HMD’s Fusion X1 is a kid-friendly phone with remote access for parents


HMD
The impact of smartphones on kids and young users has been documented widely, especially for their role in fostering mental health woes, body image issues, exposure to inappropriate content, and digital addiction. At MWC 2025, HMD has revealed the Fusion X1, a phone that promises a safe smartphone experience for children.
The company says its latest device offers “built-in, operating system-level parental controls to ensure a safe and age-appropriate digital experience.” Parents can customize how kids access certain apps and browse the internet, set limits for social media browsing, and establish screen time guardrails.
At the heart of all these safety and age-appropriate wellness controls is the Xplora app, which allows parents to change the on-device settings and make usage adjustments in real time.

Guardians will be able to remotely access their ward’s Fusion X1, which also comes with an emergency SOS calling facility. There’s also a dedicated School Mode, which restricts access to certain apps and features so that kids are not distracted during their education hours.
Please enable Javascript to view this content
Even though it’s a phone targeted at a young user base, it’s not exactly watered-down from a hardware perspective. The Fusion X1 comes armed with a 108-megapixel camera and a large 5,000mAh battery for full-day usage. Surprisingly, there’s a 3.5mm headphone jack on the phone, as well.

There’s a 6.56-inch display on the front with a 90Hz refresh rate. Under the hood, you will find Qualcomm’s entry-level Snapdragon 4 Gen 2 SoC tagging alongside 6GB of RAM and 128GB of onboard storage.
Alongside the phone, HMD will also be selling “outfits,” which are essentially modular accessories that snap on to the rear shell, like a Ring light, rugged case with an in-built battery, or gamepad, via a pin-based connector system.
The HMD Fusion X1 is priced at GBP 229 (roughly $288) and expected to hit the shelves around April or May, depending on the region.
Nadeem is a tech and science journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started…
The iPhone 16e is here now, but is it the iPhone you should buy?
It’s decision time, folks. After much hype since it was announced, the iPhone 16e is now available in stores. The phone, which is now Apple’s budget phone, has a lot of great things going for it, assuming you fall into Apple’s demographic for the handset. And yet, if you plan on purchasing a new iPhone right now, there’s possibly a better phone you should buy instead, the iPhone 14.
After Apple announced the iPhone 16e, it became clear that it shares more similarities with the iPhone 14 than with the iPhone SE 3, which many initially believed the rumored “iPhone SE 4” would replace. The iPhone 16e may turn out to be a much better device overall. Consequently, it’s not surprising that the introduction of the iPhone 16e has led to the discontinuation of both the iPhone SE 3 and the iPhone 14.
Google quietly fixed USB flaw that left over a billion Android devices exposed
In the first week of February, Google published its usual Android Security Bulletin, detailing security flaws that have been plugged to strengthen the platform safety. These flaws are usually declared once they have been fixed, except in special circumstances.
February is one of those rare situations for a kernel-level, high-severity flaw that was still being actively exploited at the time of the bulletin’s release. “There are indications that CVE-2024-53104 may be under limited, targeted exploitation,” says the release note.
ChatGPT app could soon generate AI videos with Sora
OpenAI released its Sora text-to-video generation tool late in 2024, and expanded it to the European market at the end of February this year. It seems the next avenue for Sora is the ChatGPT app.
According to a TechCrunch report, which cites internal conversations, OpenAI is planning to bring the video creation AI tool to ChatGPT. So far, the video generator has been available only via a web client, and has remained exclusive to paid users.