes.

In addition, 30 PMC stores nationwide will open at 12:01 AM on October 18 to cater to customers.

PMC raffle promo

Lastly, as a special treat, PMC is holding its “Miles and Milestones: The 30th Anniversary Raffle” promo. All preorders and purchases of the iPhone 16 are qualified to earn entries for a chance to win a brand-new BYD ATTO 3 Dynamic Electric Vehicle, among other exciting prizes.

To join, simply sign up for membership to 1 Infinite. Once confirmed, make a single-receipt purchase of  at lelast PhP 30,000 until December 31, 2024.

News

OPPO Find N6 global launch set for March 17

Foldable debuts Zero-Feel Crease

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Find N6 global launch

OPPO has confirmed the global launch date of its next foldable flagship. The OPPO Find N6 will debut on March 17, 2026 at the company’s Binhai Bay Campus in China.

The upcoming device aims to push foldable technology further with what OPPO calls a “Zero-Feel Crease,” designed to deliver a flatter display and a smoother touch experience even after years of use.

According to OPPO Senior Vice President and Chief Product Officer Pete Lau, the Find N series has consistently focused on advancing foldable innovation. With the Find N6, the company says it has achieved a major breakthrough in hinge architecture and display materials to reduce the visibility and feel of the screen crease.

Zero crease

Creases have long been a common concern among foldable phone users. OPPO first addressed the issue with the original Find N in 2021, which introduced the waterdrop-style Flexion Hinge. The design helped minimize deep creases by allowing the display to fold more naturally.

With the Find N6, OPPO claims it has taken another step forward. The new hinge and display structure aim to create a more seamless large-screen experience, keeping the inner display smooth and flat over long-term use.

Thin design meets flagship camera

The Find N6 also continues the series’ focus on thin and comfortable hardware. OPPO says the device is among the thinnest book-style foldables available, with ergonomics comparable to conventional bar-style flagship smartphones.

On the back, a redesigned symmetrical Cosmos Ring houses a new 200MP Hasselblad Ultra-Clear camera system. The setup aims to deliver professional-grade photography while maintaining a relatively slim camera module.

The foldable will launch in two color options: Stellar Titanium and Blossom Orange. The latter features a titanium hinge casing with a rose-gold finish achieved through a gilding technique that incorporates genuine gold.

OPPO AI Pen

OPPO is also positioning the Find N6 as a productivity device. It will support the OPPO AI Pen stylus, designed to take advantage of the larger foldable display and integrate AI-powered tools for note-taking and multitasking.

More details about the OPPO Find N6 will be revealed during the global launch event on March 17.

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Samsung is done chasing specs, says TM Roh

Samsung shifts beyond spec wars

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For more than a decade, the smartphone industry has been defined by a familiar race. More megapixels. Faster processors. Bigger batteries. Thinner designs. Being first. Being the most. And being the fastest.

The industry rewarded brands that appeared to be chasing specs. Bigger numbers meant progress. At least on paper.

But if you ask Samsung, the days of chasing specs may no longer define the future of Galaxy smartphones.

During a regional roundtable following the launch of the latest Galaxy devices, I asked TM Roh how the company decides when it’s time for a major hardware upgrade if it isn’t simply chasing specs.

His answer revealed how Samsung now approaches the future of its flagship smartphones.

According to Roh, hardware upgrades are increasingly tied to how well they support Galaxy AI.

“To make Galaxy AI run smoothly, it must be backed by strong hardware,” Roh said during the session, speaking through a translator. He added that Samsung develops its hardware, software, and AI capabilities together — and that major upgrades tend to arrive only when the company reaches what he described as the “desired level of excellence.”
(Quotes are approximate translations.)

“To make Galaxy AI run smoothly, it must be backed by strong hardware.”
(Approximate translation from TM Roh during the roundtable)

In short, Samsung says it’s no longer chasing specs for the sake of winning spec-sheet battles. Not anymore.

Samsung CEO TM Roh answering questions at a media roundtable in San Francisco

When hardware stops chasing numbers

Hardware innovation still matters. But Samsung increasingly frames those improvements as tools that enable smarter software experiences.

During the roundtable, Roh pointed to Samsung’s custom application processors, which now include stronger neural processing capabilities designed to handle AI workloads more efficiently. Dedicated hardware is also being introduced to strengthen privacy and security — including technologies embedded directly into the display. (See: Privacy Display)

Even cameras, historically one of the biggest battlegrounds for smartphone innovation, are evolving in the same direction.

Roh noted that while sensors and lenses remain important, modern smartphone photography now relies heavily on AI-powered image processing working alongside the hardware. This could also explain why, as of writing, Samsung has resisted the extra telephoto lens accessories that is prevalent with other brands.

The shift is subtle but important. Instead of emphasizing bigger numbers on spec sheets, Samsung positions hardware upgrades as part of a broader system designed to support intelligent software.

Why Samsung gets dunked on online

That philosophy, however, exists in tension with how smartphones are often discussed online.

In a landscape driven by benchmark charts and viral comparisons, incremental refinement rarely generates the same excitement as dramatic hardware leaps. Over the past few years, the Galaxy S series has occasionally become an easy target for criticism — especially as rival Android manufacturers compete to deliver the biggest numbers, the fastest charging speeds, or the thinnest designs.

The temptation in tech media, particularly on platforms like YouTube, is often to dunk on Samsung rather than examine the nuance behind its approach. Spectacular upgrades and dramatic spec sheets make better thumbnails.

Yet listening to Samsung executives across multiple briefings reveals something interesting: the messaging is remarkably consistent. Whether discussing cameras, processors, or ecosystem features, the company repeatedly returns to the same principle. Hardware innovation matters most when it unlocks a better overall experience.

A company that knows its role

That consistency suggests Samsung knows exactly who it is in the smartphone industry.

As the largest Android smartphone manufacturer globally, Samsung occupies a position where competitors often measure themselves against it. Many brands differentiate by pushing aggressive specifications or experimenting with bold hardware changes.

In many ways, everyone else is punching up.

Scale changes priorities. When you’re building devices for hundreds of millions of users, the focus shifts toward reliability, ecosystem integration, and increasingly, AI-powered experiences that work consistently across products.

Why Southeast Asia matters in Samsung’s AI strategy

During the roundtable, Roh also emphasized the importance of Southeast Asia and Oceania to Samsung’s AI strategy.

According to the company’s internal research, the region ranks among the most receptive markets for AI-powered mobile features. Younger demographics and heavy social media usage are driving adoption.

In markets where smartphones are central to communication, content creation, and digital services, AI-powered tools — from translation features to image editing — have found strong traction.

That context helps explain why Samsung continues to position AI as the defining layer of its next-generation devices.

Is the smartphone spec race ending?

For years, smartphone makers built their identities around chasing specs.

Bigger numbers meant better phones. Faster chips meant progress.

Samsung, it seems, is chasing something else.

Whether that bet ultimately reshapes the smartphone experience remains to be seen. But if Roh’s comments are any indication, the next major leap in Galaxy hardware won’t happen simply because the numbers can go higher.

It will happen when Samsung believes the experience — not the spec sheet — is ready to move forward.

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Laptops

Hands-on: NEW iPhone 17e, iPad Air, MacBooks, Studio Displays

What Apple has announced other than the MacBook Neo

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The MacBook Neo was the star of yesterday’s Apple event, and it has every right to be but it’s been a big week for Apple.

So as promised, we also went hands-on with every other device announced this week: iPhone 17e, M4 iPad Air, M5 MacBook Air, MacBook Pro with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, and the new Studio Displays.

 

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