惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

月光博客
月光博客
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
IT之家
IT之家
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
博客园 - 叶小钗
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Jina AI
Jina AI
T
Tor Project blog
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
博客园_首页
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Security Latest
Security Latest
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
博客园 - 司徒正美
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
I
Intezer
The Cloudflare Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
博客园 - 【当耐特】
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
量子位
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
AI
AI
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
S
Security Affairs
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
S
Secure Thoughts
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs

The Verge

The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge The Verge Govee’s multicolor ceiling light doubles as a low-res screen The plan to quietly kill Coyote v. Acme blew up in David Zaslav’s face AirPods, Touch Bars, and the rest of Tim Cook’s legacy I don’t think Gwyneth Paltrow knows what a peptide is Brendan Carr’s war on wokeness targets inclusive children’s television Anthropic’s Mythos breach was humiliating Ikea’s new inflatable chair doesn’t look like an inflatable chair Inside Microsoft’s wave of executive departures Netflix can’t seem to follow-up its biggest shows The Iranian women Trump ‘saved’ from execution are simultaneously real and AI-manipulated Elon Musk admits that millions of Tesla vehicles won’t get unsupervised FSD Tesla’s revenue rises again as it prepares for more AI and robotics Former MrBeast exec sues over ‘years’ of alleged harassment Watch Sony’s elite ping-pong robot beat top-ranked players Anthropic’s Mythos rollout has missed America’s cybersecurity agency Will a new CEO realize Apple’s smart home potential? It’s amazing how good Alienware’s $350 OLED monitor is Call of Duty never made much sense for Xbox Game Pass BMW’s flagship 7 Series gets its ‘Neue Klasse’ upgrade The year’s weirdest game is hard to explain and even harder to put down Behind the unraveling of Dan Crenshaw First vacuums — then the world SpaceX cuts a deal to maybe buy Cursor for $60 billion We translated the Palantir manifesto for actual human beings ISS astronauts are getting new laptops Tim Cook was an innovator — just not the Jobs kind AI backlash is coming for elections OpenAI’s updated image generator can now pull information from the web Framework’s Laptop 13 Pro launch event X makes it 1,900 percent more expensive to post links Framework announces Laptop 13 Pro, ‘the MacBook Pro for Linux users’ Framework’s first eGPUs turn its laptop into a desktop PC Blue Origin successfully reused its New Glenn rocket Cloud development platform Vercel was hacked The RAM shortage could last years Judge rules Trump administration violated the First Amendment in fight against ICE-tracking Cheap stuff that doesn’t suck, take 3 Dyson’s handheld fan is more powerful and louder than I expected There’s nothing like an RPG over vacation The AI apps are coming for your PC The best budget smartphones you can buy Dairy Queen is putting an AI chatbot in its drive-thrus The AirPods Pro 3 are $50 off right now, nearly matching their best-ever price Ghost orchid in the machine The South Korean president is doing quote-post diplomacy Peloton, stay in your lane The ‘AI is inevitable’ trap The creative software industry has declared war on Adobe Gucci-branded Google smart glasses are coming next year Ballmer gives $80 million to NPR, with strings attached Netflix embraces vertical video with major mobile app update Netflix cofounder Reed Hastings is officially leaving the company Live Nation says it will fight monopoly suit loss Ozlo’s comfy Sleepbuds are nearly 30 percent off in the run-up to Mother’s Day Teenage Engineering might be getting into instrument amps next The only way to fight deepfakes is by making deepfakes Casely has reannounced a power bank recall from 2025 following a fatality How Netflix made us fall in love with K-dramas It’s slushy season, and Ninja’s frozen drink machine is nearly half off Roku hits a major milestone with 100 million households Age verification is a mess but we’re doing it anyway Ronan Farrow on Sam Altman’s “unconstrained” relationship with the truth Character.AI’s new Books mode turns reading into roleplay The Cybertruck of e-bikes is here to replace your car Moft adds a tracker and shutter button to its magnetic tripod wallet Canva’s AI 2.0 update goes all in on prompt-powered design tools Meta blames RAM shortage for $100 Quest 3 price hike Intel’s cheaper Panther Lake chips are for budget-friendly laptops DJI’s Osmo Pocket 4 camera is better at capturing slo-mo footage and photos Govee’s new LED Lightwall comes with its own self-standing frame Spotify just won $322 million from music pirates it can’t find YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts Ford’s EV and software chief Doug Field is leaving the company Trump’s posting even more AI-generated Trump-Jesus fan art Ticketmaster is an illegal monopoly, jury finds FTC pushes ad agencies into dropping brand safety rules Ikea’s smart donut lamp is a sweet treat Google launches a Gemini AI app on Mac Microsoft counters the MacBook Neo with freebies for students Best Buy’s Ultimate Upgrade Sale features deals on dozens of our favorite gadgets The Senate is voting to save free IRS Direct File today The Verge The Verge The Verge You can grab a refurbished 2021 Kindle Paperwhite starting at just $49.99 The Hisense UR9 is a great first shot against OLED’s bow How AT&T created the most iconic phone ever The AI code wars are heating up Allow me to explain why I love this camera that can’t shoot color
Honor’s Magic V6 sets three foldable firsts
Dominic Preston · 2026-06-15 · via The Verge

On paper, the Honor Magic V6 sounds like a tremendous leap forward for foldable phones: It’s the thinnest one yet, with the biggest battery, and the best water-resistance ever. In practice, only the bigger battery feels like a meaningful improvement. The other upgrades are only fractionally superior to what came before.

This isn’t entirely Honor’s fault. It’s getting harder to make a foldable phone stand out; even last year’s offerings felt like complete flagship phones. Huawei’s Pura X Max stood out for its odd new aspect ratio, which we’re expecting to see both Samsung and Apple replicate later this year. Then there are the trifolds, which feel like a separate beast entirely. But book-style Android foldables have well and truly matured, now able to go toe-to-toe with regular flagship phones in almost every respect.

Honor has been one of the manufacturers pushing foldables forward most aggressively, so it’s earned the right to release a phone with relatively modest hardware improvements. I just wish the company had done more to overhaul the software, as MagicOS remains the main thing holding the Magic V6 back.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden trolley with a pot plant and glassware, closed and showing the rearPhoto of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden trolley with a pot plant and glassware, closed and showing the rear

$1930

The Good

  • Two-day battery life
  • IP69 dust- and water-resistance
  • Thinnest foldable phone around
  • Seven years of software support

The Bad

  • MagicOS is often frustrating
  • Lacks Oppo’s almost invisible crease
  • Triple camera is good, but slab phones are still better

The Magic V6 launched at February’s MWC trade show. At the time, it only went on sale in China; it’s taken until now for Honor to begin the global rollout. The phone is now on sale in Malaysia and Singapore, where it costs RM 7,699 (about $1,930). More countries, including the UK and Europe, are set to follow later this month.

It’s only fair to start with the phone’s three foldable firsts, even if they’re mostly incremental. For starters, it’s the thinnest foldable in the world, just 4mm thick when open, and 8.75mm when folded shut (well, the white version is — other colors are fractionally thicker at 9mm). Closed, it’s no thicker than an iPhone 17 Pro Max, which is a true accomplishment. But it’s a mere 0.05mm thinner than Honor’s previous generation Magic foldable. That’s about the width of a human hair, so I think it’s safe to say we’re in imperceptible territory here.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 USB-C port

My gold version of the phone isn’t quite the thinnest, but each half is still barely thicker than the USB-C port.

The Magic V6 is also the first foldable phone with an IP69 rating, meaning it’s dust-tight and capable of surviving exposure to high-pressure and high-temperature water jets. The rating means the V6 has better dust protection than the V5’s IP59 and can survive water exposure that the IP68 Pixel 10 Pro Fold couldn’t, but the practical implications still feel minimal. I can’t say I run into high-pressure jets with my phone in hand all that often, but even so, the extra peace of mind is welcome.

The most important of the three upgrades is to the battery, which is now 6,660mAh thanks to improved silicon-carbon cells (though China gets an even more capacious 7,150mAh model). This is bigger than any other foldable out there and a reasonable jump up from the 5,820mAh capacity of the Magic V5. And it pays off. The V5 could last for a day and then some, but I’ve been comfortably using the V6 for two days at a time, charging every other night, and I struggle to see how even a heavy user could run this thing down over the course of a single day. This, at least, feels like a meaningful improvement.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden trolley with a pot plant and glassware, closed but showing the homescreen

Closed, it’s increasingly hard to tell foldables like this from regular slab phones.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden trolley with a pot plant and glassware, closed but showing the top of the homescreen

The Magic V6 defaults to uncomfortably vivid display settings, but you can make it more muted.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 rear camera

The triple camera island is big, but actually a lot thinner than the Magic V5’s.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 rear finish and Honor logo

It’s a touch gaudy, but I don’t mind the glittery golden effect — it reminds me a little of silicon wafers.

Elsewhere things are boring, but only because I take them for granted in flagship foldables. Of course the Magic V6 is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5. Of course it offers up to 512GB of storage and 16GB of RAM. Of course it includes fast wireless charging (but, of course, it doesn’t support Qi2). Of course it has dual 120Hz OLED displays and a triple rear camera and support for a stylus. These things aren’t just expected any more, they’re assumed.

Still, as much as foldable phones have advanced, there are drawbacks. The camera is still the big one. The triple rear camera here is certainly impressive and probably the best in any foldable bar Oppo’s Find N6. But, just like that phone, the camera system here lags behind the absolute top-end slab phones, held back by smaller sensors that limit light capture, heavy saturation on many shots, and some inconsistent color processing. In short: The camera is good, but not great, and that is still one of the big compromises you’ll make with any foldable phone.

1/18

As expected, the 50-megapixel main camera takes bright, detailed shots.

The crease is another, of course. The V6’s is fairly subtle, but nowhere near as hard to detect as the nearly imperceptible one on Oppo’s latest. And then there’s durability. Yes, there’s an IP69 rating, but it’s still a foldable: The hinge is fragile, the inner screen is soft, and it’s difficult to protect fully with a case. Outside of China, Honor can’t match the repair and support infrastructure of the likes of Samsung, so you may have a harder time if it does ever break.

Then there’s software. The good news is that Honor is promising seven years of OS and security updates, two more than Oppo and the same that Google and Samsung offer. The bad is that Honor’s MagicOS is among my least favorite Android skins. The UI is noisy (and increasingly inspired by Apple’s Liquid Glass), Honor packs the phone with its own-brand apps, and the multitasking isn’t as powerful or as intuitive as Oppo’s. I much prefer using other versions of Android OS, and the software is a major reason the Oppo Find N6 remains my favorite foldable.

Photo of Honor Magic V6 on a wooden trolley with a pot plant and glassware, open to show the homescreen

MagicOS loves AI widgets and glassy UI elements.

We don’t know exactly what the rumored foldable iPhone will offer, or Samsung’s imminent Galaxy Z Fold 8 for that matter. But Apple will be entering a mature foldable market, and I have to give credit to Honor as one of the companies that’s made sure that’s the case. Over the last few years its Magic foldables have pushed the limits of foldable design and battery capacity again and again, and the Magic V6 is the culmination of that steady progress in hardware, even if Honor has let its software side lapse. This is an impressive, complete foldable, but all those incremental upgrades are beginning to feel boring. Let’s see if Apple can make things interesting again.

Photography by Dominic Preston / The Verge

Agree to Continue: Honor Magic V6

Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it — contracts that no one actually reads. It’s impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these agreements. But we started counting exactly how many times you have to hit “agree” to use devices when we review them since these are agreements most people don’t read and definitely can’t negotiate.

To use the Magic V6, you must agree to:

  • Google Terms of Service
  • Google Play Terms of Service
  • Google Privacy Policy (included in ToS)
  • Install apps and updates: “You agree this device may also automatically download and install updates and apps from Google, your operator, and your device’s manufacturer, possibly using cellular data.”
  • Honor End User Software Licence Agreement
  • Honor Basic Service Statement

There’s also a variety of optional agreements, including:

  • Provide anonymous location data for Google’s services
  • “Allow apps and services to scan for Wi-Fi networks and nearby devices at any time, even when Wi-Fi or Bluetooth is off.”
  • Send usage and diagnostic data to Google
  • Let contacts nearby find and share with you
  • Google Gemini Apps Privacy Notice if you opt in to using Gemini Assistant
  • Honor User Experience Improvement Programme
  • Honor system software update service
  • Honor Magazine Unlock User Agreement
  • My Honor User Agreement
  • Honor Connect User Agreement
  • Honor AI Suggestions User Agreement
  • Honor Location Services

Honor includes several more optional agreements during setup tied to specific features. Other Google features, like Google Wallet, may require additional agreements.

Final tally: six mandatory agreements and more than 12 optional agreements.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Dominic Preston