Latest Articles and Reviews
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Crucial BX500 4TB 2.5 inch SSD Review
SSD |The BX500 4TB drive behaves as expected for a QLC drive and presents the same shortcomings as the P310 drive, meaning that we have a considerably lower TBW versus TLC NAND and a very low write speed when writing directly to QLC, between 10MB/s and 20MB/s, basically lower than regular HDDs.
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Silicon Power QS58 20000 mAh Power Bank Review
The QS58 power bank from Silicon Power comes in handy when you need to recharge multiple devices from a single source, while being packed with a lot of safety technologies. The remaining charge is displayed via a simple 4-LED display and can be easily taken with you on flights, complying with IATA regulations.
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Patriot Viper Venom 32GB (2X16GB) 7000MT/s Memory Kit Review
Memory |The non-RGB version of the Viper Venom DDR5-7000 memory kit runs great on Intel platforms and compatibility is assured with many motherboards thanks to the inclusion of no less than 3 XMP 3.0 profiles. 32GB of installed RAM is becoming mainstream to be able to handle lots of game launchers in the background, browser tabs and games…
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Shuttle XPC nano NA10H7 Barebone Review
The AMD-based NA10H7 barebone from Shuttle has impressed us quite a bit thanks to the Ryzen 7 8845HS APU which can pack quite a punch with the 8-thread APU, for a total of 16 threads with HT and the integrated AMD Radeon 780 GPU, which is around the dedicated Radeon RX 470 dedicated GPU in terms of…
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Razer Huntsman V3 Pro Gaming Keyboard Review
As the SteelSeries Apex PRO Gen 3, Huntsman V3 Pro is the ultimate keyboard for competitive gamers, integrating the latest technologies such as adjustable actuation, Razer Snap Tap, Rapid Trigger Mode and direct integration with controller buttons. The actuation force is lighter than with the well-known CHERRY MX Reds for a faster reaction speed, while the PBT…
Latest News from around the web
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New Switch 2 specs show large performance dip in undocked mode
While Nintendo offered an official spec sheet for the Switch 2 last month, neither it nor an accompanying blog post from chip-making partner Nvidia provided many specific numbers for the upcoming console’s raw CPU and GPU horsepower. Today, though, Digital Foundry is offering what it calls “rock-solid confirmation” of the system’s final tech specs, adding detail and clarity to years-old leaks and educated speculation on the system’s internals (which turned out to be largely reliable in the end).
Unlike the Switch—which basically used an off-the-shelf Nvidia Tegra T1 chip—Digital Foundry says the Switch 2 is using “very much custom silicon designed specifically for Nintendo and for mobile gaming.” You can see what that means in terms of raw hardware performance”
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Valve takes another step toward making SteamOS a true Windows competitor
We’ve known for months now that Valve is expanding its Linux-based SteamOS operating system beyond the Steam Deck to other handheld PCs, starting with some versions of the Asus ROG Ally. This week, Valve began making some changes to its Steam storefront to prepare for a future when the Deck isn’t the only hardware running SteamOS.
A new “SteamOS Compatible” label will begin rolling out “over the next few weeks” to denote “whether a game and all of its middleware is supported on SteamOS,” including “game functionality, launcher functionality, and anti-cheat support.” Games that don’t meet this requirement will be marked as “SteamOS Unsupported.” As with current games and the Steam Deck, this label doesn’t mean these games won’t run, but it does mean there may be some serious compatibility issues that keep the game from running as intended.
Valve says that “over 18,000 titles on Steam [will] be marked SteamOS compatible out of the gate,” and that game developers won’t need to do anything extra to earn the label if their titles already support the Steam Deck.
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Judge admits nearly being persuaded by AI hallucinations in court filing
A plaintiff’s law firms were sanctioned and ordered to pay $31,100 after submitting fake AI citations that nearly ended up in a court ruling. Michael Wilner, a retired US magistrate judge serving as special master in US District Court for the Central District of California, admitted that he initially thought the citations were real and “almost” put them into an order.
These aren’t the first lawyers caught submitting briefs with fake citations generated by AI. In some cases, opposing attorneys figure out what happened and notify the judge. In this instance, the judge noticed that some citations were unverifiable but was troubled by how close he came to including the bogus citations in an order.
“Directly put, Plaintiff’s use of AI affirmatively misled me,” Judge Wilner wrote in a May 5 order. “I read their brief, was persuaded (or at least intrigued) by the authorities that they cited, and looked up the decisions to learn more about them—only to find that they didn’t exist. That’s scary. It almost led to the scarier outcome (from my perspective) of including those bogus materials in a judicial order. Strong deterrence is needed to make sure that attorneys don’t succumb to this easy shortcut.”
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Google DeepMind creates super-advanced AI that can invent new algorithms
Google’s DeepMind research division claims its newest AI agent marks a significant step toward using the technology to tackle big problems in math and science. The system, known as AlphaEvolve, is based on the company’s Gemini large language models (LLMs), with the addition of an “evolutionary” approach that evaluates and improves algorithms across a range of use cases.
AlphaEvolve is essentially an AI coding agent, but it goes deeper than a standard Gemini chatbot. When you talk to Gemini, there is always a risk of hallucination, where the AI makes up details due to the non-deterministic nature of the underlying technology. AlphaEvolve uses an interesting approach to increase its accuracy when handling complex algorithmic problems.
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Video AI 7.0 – NEW Starlight Mini (Local) AI Model
We’re excited to announce the biggest update for Video AI in a long time with version 7.0 releasing today, giving you access to a version of Starlight which can run locally (!!!) on Windows machines with NVIDIA GPUs.
That’s right. Starlight can now run on your local machine with Starlight Mini!
Please review the system specs below to run Starlight Mini:Operating System: Windows
GPU: NVIDIA GPU with at least 8GB of video memory, but we strongly recommend a GPU with 16GB or more memory for optimal performance and quality
RAM: Minimum of 12GB of system RAM -
Biostar Set to Unveil Cutting-Edge Innovations at Computex 2025
BIOSTAR, a leading manufacturer of Edge AI platform, IPC solutions, motherboards, graphics cards, and storage solutions, is excited to announce its participation at COMPUTEX Taipei 2025, set to take place from May 20 to May 23 at the Nangang Exhibition Center, Hall 2, 1F (Booth No. P0808) in Taipei, Taiwan. With the theme “Unlock the Future of Edge AI,” BIOSTAR’s booth will feature a wide array of innovative technologies designed to meet the evolving needs of modern computing. Visitors can expect a diverse showcase that spans industrial-grade edge AI platforms, EdgeComp embedded IPC systems, and the latest consumer PC motherboards, graphics cards, SSDs, and DDR memory for creators, gamers, and casual use, all presented in a sleek exhibition space that highlights sustainable living.
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Retro PlayStation UI options return permanently to the PS5
The PlayStation 5 is getting a software update that brings back the looks of yesteryear. After fans applauded the move to apply the appearances of past Sony generations to their consoles’ home screens during the PlayStation 30th anniversary last year, the company said it was working on making those permanent aesthetic options. That promised return of the four retro UI looks is the highlight of the upcoming PS5 update.
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How a 20 year old bug in GTA San Andreas surfaced in Windows 11 24H2
This was the most interesting bug I’ve encountered for a while. I initially had a hard time believing that a bug like this would directly tie to a specific OS release, but I was proven completely wrong. At the end of the day, it was a simple bug in San Andreas and this function should have never worked right, and yet, at least on PC it hid itself for two decades.
How a 20 year old bug in GTA San Andreas surfaced in Windows 11 24H2
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The Last of Us season two ‘Through the Valley’ recap
HBO’s The Last of Us showed viewers in season one that it would lean heavily on the source video games for major plot points and general direction of the season while expanding on the universe, and season two has followed that to the most extreme end possible. Episode two sees Tommy and Maria lead the town of Jackson Hole against a massive wave of Infected, the likes of which we haven’t seen in the show (or video games) yet. This was a complete invention for the show, one that gives the episode Game of Thrones vibes, or calls to mind a battle like the siege of Helm’s Deep in Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. It’s epic in scale, with the overmatched defenders showing their skill and bravery against overwhelming odds; there is loss and pain but the good guys eventually triumph.
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The next Star Wars Celebration will be held in LA in 2027 for the 50th anniversary
Star Wars Celebration is heading back to Los Angeles for the first time since 2006 to mark the franchise’s 50th anniversary in 2027. Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope, then simply called Star Wars, first hit theaters in 1977 and the rest is history. The location was announced during the closing ceremony of this year’s event, which took place in Japan. Star Wars Celebration 2027 will be held at the Los Angeles Convention Center from April 1 to April 4, 2027.
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Nintendo shares a vintage SNES commercial starring Paul Rudd
Nintendo surprised us with a little blast from the past this weekend, uploading a 34-year-old Super Nintendo commercial featuring Paul Rudd to its YouTube channel — and it’s released a sequel for the Nintendo Switch 2. Rudd appears in the Switch 2 promo wearing the same outfit he wore back in 1991, but this time he’s playing Mario Kart World with some celebrity friends over the new GameChat social feature. It’s a charming callback to the original SNES ad, which itself is deliciously ‘90s and a real treat to revisit in 2025. Commercials today just don’t hit the same.
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AMD Readies Radeon PRO W9000 Series Powered by RDNA 4
AMD is readying a new line of professional graphics cards based on its latest RDNA 4 graphics architecture. The company has assigned the silicon variant “Navi 48 XTW” to power its next flagship pro-vis product, which will likely be branded under the Radeon PRO W9000 series. According to the source of this leak, the card comes with 32 GB of memory, which is probably ECC GDDR6, across the chip’s 256-bit wide memory bus. The product should offer the same core-configuration as the Radeon RX 9070 XT gaming GPU, with 64 compute units worth 4,096 stream processors, 128 AI accelerators, 64 RT accelerators, 256 TMUs, and 128 ROPs.
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Blue95 Topanga released with Paint and Plus! clones
Only a few weeks ago we talked about Blue95, a Fedora-based distribution focused on bringing the Windows 95 look to the Linux world by integrating a set of existing Windows 95 Xfce themes. Since Fedora 42 has just been released, the Blue95 project also pushed out a new release, called Blue95 Topanga. It brings with it all the improvements from Fedora 42, but also goes a step further be integrating new applications to further add to the Windows 95 vibe.
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A bunch of robots ran a half-marathon alongside humans and it was incredibly goofy
Beijing held what’s being called the world’s first half-marathon for robots, allowing bipedal bots to compete alongside human runners, and as one might expect, ridiculousness ensued. The robots, which had human operators running with them, for the most part struggled to make it through the course at all, let alone complete the full 13 miles within the four-hour cutoff time. “One fell at the starting line,” Bloomberg reports. “Another’s head fell off and rolled on the ground. And one collapsed and broke into pieces.” They may not be gold medalists just yet, but the videos sure are entertaining.
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Doctor Who ‘Lux’ review: Hope can change the world
It’s an interesting time to be a long-running science fantasy media property in the streaming TV age. Star Trek is in the grip of an existential crisis as it (wrongly) fears it’s too old-aged to be relevant. Star Wars became a battlefield in the culture war and, to duck all future bad faith criticism, gave us The Rise of Skywalker. And then there’s Doctor Who, which is somehow managing to plough a 62-year furrow and still fill it with original ideas. Don’t believe me? This week the Doctor and Belinda go up against a sentient cartoon holding the patrons of a 1950s cinema hostage.
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Star Wars Zero Company looks like XCOM with Jedi and droids
EA and Lucasfilm shared first look at Star Wars Zero Company, a new single-player strategy game set in the Star Wars universe, at Star Wars Celebration in Japan. The game was originally announced in 2022 as one of three new Star Wars titles being developed or co-developed by Respawn Entertainment, the studio behind Jedi: Fallen Order and Jedi: Survivor, including a new first person shooter and another entry in the Jedi series. There isn’t a firm release date yet, but Star Wars Zero Company will be available on PC, Xbox Series X/S and PlayStation 5 in 2026.
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Real-time strategy game ‘Tempest Rising’ has been released early to all users
Tempest Rising, a real-time strategy game that’s being called a “spiritual successor” and an homage to Command & Conquer, is now available to everyone. It was supposed to be released on April 24, but according to its developers, it was “unexpectedly made available” on April 17 for all players who pre-ordered the game. Instead of pulling it back, they’ve decided that the best and most seamless solution was to just release it a week early.
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beyerdynamic Aventho 300 Over-Ear Wireless Headphones Review
Description: The Aventho 300 by beyerdynamic may not be the best ANC wireless headphones out there but thanks to their very good audio performance, impressive battery life and number of features they are certainly among the best money can buy.
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ASRock X870E Taichi Lite @ TechPowerUp
With the Taichi Lite, ASRock aims to offer a cost-optimized, RGB-less, trimmed version of the popular X870E Taichi. The result is a price that’s $50 lower than the big Taichi. Is it a no-brainer if you want the same basic package, or did ASRock cut away too much?
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Blizzard explains hero bans ahead of their introduction in competitive Overwatch
Blizzard has finally shared how hero bans will work in competitive Overwatch 2. The new step will let teams ban heroes they think are overpowered or annoying to play against, without letting them game out who their opposing team might want to play. The feature is a common part of other competitive games like League of Legends, and is a meta-game in its own right.