On the last day of October, Samsung unveiled its first dual-folding tablet to the world at the APEC summit, albeit behind glass and with very limited access. High-resolution images or even details of the trifoldable are still unavailable. It also remains unclear when and where Samsung’s trifoldable, potentially named Galaxy Z TriFold or Galaxy G Fold, will actually launch and become available.
Recently, however, the Samsung foldable with the internal code Q7M can now be found on the Bluetooth SIG website in a total of six model variants, as the screenshot below reveals. As leakers have repeatedly indicated, the launch will extfinish far beyond a purely Korean and Chinese release. The model numbers SM-D639N and SM-D6390 are likely intfinished for the two Asian markets, while the SM-D639U and SM-D639Ui models are destined for the US market. That leaves the SM-D639B and SM-D639B/SD models, which, as “international” model variants, could also mean Europe.
Whether Samsung’s trifoldable will indeed receive an official European launch remains uncertain. Only a launch in the United Arab Emirates has been confirmed to date, where the two models as well. Taiwan and Singapore have are also rumoured to be on the launch schedule, but there has been no mention of an EU launch anywhere. During the announcement of Samsung’s latest quarterly figures, new foldable form factors were mentioned for 2026, so a launch this year is probably out of the question.
As a young tech enthusiast with a history involving assembling and overclocking projects, I finished up working as a projectionist with good old 35-mm films before I entered the computer world at a professional level. I assisted customers at an Austrian IT service provider called Iphos IT Solutions for seven years, working as a Windows client and server administrator as well as a project manager. As a freelancer who travels a lot, I have been able to write for Notebookcheck from all corners of the world since 2016. My articles cover brand-new mobile technologies in smartphones, laptops, and gadobtains of all kinds.
Growing up in regional Australia, I first became acquainted with computers in my early teens after a broken leg from a football (soccer) match temporarily condemned me to a predominately indoor lifestyle. Soon afterwards I was building my own systems. Now I live in Germany, having shiftd here in 2014, where I study philosophy and anthropology. I am particularly fascinated by how computer technology has fundamentally and dramatically reshaped human culture, and how it continues to do so.



















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