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Today — 26 June 2024PCWorld

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi review: A stand-out budget ultrawide

26 June 2024 at 06:30
At a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Compact but effective ergonomic stand
  • Excellent contrast for a budget monitor
  • Strong color performance
  • Up to 180Hz refresh rate with solid motion clarity

Cons

  • Stand requires some assembly
  • No USB-A or speakers
  • HDR is available but doesn’t impress

Our Verdict

Xiaomi’s G34WQi is a budget ultrawide with impressive image quality.

Price When Reviewed

245.79

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Xiaomi is best known for smartphones (in North America, at least), but the company is making inroads into PCs with a handful of inexpensive laptops and monitors. The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi is the company’s latest budget ultrawide, and don’t let the price fool you: It’s an attractive display.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi specs and features

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi’s specifications are nearly identical to dozens of ultrawide monitors from competitive brands like Gigabyte, AOC, and Spectre (to name a few). It has a 34-inch Vertical Alignment (VA) panel with 3440×1440 resolution. Only the refresh rate stands out: It supports up to 180Hz, which is a tad higher than competitors at 120- to 160Hz.

  • Display size: 34-inch ultrawide
  • Native resolution: 3440×1440
  • Panel type: Semi-gloss curved VA-panel with LED backlight
  • Refresh rate: Up to 180Hz
  • Adaptive sync: Adaptive Sync, AMD FreeSync Premium
  • Ports: 2x DisplayPort 1.4, 2x HDMI 2.0, 1x 3.5mm audio jack
  • VESA mount: 75x75mm
  • Speakers: Yes, 2x 3-watt stereo speakers
  • Price: $289.99 MSRP, $260 typical online retail

The G34WQi carries an MSRP of just $289.99 and often receives a small discount off. That makes the G34WQi an alluring option, though it does face many similarly priced competitors.

Further reading: See our roundup of the best gaming monitors to learn about competing products.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi design

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi doesn’t make much of an impression out of the box. It’s clad in matte and semi-gloss black plastic that looks and feels fine but unexceptional. The only design highlight is the stand neck, which is svelte and has a piano black glossy finish to add a touch of class. An RGB-LED accent light is included, but it’s rather dim.

The monitor has an aggressive 1500R curve, meaning that the radius of the curve would be complete if the monitor were 1500mm wide. In other words, a smaller curvature number actually translates to a more aggressive curve. Most people will appreciate the immersion a curved screen can provide, but it slightly distorts the image (a straight line rendered across the display will appear curved, not straight), which could annoy content creators who need an accurate image.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi
The 1500R curvature of the Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi will be immersive for games, but will also affect the appearance of your productivity windows.
Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi
The 1500R curvature of the Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi will be immersive for games, but will also affect the appearance of your productivity windows.

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi
The 1500R curvature of the Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi will be immersive for games, but will also affect the appearance of your productivity windows.

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Matthew Smith / Foundry

A small, flat stand keeps the monitor secure on your desk and keeps the monitor’s footprint to a minimum. That’s important: Many budget ultrawides, like the Gigabyte GS34WQC, have oversized stands that take up a lot of desk space.

The stand provides adjustments for height, tilt, and swivel, and connects to the monitor with a 75x75mm VESA mount, allowing you to attach a third-party monitor stand or arm. The stand base doesn’t have a tool-less design though, so some assembly is required. A screwdriver is included, and assembly takes no more than two minutes, but more expensive monitors have a tool-free mechanism that’s easier to assemble and disassemble.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi connectivity and menus

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi’s connectivity is basic but expansive. It has two DisplayPort inputs and two HDMI inputs for a total of four video inputs, which is more than usual for a budget monitor.

However, the monitor lacks any form of USB connectivity, so it can’t be used as a USB hub to connect wired gaming peripherals. This is true for many budget ultrawide monitors, though most competitors with USB ports, like the LG 34BQ77QB, have a lower refresh rate or resolution. A 3.5mm audio out jack rounds out the connectivity.

The monitor’s on-screen menu system is controlled with a joystick located on the rear side of the lower right-hand bezel. It is responsive, easy to control, and navigates through Xiaomi’s well-labeled menus. The menus offer a fair bit of image quality customization, including several gamma presets that target specific numerical values, multiple color temperature presets, and settings for color hue and saturation.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi‘s menu system is controlled by a joystick and easy to use.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi‘s menu system is controlled by a joystick and easy to use.

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi‘s menu system is controlled by a joystick and easy to use.

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Strangely, the monitor has a separate set of image quality settings for the standard and game modes, which are adjusted independently. That can prove confusing as certain settings, like the monitor’s response time modes, can’t be changed without first activating game mode. On the plus side, this provides an easy way to calibrate the display’s settings differently for work and play.

Xiaomi throws in a few extra features, including several picture-by-picture modes and a black equalizer to elevate the black levels of the display and make enemies more visible in games. These features are appreciated but also available in most competitive monitors.

The monitor lacks speakers, so you’ll have to rely on external speakers or a headset. That’s typical for a budget ultrawide monitor. The few competitors that do offer built-in speakers deliver a sub-par experience that’ll quickly have you looking for an upgrade.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi SDR image quality

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi has a Vertical Alignment (VA) display panel paired with a conventional LED backlight. It’s a common combination for a budget ultrawide monitor, but effective, and the G34WQi’s SDR image quality holds up well.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi brightness
Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi brightness

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi brightness

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi scores a win in brightness, as the Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi achieved a maximum sustained SDR brightness of 435 nits. That’s an excellent result for a budget monitor and beats many competitors by 25 or 30 percent.

A brightness of 435 nits isn’t required for typical use, of course, but it’s good news if you want to use the monitor in a brightly lit room or a room with sun-lit windows and poor light control. The G34WQi can easily compete with a room’s ambient light.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi contrast ratio
Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi contrast ratio

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi contrast ratio

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Contrast is another win for the G34WQi. The monitor achieved a contrast ratio of 4110:1, which is towards the upper end of what’s available from a budget ultrawide with a VA panel, and much better than what’s available from monitors with an IPS panel (like the HP Omen 27qs and Asus ROG Strix XG27ACS).

A higher contrast ratio translates to an image with more depth and immersion. Bright content seems to pop from the display and darker content shows detail that might be obscured on a less capable display. The monitor’s minimum luminance isn’t perfect, so it can still appear a bit hazy or gray when viewed in a darkly lit room, but this is less noticeable than with most budget monitors.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi color gamut
Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi color gamut

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi color gamut

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Matthew Smith / Foundry

The G34WQi posted another strong result with a color gamut that spans 100 percent of sRGB, 94 percent of DCI-P3, and 89 percent of AdobeRGB. These are excellent results for a budget display and more than enough to deliver a saturated, vivid image for gaming and Netflix. It’s also sufficient for many content creators.

With that said, the G34WQi ties competitors like the Gigabyte G34WQC. And some IPS panel monitors, like the HP 27qs, can provide a wider DCI-P3 color gamut. Xiaomi scores well here but it doesn’t stand out from the crowd.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi color error
Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi color error

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi color error

Matthew Smith / Foundry

Matthew Smith / Foundry

The same is true of color accuracy. The G34WQi’s color error is low enough that most people, myself included, won’t notice an issue. Videos, photos, and games look realistic and immersive. Still, the monitor’s out-of-box color accuracy is not remarkable and doesn’t beat competitors.

One problem I found noticeable was the monitor’s out-of-box color temperature of 7200K, which was significantly off the target of 6500K. The image seemed too cool and sterile when compared to that target. Color temperature can be adjusted with the monitor’s settings, and the ideal value can vary based on your preference. Still, 6500K is a common target, and most monitors come closer to it.

Gamma, on the other hand, was strong with an on-target gamma curve of 2.2. That means content viewed on the monitor generally looked as bright as it should and provided detail in both bright and dark areas. The curve can also be adjusted in the monitor’s settings, which is helpful for people who need (or prefer) a different gamma curve.

Sharpness was adequate. The G34WQi’s resolution of 3440×1440 works out to roughly 109 pixels per inch, which is identical to a 27-inch monitor with 2560×1440 resolution. Small fonts and high-contrast edges can appear slightly pixelated, and the Windows desktop lacks the absolute clarity of a 4K monitor, but it still looks rather sharp. Very few 34-inch ultrawide monitors offer a higher resolution, and those that do are much more expensive, so the G34WQi’s clarity is on par with its competition.

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi’s SDR image quality is excellent for the price and competitive with some more expensive monitors, like the Asus ProArt PA348CGV. It also comes out a tad ahead of the Gigabyte G34WQC, another budget ultrawide I liked. Better monitors are available, of course, but you’d need to leap to a QD-OLED monitor like the Alienware AW3423DWF to see a massive improvement.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi HDR image quality

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi supports HDR but doesn’t list an official HDR certification (like VESA DisplayHDR 400). That’s just as well because, like most budget monitors, it fails to deliver a good HDR experience.

Brightness is part of the problem. The monitor’s maximum brightness of 435 nits in HDR is precisely the same as its maximum brightness in SDR. That’s not enough to do HDR content justice, and bright portions of a scene lack the detail available on more capable HDR monitors.

Contrast is also an issue. The G34WQi’s conventional LED backlight can’t increase brightness in any single portion of the display without increasing brightness across the entire display. As a result, HDR content will often show less depth than SDR, especially in scenes that combine a few bright highlights with a mostly dark background.

None of this is unexpected. Good HDR performance is out of reach for most budget monitors with the rare exception of new budget Mini-LED monitors like the AOC Q27G3XMN. Those looking for better HDR performance from an ultrawide will need to step up to an OLED or Mini-LED display.

Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi motion performance

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi’s specifications are promising. It has a maximum refresh rate of up to 180Hz and claims a minimum pixel response time of one millisecond. The benefits of these features were obvious when playing games. Quickly panning the camera revealed that significant detail remains visible and small, fast-moving objects are easy to see. It’s a huge upgrade from a 60Hz monitor.

With that said, gamers should keep the monitor’s price tag in mind. Motion clarity is good but nowhere near what’s available from more expensive displays. Competitive gamers who want great motion clarity at this price point should instead look towards 27-inch 240Hz widescreen monitors like the LG UltraGear 27GR38Q-B.

Adaptive Sync is supported for smooth, tear-free gaming, and the monitor is AMD FreeSync Premium certified (though only when connected over DisplayPort). Nvidia G-Sync should work with the monitor, as it’s compatible with Adaptive Sync, but the lack of official support means you’re out of luck if it doesn’t work as expected.

Should you buy the Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi?

The Xiaomi Curved Gaming Monitor G34WQi is an outstanding budget ultrawide monitor that should work equally well for home office, gaming, and entry-level content creation. It provides strong contrast, a wide color gamut, high maximum brightness, and respectable motion clarity for less than $300.

Xiaomi faces a lot of competition, as many competitors sell ultrawide monitors with identical specifications at a similar price. Still, the G34WQi stands out in a few ways. It’s among the least expensive monitors, it has a compact yet functional ergonomic stand, it has four video inputs, and its maximum refresh rate of 180Hz is higher than most alternatives. These traits make the G34WQi a good choice, and it’s especially appealing when on sale for below MSRP.

Monitors

Data breaches are everywhere—but you still need to pay attention to them

26 June 2024 at 06:30

Avoiding data breaches is all but impossible these days. You can’t control a company’s data security policies—you can only filter what information you share with them and mitigate the potential fallout. But don’t assume that once your personal info is on the dark web, it’s over and done. Unfortunately, we all still need to stay informed about the latest data breaches and leaks. 

Why? They keep you from falling for opportunistic scams.

Further reading: Best password managers 2024: Protect your online accounts

Let’s say you were affected by one of the latest breaches—perhaps as one of the potentially 500,000 Ticketmaster users or unknown number of Tile owners. But you don’t pay attention to the news, so when you get an email saying your credit card transaction failed for your ticket purchase (or a recall is in effect for your Tile device with serial number ending in XXXX), you click the link. 

What happens next could be one of a few bad outcomes. Perhaps you get subjected to drive-by malware. Or maybe you end up sharing or indirectly revealing more personal details an attacker needed to commit identity theft.

If you paid attention to the latest security reports, however, you might be more suspicious of messages related to Ticketmaster, Tile, or any other recent data leak. You’d be more likely to avoid clicking directly on links and you’d lean on your good security practices like accessing an official website directly. Scams rely on people reacting first and then thinking about the situation later on (if at all). If you’re already aware that someone could try to exploit your trust, you’ll be more careful about giving it.

OUr TOP Antivirus Pick

Norton 360 Deluxe

Norton 360 Deluxe
Price When Reviewed: $49.99 for the first year

Of course, a lot of us are busy and don’t have time to keep up with security news. You can lean on services to keep you appraised—in addition to regularly browsing technology websites (hello), you can subscribe to Have I Been Pwned as well as lean on any subscriptions you have (like a good paid antivirus suite, Microsoft 365, or Google One) that offer dark web monitoring. If you end up relying on a service, I’ve found it helpful to use more than one since the notifications don’t always cover the same breaches.

And yes, having to be so vigilant is a little depressing. Almost hard to remember that once upon a time, during the early days of the Internet, people would openly share their personal details with full trust in others’ goodness.

Antivirus, Security Software and Services

Get Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy on Steam for just $24

26 June 2024 at 06:00

Marvel fans take note. Right now, you can get Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy on Steam for just $23.99! 

In this action-adventure game, you play as Star-Lord, the “leader” of the Guardians of the Galaxy. Now, it’s your responsibility to lead Gamora, Rocket Raccoon, Groot, and Drax on a series of adventures to help avoid a massive interplanetary meltdown. You’ll use any means necessary to save the galaxy as you play along the exciting story mode and rock out to iconic ’80s hits along the way.

It’s all an original story but with all kinds of familiar characters grappling for the fate of the universe.

IGN writes, “Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy is yet another convincing example of how much fun a linear, no-frills, single-player campaign can be.”

You are Groot. For a limited time, you can get Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy on Steam for 60% off $59 at just $23.99.

 

Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy on Steam – $23.99

See Deal

StackSocial prices subject to change.

Gaming

Invest in your personal development with $110 off this app

26 June 2024 at 04:00

The ability to learn new things is one of our most powerful assets. But finding time to invest in one’s own learning can be exceedingly difficult in our fast-paced world. With HappyLife Knowledge Summaries, however, you just need 15 minutes to get to the main idea of some of the world’s most important nonfiction books, podcasts, and Ted Talks.

This app’s massive library includes thousands of summaries, spanning topics from personal development to business, creativity, and much more. The app gamifies your learning, helping you reach streaks and claim achievements to make learning something new daily fun. It will give you personalized recommendations based on your interests to keep exploring new ideas and give you the power to delve deep into all kinds of new topics.

Invest in yourself. For a limited time, you can get a lifetime subscription to HappyLife Knowledge Summaries for 73% off $149 at just $39.99.

 

HappyLife Knowledge Summaries Lifetime Subscription – $39.99

See Deal

StackSocial prices subject to change.

Accessories

Yesterday — 25 June 2024PCWorld

Best dash cams 2024: Your second set of eyes on the road

25 June 2024 at 14:30

While you drive, there’s a lot happening, so a second pair of eyes can help you stay safe. A dash cam provides this extra vigilance and helps give you peace of mind while out on the road. The best dash cams monitor in high-res video what’s happening while you’re behind the wheel, with timestamps and GPS coordinates. They can even record while your car is parked, helping you keep tabs on your car while you’re away.

When choosing the best dash cam for your needs you should first consider if you want a front, front/interior, or front/rear model. Additionally, you’ll want to decide on how wide a viewing angle you’ll need. Then there are special features to take into account, such as voice control or parking assist. Since there are a number of reasons to use a dash cam, we understand that there isn’t a one-size-fits-all model. With that in mind, we’ve curated a list of the best dash cams of all types with various features and prices below.

For even more information on what to look for when buying a dash cam, scroll to our buyer’s guide under our best picks. And after you’ve bought a dash cam, save yourself some time and frustration by reading our guide on how to install a dash cam.

Updated June 18, 2024 to add the Viofo VS1 Mini 2K to our list of recommendations as the best tiny dash cam. Read our summary below to find out why this petite, front-only 1440p cam with the minimalist styling has won us over.

Nextbase 222X – Best budget front/rear dash cam

Nextbase 222X - Best budget front/rear dash cam
Nextbase 222X - Best budget front/rear dash cam
Nextbase 222X - Best budget front/rear dash cam

Pros

  • Good front/rear-view day video
  • Decent front/rear-view night captures
  • 48-hour, battery-supported parking mode and after-incident capture

Cons

  • Modest video quality compared to pricier Nextbase models
  • Modular port, but no add-on modules
  • No GPS
Price When Reviewed: $99.99

If you really want to save money, this Walmart-exclusive Nextbase 222X front-and-rear camera duo offers great value. The 1080p/720p video is a compromise, but video quality is still good, it has a nice magnetic mount, a clear 2.5-inch screen, and a battery-supported parking mode.

Read our full Nextbase 222X Dash Cam review

70mai 4K A810 – Best midrange front/rear dash cam

70mai 4K A810 - Best midrange front/rear dash cam
70mai 4K A810 - Best midrange front/rear dash cam
70mai 4K A810 - Best midrange front/rear dash cam

Pros

  • Excellent front captures
  • GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth connectivity
  • Phone app

Cons

  • So-so rear capture processing
  • Non-standard rear camera cable
Price When Reviewed: $179

The market today is now saturated with 4K-front/1080p-rear camera setups, but the 70mai 4K A810 stands out from the rest. It’s absolutely loaded with great features such as onboard GPS, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth for phone connectivity. The 3-inch IPS display provides a colorful and crisp image and it can be powered either via USB Type-A or Type-C cables. It also gives you advanced features like lane-departure and forward-collision warnings.

All of that plus the A810 captures crystal-clear 4K images with the front camera and 1080p with the rear camera. Most other competitors don’t offer nearly the same features or image quality for the price either. For these reasons, the 70mai 4K A810 is an absolute midrange bargain among dual-channel dash cams.

Read our full 70mai 4K A810 dash cam review

Cobra SC 400D – Best premium front/rear dash cam

Cobra SC 400D - Best premium front/rear dash cam
Cobra SC 400D - Best premium front/rear dash cam
Cobra SC 400D - Best premium front/rear dash cam

Pros

  • Excellent video captures, day and night, front and back
  • 3-inch touchscreen display
  • Voice control
  • Alexa support (if you care)
  • 2160p (4K UHD) if you want it

Cons

  • Very expensive
  • Rear camera isn’t removable
Price When Reviewed: $399.95

Our review of the Cobra SC 400D left us smitten. It’s pricey, yes, but it delivers the goods with stunning images—4K for the front, 1080p in the rear—day or night. In addition to that it has all the trappings of a premium product: a sturdy magnetic mount with integrated GPS, a crisp 3-inch touchscreen display, and Alexa support for finding businesses and the like when you are on the road. It can also be expanded with an optional 120-degree FOV cam for the interior.

Read our full Cobra SC 400D review

Nextbase 622GW – Best premium front/rear runner-up

Nextbase 622GW - Best premium front/rear runner-up
Nextbase 622GW - Best premium front/rear runner-up
Nextbase 622GW - Best premium front/rear runner-up

Pros

  • Stellar day and night captures
  • Modular add-on 1080p cameras provide interior and rear coverage
  • Alexa voice control and automatic emergency notifications

Cons

  • Expensive
Price When Reviewed: $399.99

Prior to our review of the Cobra SC 400D above, the 622GW front/rear system was our hands-down favorite. And, really, it shares virtually all the same attributes as its rival—nice design and build quality, excellent day and night captures, drive mapping, a wonderful 3-inch display, emergency response to accidents, Alexa support, and the ability to add a third camera for interior views. Like the 400D, it carries a premium price tag. But in the end, you can’t go wrong with either model.

Read our full Nextbase 622GW Dash Cam review

Viofo A229 Plus – Best 3-channel dash cam

Viofo A229 Plus - Best 3-channel dash cam
Viofo A229 Plus - Best 3-channel dash cam
Viofo A229 Plus - Best 3-channel dash cam

Pros

  • Front, interior, and rear cameras
  • Discrete interior camera for versatile placement
  • Colorful, detailed captures
  • Rear captures are as good as the front captures
  • Phone connectivity

Cons

  • Lots of wires to hide
Price When Reviewed: $279.99
Best Prices Today: $269.99 at Amazon

A dash cam is all about monitoring and recording your surroundings, and for that it’s hard to beat a 3-channel system. Combining front view, interior view, and rear view, a 3-channel dash cam makes sure nothing is missed. The Viofo A229 Plus is our pick for best 3-channel system due to strong 1440p front and rear captures, 1080p interior captures, and a whole host of great additional features.

Not only do the front and rear view cameras offer solid resolutions, but the interior cam is discreet and all are easy to install. The Viofo A229 Plus also comes with an onboard mic for recording audio or receiving voice commands — an extremely convenient feature while driving. The A229 comes with GPS tagging, motion detection, and a parking mode as well. Needless to say, it’s chock-full of amenities and features. A 3-channel dash cam might not be for everyone, but if you need one, the Viofo A229 should be at the top of your list.

Read our full Viofo A229 Plus 3-channel dash cam review

Vantrue N5 – Best for 360 degree view

Vantrue N5 - Best for 360 degree view
Vantrue N5 - Best for 360 degree view
Vantrue N5 - Best for 360 degree view

Pros

  • 4-channel, nearly surround coverage
  • Good captures
  • Embedded and watermarked GPS
  • Voice control and phone connectivity

Cons

  • Pricey
  • Uses lots of storage
Price When Reviewed: $399.99
Best Prices Today: $399.99 at Vantrue

The Vantrue N5 offers the most complete coverage of any dash cam system we’ve ever seen. It comes with 4-channels including a front, rear, and dual cabin cameras (one in the front facing aft and another in the rear facing forwards). All of these cameras allow you to see not only what is happening outside your vehicle, but also within it, and they even catch some blind spots that front/rearview cameras might miss.

The N5 offers much more than just thorough coverage. It comes with watermarked GPS on board and excellent capture quality—the front cameras is capable of 1440p with superb night captures as well. You can also control the system via voice control and it offers great connectivity features as well. Overall, there is no other dash cam on the market that does a better job of capturing events in and around your car.

Read our full Vantrue N5 dash cam review

Miofive 4K – Best front-only dash cam

Miofive 4K - Best front-only dash cam
Miofive 4K - Best front-only dash cam
Miofive 4K - Best front-only dash cam

Pros

  • Compact, fully integrated design
  • Very affordable for 4K with GPS
  • Friendly voice notifications
  • 64GB of internal storage
  • Good day and night captures

Cons

  • Internal storage isn't replaceable
  • macOS won't read the internal storage
Price When Reviewed: 149.99
Best Prices Today: $129.99 at Amazon

Prior to our review of the Miofive 4K, we would have tapped the Car and Driver Eye2 Pro as the best front-only dash cam with 4K, a fine product in its own right. But the Miofive costs $100 less, and offers integrated GPS as well as great video captures, 64GB of internal storage, a compact design, friendly voice notifications, and a super straightforward setup. So not only is this our favorite front dash cam with 4K, it’s our favorite front cam overall.

Read our full $150 review

Viofo VS1 Mini 2K – Best tiny dash cam

Viofo VS1 Mini 2K - Best tiny dash cam
Viofo VS1 Mini 2K - Best tiny dash cam
Viofo VS1 Mini 2K - Best tiny dash cam

Pros

  • Super-small, handsome profile
  • Very good day and night 1440p captures
  • Voice commands/alerts and phone connectivity
  • Integrated GPS

Cons

  • No room for a display
Price When Reviewed: $139.99
Best Prices Today: $139.99 at Viofo

If you’re in the market for an unobtrusive, front-only cam that’s capable of capturing good-quality (1440p) day and night images, then the Viofo VS1 Mini 2K should be on your radar.

It only sweetens the deal that the VS1 Mini 2K also offers a GPS, along with voice commands and a phone-app interface, since the small size leaves no room for an on-unit display.

The camera’s body is tastefully styled, measure a mere 1.3 inches wide by 1.18 inches thick by approximately 2.85 inches tall, with a front lens that sits flush with the body. The unit easily slides in and out of a mount that affixes to your car with semi-permanent adhesive.

Support for voice commands let you operate the camera without distraction.

All in all, the VS1 Mini 2K has a clear edge over our previous favorite small dash-cam wonder, the Garmin Dash Cam Mini 2.

Garmin Dash Cam 57 – Best front-only runner-up

Garmin Dash Cam 57 - Best front-only runner-up
Garmin Dash Cam 57 - Best front-only runner-up
Garmin Dash Cam 57 - Best front-only runner-up

Pros

  • Colorful, detailed captures day and night
  • Small enough to hide behind your mirror
  • Super-convenient magnetic mounting
  • Phone and cloud connectivity

Cons

  • No rear camera option
Price When Reviewed: $229.99

This small but mighty front dash cam has it all: great 1440p video with a 140-degree field of view, integrated GPS and driving assistance, good phone connectivity, an easy and convenient magnetic mounting system, and the backing of Garmin’s good name.

Read our full Garmin Dash Cam 57 review

Cobra SC 201 – Best budget front/interior dash cam

Cobra SC 201 - Best budget front/interior dash cam
Cobra SC 201 - Best budget front/interior dash cam
Cobra SC 201 - Best budget front/interior dash cam

Pros

  • Excellent video, especially at night
  • Front and interior cameras for ride-givers
  • GPS with automatic setup
  • Included 16GB SD card

Cons

  • No captures without 12-volt
  • Buggy software at the time of testing
  • App does not support smartphones running Android 7 or older
Price When Reviewed: $179.95

Dash cams are all about capturing the action, and few do it better than the front/interior Cobra SC 201. The exterior night video, especially, is unsurpassed in its ability to show details in dark surroundings and it offers a laundry list of features including GPS and cloud uploads. The company even includes a 16GB SD card. It’s well worth the money for what you get—just don’t try to use the cloud functionality with an older phone OS.

Read our full Cobra SC 201 Smart Dash Cam review

Garmin Dash Cam Tandem – Best front/interior dash cam

Garmin Dash Cam Tandem - Best front/interior dash cam
Garmin Dash Cam Tandem - Best front/interior dash cam
Garmin Dash Cam Tandem - Best front/interior dash cam

Pros

  • Very easy to install and use
  • Compact profile
  • Excellent magnetic mount
  • 360-degree front/interior view (minus obstructions)

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Average captures
Price When Reviewed: $289.99

Garmin’s front/interior camera is easy to install, features a compact body that helps it avoid detection, and has an excellent magnetic mount—all useful features that make up for the average 1440p/720p video capture quality. The Tandem doesn’t have a display; it nicely uses Bluetooth (as opposed to Wi-Fi) to connect to your phone, where Garmin’s easy-to-use app lets you configure settings—although the defaults are spot-on.

Read our full Garmin Dash Cam Tandem review

What to look for in a dash cam

We’ll step you through what to think about when you’re shopping for a dash cam, from video capabilities, recording options, power connections, and more. 

Video capabilities

  • Dual-channel support: This is what you’ll need if you want to run both front and rear, or interior (cabin-view) cameras. Interior cameras are generally situated on the dash cam, but rear cameras are separate and require additional cabling. 
  • A decently wide field of view: You’ll see cameras with as little as 90-degrees field of view, but you’ll catch more of what’s around you if you go for 120 to 140 degrees. Some cameras offer 160- to 180-degree lenses. Note that the wider the field of view, the more fish-eye distortion there is, and more processing is involved to compensate.
  • Day and night video recording (night quality is a big variant)
  • Infrared lighting is important if you want to assure good captures of nocturnal events inside the cabin of your vehicle.
  • HDR (high dynamic range) isn’t necessary, but it does make for more detailed video because of better contrast. It also generally indicates richer color.
  • WDR (wide dynamic range) is much like above, except it usually refers to only color and not contrast.
  • Do you need 4K UHD? It’s easy to fall victim to the specsmanship of a higher-res image. In our tests, the gain in detail from 4K video (2160p) can vary, but the storage investment is consistently heavy: four times the storage of 1080p, or around 1GB for every three minutes of video. For most purposes,1080p is the more frugal everyday choice. Don’t avoid 4K UHD—which is a feature in our best overall picks—but read the reviews first so you know whether the cost is justified.

Recording options

  • Continuous loop recording to minimize storage requirements. Video is recorded, then immediately overwritten at a specified interval unless saved. Video is saved (protected from overwriting) automatically when an incident is detected. Most dash cams will overwrite older recordings when they run out of space. 
  • Cloud storage is available with a few dash cams. Uploading to the cloud in real time is a nice hedge against damage and theft—assuming the thief isn’t smart enough to kill the dash cam immediately. It’s handy for those managing fleets of vehicles, too, as incident videos are safely stashed online.
  • Self-powered recording when power fails, so that you can be sure to capture all of an incident. This requires a battery or large super-capacitor (see below in “Power connections”). The camera should have a setting that allows you to specify how long the camera runs off 12-volt before shutting down. 
  • Incident recording triggered by impact (G) sensors, or when in parking mode (see below), by motion detection.
  • MicroSD card storage. Pricier dash cams bundle a storage card. Some come with larger cards, and some budget models come without. There are often bundles available with the card. Some cameras opt for hard-wired internal storage, like the Miofive 4K.

Power connections

Something most people don’t consider before they buy is that dash cams connect to a power source in your car via a physical cable. That cable can sometimes be tucked out of the way, but more likely than not you’ll have loose cable hanging somewhere. You can sometimes fix this with a longer or shorter cable (or a professional installation). Keep that in mind as you consider your power options:

  • Auxiliary 12-volt power (adequate): Most vendors have stuck with powering their dash cams via the auxiliary 12-volt power socket (also known as the cigarette lighter) and USB cables. It can lead to an unsightly cable run, and the power disappears when you turn off the car, but it’s universal and easy.
  • Hard-wired 12-volt power (better): Most vendors offer kits that connect the dash cam directly to a constant 12-volt source in your wiring harness behind the dash. This provides always-on power, but it isn’t particularly easy to install.
  • OBD-II 12-volt power (better): Outliers like the Owl and PureCam use the OBD-II connector for constant 12-volt power. OBD-II-to-USB power cables are now available separately (as an alternative to hardwiring kits that draw constant 12-volt power from the wiring harness). I recommend one with a USB Type-A port, which will accommodate any dash cam. Most of those with captive cables I’ve seen are mini-USB. The only downside is a long cable run, as the OBD-II port is usually next to the driver’s left knee, under the dash.
  • Rearview 12-volt power (better): Another option that features a super-short cable run is powering your dash cam using your auto-dimming rearview mirror. You can find adapters for this at Dongar Technologies. If your car qualifies, this is by far your best option.
  • Battery (or super-capacitor) power: Many dash cams come with super-capacitors, which allow the dash cam to operate for a brief period after losing regular power—such as during a collision. They don’t record for very long though, and sometimes not at all. A battery gives you a better chance of recording an entire incident, even when 12-volt power is lost. If run time is sufficient, it also allows you to record for a while with the car turned off. 

Other handy features

  • Phone connectivity is not essential, but can make offloading video and configuring the dash cam easier. We’ve noticed just recently (12/15/2020) that phone apps are starting to require later versions of Android. If you’re rocking anything older than 8, keep that in mind.
  • GPS: This feature could be the tipping point if you use your captured video to resolve a dispute. Watermarking the video is common, but when embedded into the video, GPS info is also immensely useful for mapping your travels. GPS will also automatically set the time in better cameras.
  • Parking monitoring: This can mean two things. Running the dash cam continuously in low frame-rate mode to save card space and battery, or running in standby mode and awakening when motion or g-forces are detected. We’ve reviewed cameras that have a battery large enough to monitor the car with the 12-volt turned off for several days, but most cameras require a constant 12-volt source.

How we test dash cams

Few people are as well situated geographically as I am to test dash cams. Within two blocks there are major four- and six-lane thoroughfares, numerous bike lanes, joggers, dog walkers, oblivious ear-budded pedestrians, and a major bus nexus serving both public and private coaches. The opportunities for near-accidents are endless.

For every dash cam, I mount it in my car, judging the ease and convenience of doing so. Tip: Many dash cams rely on adhesive for mounting to your windshield. Hot conditions can make it next to impossible to remove the film that protects the adhesive. Remove the film in a cool environment, or place it in the fridge for a minute or two before installing it.

I put each dash cam through several days’ and nights’ worth of driving, recording video and judging the image quality. All the dash cams I’ve reviewed in the last couple of years take good daytime video. However, night video is often plagued by murky shadows and headlight flare. That said, quality is improving rapidly with the introduction of new sensors. Take a close look at the night shots in each review. 

I try all the features: Buttons, display controls, apps. Aside from rear-view support and GPS, the most salient differences between the products are the interface controls and extra features, such as the lane departure and collision warnings that you get with some models. I try them…and I turn them off. In practice, they usually tell me I’m changing lanes, in heavy traffic, or have just been cut off. I know that. Additionally, the collision warnings generally come too late to do anything but distract you at exactly the wrong time. 

Note that the one thing I can’t relate to you is the longevity of any dash cam, as my testing occurs over a relatively short amount of time. Please check user reviews on various sites and pay attention to the warranty.

FAQ


1.

Do I really need a dash cam?

The use of dash cams in consumer vehicles is a relatively recent trend, and people have been driving just fine without them for a long time. However, while it might not be necessary, there are legitimate benefits to using a dash cam in your car. 

Many people who purchase and install dash cams use them as a type of insurance policy for their actions and those of others on the road. Dash cams can protect you from other drivers in a number of ways. They can help you prove your innocence in the event of an accident. They may also act as a deterrent against aggressive drivers. And some dash cams come with features that have motion-sensor parking modes that can record any possible hit-and-runs or thefts while you are away from your car.

In the end, it’s ultimately up to you as to whether you believe the possible benefits of buying and using a dash cam are worth the investment.

2.

Is it legal to use a dash cam?

Yes, in all U.S. states, dash cams are legal. However, it’s best to check with your particular state’s traffic laws to determine what type of dash cam you should use. For example, not all states allow a dash cam to be mounted to a windshield—it’s best to do a little research before you buy.

3.

Will a dash cam drain my car battery?

Probably not. And by that, we mean almost certainly not. A standard dash cam with front and rear coverage, motion detection, and Wi-Fi all operating while your car is parked will only consume about 0.25 to 0.45 amps per hour. A typical small or midsize car battery is rated at 45 amp hours. This means that while your car is turned off it will take a few days for your car battery to get low from powering your dash cam.

Another feature that’s becoming more common in dash cams is a low-voltage cutoff as a safeguard against dead batteries. This feature automatically shuts-down your dash cam if it senses that the power drops below a certain threshold. So you can rest assured knowing that your dash cam won’t kill your car battery.

4.

How much storage should I have for my dash cam?

Dash cams use removable SD or microSD cards to store recorded data. Unlike your phone or mobile device, which stops you from adding more pictures or videos when the memory is full, a dash cam instead just uses an overwrite function to record over old data. Therefore, you shouldn’t have to worry about your dash cam shutting off because the memory card is full. 

That being said, if you want to ensure that you aren’t overwriting valuable old data, you’ll want to get an adequate-sized memory card, and consider the resolution at which the camera captures the video. 4K recordings take up a lot more space than 1080p recordings.

We believe that the sweet spot for a memory card is somewhere around 128GB. Even if you are recording in 4K, this will allow you to record continuously for around five hours, or around 20 hours if you record at 1080p. Thankfully though, memory cards are relatively cheap and you won’t need to break the bank if you opt for even more storage capacity.

Dash Cams

Windows 11 starts forcing OneDrive backups without asking permission

25 June 2024 at 14:01

Microsoft has made a questionable change in Windows 11 that takes away your freedom of choice for OneDrive backups.

Without prior notice or explanation, Microsoft now force activates the automatic folder backup with OneDrive feature when you set up a new computer, all without asking you for permission.

When you set up a new Windows computer while connected to the internet and using a Microsoft account, you usually see OneDrive on your desktop. The app synchronizes data from folders—such as images, documents, music, and videos—which can be useful in certain cases.

Related story: Microsoft blocks popular method to install Windows 11 without an account

In the worst-case scenario, however, you may set up Windows and immediately be confronted with a desktop that’s cluttered with files and folders. This is likely to cause all kinds of frustration.

Previously, you had to explicitly activate automatic folder backups, and Microsoft would ping you with recurring notifications to remind you of the feature if it wasn’t enabled.

Now, however, Microsoft seems to have assumed that everyone wants OneDrive backups activated by default, thus forcing it on without exception. You may not even realize it until you set up a new computer and suddenly see all your old files again.

How to deactivate OneDrive backups

If you don’t want your Windows computer to back up everything on your desktop—or in other folders—to OneDrive, you can deactivate it:

get windows 11 pro for cheap

Windows 11 Pro

Windows 11 Pro

Right-click on the OneDrive icon at the bottom right of your taskbar notification area. (If you can’t find the icon directly, you may need to expand the field by clicking the little arrow.) Then, go to the settings gear icon and select Settings.

Click the Sync and backup section in the left sidebar, then select Manage backup. Now deactivate all the folders that you don’t want backed up to OneDrive, then confirm the changes.

If you have an older version of OneDrive with the classic tabbed interface, go to the Backup tab and click Manage backup and then Stop backup. You will need to confirm the setting again.

Alternatively, you can uninstall OneDrive altogether if you don’t want to use automatic backups at all. This would be the simplest solution, but Microsoft might not like it at all.

More on this: The best Microsoft OneDrive tricks you should know

Windows

WordPad disappears from Windows 11, but this trick brings it back

25 June 2024 at 13:45

In September 2023, Microsoft announced the surprising end of their free text editing program. For many, WordPad was a simple but useful alternative to Microsoft Word—but it will no longer be offered in future versions of Windows.

Windows 11 24H2 will mark the final end for WordPad, as the AI features of that Windows version will delete legacy features like the free text editors. The update is due to be released this fall.

You’ll likely be better off switching to other free apps such as LibreOffice, but it just won’t be the same. If you find that you still prefer WordPad and want to keep using it, here’s a method you can use.

How to get WordPad back in Windows 11

It’s not that difficult to bring WordPad back to Windows 11. All you need is the appropriate files from an older version of Windows before 24H2, one that still supports WordPad. (The folder for WordPad should still be present in 24H2, but without the wordpad.exe.)

get windows 11 pro for cheap

Windows 11 Pro

Windows 11 Pro

On a Windows computer of your choice with Windows 11 version 23H2 or older, enter this file path in the address bar of Explorer:

C:\Program Files\Windows NT\Accessories

Here, you’ll see three things: WordpadFilter.dll, wordpad.exe, and a localization folder (e.g., en-US).

Copy all three to a USB stick or external data drive. Take it to the computer that no longer has WordPad, then paste everything into any folder. It doesn’t matter where, but we recommend choosing a permanent location and creating a new folder called WordPad.

After everything is pasted, right-click on the wordpad.exe file in the folder and select Show more options. Go to Send to and then Desktop (create shortcut) to create a shortcut.

Copy the newly created shortcut and go here in Explorer:

C:\Program Files\Data\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Program Files

Paste the shortcut there and rename it if necessary.

Next, open the Start menu, click All apps, and scroll down to find WordPad. Now you can pin it to the Start menu or the taskbar. (This last step is necessary because WordPad won’t appear in the search results if it was installed this way.)

You should also specify in the app settings that WordPad can be used to open documents. To do this, go to Settings > Apps > Default apps and select WordPad from the list. For example, you can open all RTF documents with WordPad.

Further reading: The best open source apps for Windows

Is this method safe for WordPad in Windows 11 24H2?

Installing WordPad in Windows 11 is safe because you’re using official Microsoft files. However, you should be aware that WordPad won’t receive any feature or security updates in future versions of Windows.

So, if the app becomes buggy or incompatible with other elements over time, you will have no choice but to give up WordPad. It’s also possible that documents from newer Microsoft Office versions will no longer be able to be opened with WordPad at some point.

Until then, however, you can at least keep using and making the most of this free text editor for now with this method.

Keep reading: These Windows features are disappearing soon

Windows

How to get Amazon Prime for free for Prime Day

25 June 2024 at 13:41

Amazon’s Summer Prime Day sale is happening once again on July 16 and 17, and as always, you’ll need to be a Prime member to partake of the deals. Prime is Amazon’s $139-per-year service that provides two-day shipping on all orders, as well as a ton of extras like the Kindle lending library and Prime Video. (See our rundown of the top 10 Amazon Prime benefits to learn more.)

The good news is that you may not need to pay for membership at all if you just want it long enough to take advantage of Amazon’s annual shopping extravaganza. Here are a few ways to get a short-term Prime membership to cash in on the savings.

Method One: The standard 30-day free trial

If you’ve never tried Amazon Prime or haven’t tried it in a while, you may be eligible for a free, 30-day trial. After the 30 days, Amazon will charge you for the membership—either $15 per month or $139 per year—so don’t forget to cancel before the trial is up. (Set a calendar reminder if you have to!)

Figuring out if you’re eligible is simple. Just sign in to your Amazon account and visit the Prime membership landing page. If you see a button that says Try Prime, click it to sign up. If the button says Get started, then you’ve been to the well one too many times recently, and you’ll have to wait to become eligible again.

Method Two: Prime Student 6-month free trial

Amazon has a student program that offers both a free trial that lasts for six months and 50 percent off the regular price for Prime membership. If you’re in college, Prime Day could be a great time to gear up.

primestudent
Amazon’s Prime Student signup option.
primestudent
Amazon’s Prime Student signup option.
primestudent
Amazon’s Prime Student signup option.

To qualify for Prime Student, you need to be enrolled in at least one course in an institution in the United States or Puerto Rico, provide proof of enrollment if requested, and a valid .EDU email address. To get started, go to the Prime Student landing page and click Start your 6-month trial.

After your trial is up, Prime Student costs $7.50 per month or $69 per year. Make sure you mark the end date on your calendar (or just cancel any time after Prime Day), and your membership will continue to the end of the trial period. The Prime Student discounted rate is good for up to four years.

Other avenues for free Amazon Prime

There are other ways to get Prime for free as well, but they’re not as straightforward. You can, for example, open a new account with a different email address, and then try Prime on that new account. Keep in mind, however, that means you have to secure another account containing all your payment information.

amazonprimevisa

The Amazon Prime Rewards Visa Signature card.

amazonprimevisa

The Amazon Prime Rewards Visa Signature card.

amazonprimevisa

The Amazon Prime Rewards Visa Signature card.

If someone in your house is already subscribed to Prime, they can share it with your account. Amazon allows you to share a Prime membership with other members of your household, including one other adult and up to four kids aged 13 to 17. Teen accounts don’t get to share Prime exclusive deals, but the second adult account does. This is only an option for family (or trusted friends), as both adult accounts must agree to share the same payment details. 

You can also sign up for Prime and apply for the Amazon Prime Rewards Visa card, which gives you 5 percent cash-back on Amazon and Whole Foods purchases. If you’re already buying at least $2,400 per year from Amazon and Whole Foods combined, this is an easy way to have your credit card benefits pay for your Prime membership.

How to cancel an Amazon Prime free trial

Some of you might love Prime or Prime Student so much that you stick with it to get that free shipping and other perks. But if you’re a hardcore deal hunter who just wants to bail from Prime when the deals are gone, here’s what to do.

The standard way to dump Prime is to hover over your account name in the upper-right corner of any Amazon page, and then select Your Prime Membership from the drop-down menu. You can then cancel on the next page.

An easier way, however, is just to go straight to this Amazon help page and click End Membership. Regardless of how you begin the cancellation process, it’s straightforward—you’re free and clear once you’ve done it.

Editor’s note: This article was last updated in June 2024 to reflect the latest dates for Prime Day.

Consumer Electronics, Online Services

Get 15 free PC games from Amazon in the leadup to Prime Day

25 June 2024 at 13:11

Amazon recently announced that this year’s Prime Day will take place on Tuesday, July 16 and Wednesday, July 17. Prime Gaming members can once again look forward to a number of offers.

But there’s already a lot to get in the run-up to Prime Day. With Prime Gaming, you can get a total of 15 PC games completely free of charge from now until July 16.

Here’s an overview of all the free titles with their respective launch dates:

  • Deceive Inc – available now
  • Tearstone: Thieves of the Heart – available now
  • The Invisible Hand – available now
  • Call of Juarez – available now
  • Forager – from June 27
  • Card Shark from June 27
  • Heaven Dust 2 from June 27
  • Soulstice from June 27
  • Wall World from July 3
  • Hitman: Absolution from July 3
  • Call of Juarez: Bound in Blood from July 3
  • STAR WARS™: Knights of the Old Republic™ II – The Sith Lords from July 3
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge from July 3
  • Alex Kidd in Miracle World DX from July 3
  • Samurai Bringer from July 3

Which Prime Gaming titles are worthwhile?

Which of these games are worthwhile depends on your own taste, of course. Hitman is always a fun, murderous puzzle!.

The action game Soulstice could also be worthwhile. Even though the title was somewhat under the radar at the time of its release, you get action-packed battles and an exciting setting in which two sisters have to prove themselves in boss battles against fantasy creatures.

For fans of the old school, there’s also Call of Juarez and Call of Juarez: Bound in Blood. The acclaimed game series from Techland delights with an intense western experience, including duels with classic shooting irons.

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II is also highly recommended if you like old-school role-playing games. The ‘Star Wars’ setting is of course also a plus point, as you can wield a lightsaber as a Jedi or alternatively attack your enemies with laser pistols.

How do I get the free games?

To get all the free games, you need a Prime subscription that is valid for this period. (Head here for a free 30-day Amazon Prime trial.) Then all you have to do is go to the Prime Gaming page and pick up free codes for the titles shown until the end of the promotion.

You can then redeem the codes on popular gaming platforms such as Steam, Epic, or the Amazon Games app.

Gaming

Get this LED lantern for your next power outage, just $20 right now

25 June 2024 at 12:05

You should always have a few things in your home in case of emergency, and a powerful light source is high on that list. With this battery-powered LED lantern on sale right now for just $20, now’s the perfect time to grab one for your home if you don’t have one already.

In fact, it’s so reasonably priced that you may want to grab a few. Why not keep one at home, one in your car, and one to take with you when you go camping? It’s a versatile lantern with plenty of uses.

The LE 1000LM offers high brightness and dimmable lighting, making it suitable for various situations. With a long press of the button, you can adjust the brightness up to 1,000 lumens, able to illuminate an entire campsite or dim down just enough to read a book.

It can switch between daylight white and warm white, and it also has a flashing mode to help you be seen in emergency scenarios.

You’ll need three D alkaline batteries to power up this lantern, and it’ll last for up to 12 hours at the highest brightness. So, if you’re going camping, make sure to take a bunch of spare batteries with you.

The IPX4 water resistance rating means this lantern can withstand splashes of water from any angle, making it suitable for use in rainy or snowy conditions. It’s also not very large, measuring 7.24 x 3.46 inches, so it won’t take up a lot of space.

Whether you’re planning an outdoorsy adventure or prepping for a power outage that you hope never comes, you don’t want to miss out on this deal. At just $20, this battery-powered LED lantern is worth it.

This LED lantern is only $20 right now Lighting

This $42 power bank can charge your laptop in the blink of an eye

25 June 2024 at 11:31

I used to worry constantly about my laptop and phone running out of battery while I’m out, but that anxiety disappeared after I got myself a good power bank—like one by Baseus.

This particular Baseus power bank is just $42 right now if you clip the 25% Amazon coupon and apply the 5% promo code. Down from its normal price of $80, that’s a real bargain!

With a substantial 65W Power Delivery output, this power bank can charge your laptop or your phone via USB-C, making it incredibly versatile. Whether you’re juggling work on your laptop or just need a quick boost for your phone, this power bank has you covered.

The colossal 20,000mAh capacity means you can fully charge your phone roughly three times or your laptop about once. It’s perfect for extended travel where access to outlets might be limited (e.g., flights).

The power bank has one 65W PD USB-C port and two 30W QC USB-A ports. (Technically, you can charge three devices simultaneously, but you won’t get the same speed you would with only one device plugged in.)

You don’t want to miss this deal for a $42 Baseus Power Bank! And don’t forget to clip the on-page Amazon coupon and use the special promo code (44P53777) at checkout to get the best price.

The Baseus power bank is only $42 right now Mobile Phone Chargers

Logitech’s new gaming keyboard finally gets the price right

25 June 2024 at 11:19

I’ve reviewed several Logitech gaming keyboards and I usually come away less than impressed. The company tends to bank on its brand and legacy to sell high-priced hardware, while falling far short in features and especially software.

Which is why the new Logitech G515 Lightspeed TKL keyboard intrigues me by the simple fact of it being reasonably priced.

At $140 for a wireless gaming keyboard, the G515 is decidedly average as a value play—but it’s nearly $100 cheaper than the G915 TKL, a design that’s years old and far from competitive even when it came out, so someone at Logitech is paying attention to the larger market.

With a low-profile build and switches compatible with low-profile keycaps on the Cherry-style stem, it offers at least some options for customization. Logitech also built in some RGB lighting and topped it off with high-quality PBT keycaps, a feature that even some premium gaming keyboards omit. (Lookin’ at you, Razer BlackWidow.)

The G515 is a bit chunky for “low-profile,” but then again it doesn’t take much to feel skinny next to most of the gaming keyboards on the market, which might be charitably called “big-boned.”

Despite the skinny dimensions, the proprietary GL switches feature 1.3mm of travel, which is less than half of a standard MX switch but far more than most of the trendy thin keyboards and laptop-style designs.

The G515 includes Logitech’s standard—and very good—tri-mode wireless with Bluetooth and a 2.4GHz dongle plus multi-device support. Battery life is rated at “up to 36 hours,” though that’s presumably with the full light show active. If you can resist the RGB bling, it should go for weeks or months.

The G515 is available in black or white, with linear (smooth) or tactile (slight bump) switch options. Sadly, there’s no hot-swap capability. The keyboard should be showing up in online and brick-and-mortar retailers very soon.

Keyboards

This portable 2K gaming monitor is great for laptops — and only $144

25 June 2024 at 11:02

If you frequently travel or work from coffee shops, the Uperfect 2K Portable Gaming Monitor is a game changer because you can be more productive. Now available for just $144 at Amazon, down from $240, this monitor offers a blend of high performance and portability.

The Uperfect monitor features a stunning 2K resolution (2560×1600) and a 120Hz refresh rate, making this monitor suitable for more than just work—a solid option for all but the most hardcore of gamers.

This 16-inch display is surprisingly slim at just 0.4 inches thick and weighs only 1.7 pounds, which means you can easily slip this into a bag with your laptop without much of a fit issue.

One really cool thing about this monitor is that it has an IPS matte screen with a high contrast ratio, delivering rich colors and great picture quality. You’ll also get decreased reflections and fingerprints with this type of panel, a definite win since you’ll be handling this one a lot.

Another thing we love about it is that you don’t have to use it as a portable monitor if you don’t want to. It has a VESA mount, so you can just set it up at home on your wall or on a monitor arm.

Equipped with two full-featured USB Type-C ports and one Mini HDMI port, a single USB-C cable is all you need for power supply and display signal transmission. It also has built-in speakers and a 3.5mm audio jack.

Uperfect's 2K portable monitor is just $144 Monitors

How to mirror your smartphone display on your PC monitor

25 June 2024 at 10:30

Smartphones are a great convenience and all. But sometimes it’s a hassle to have to juggle activity on both your phone and your PC. Fortunately, Windows allows you to access your phone’s display on your computer monitor and interact with it in real time, so you only have to keep your eyes on one screen. Here’s how.

Further reading: The best monitors

1. Activate wireless display

The first step is to prepare the Windows computer for wireless transmission. To do this, open the search by clicking on the magnifying glass icon in the taskbar.

Next, type optional features into the search field, and click on the match to open the Settings app. There, click on the “View features” button in the top right-hand corner.

Windows optional features
Windows optional features

Foundry

Windows optional features

Foundry

Foundry

2. Install the required feature

Then tick the “Wireless display” checkbox and confirm the process by clicking the “Next” and “Add” buttons.

optional features > wireless display
optional features > wireless display

Foundry

optional features > wireless display

Foundry

Foundry

3. Establish connection

Then start the newly added “Connect to a wireless display” application. You can use the Windows search again to do this. In the “Settings” app, click on the “Connect” button on the right next to “Connect to a wireless screen.”

If this function does not appear for you, check whether your PC and smartphone are in the same WLAN.

connect to a wireless display
connect to a wireless display

Foundry

connect to a wireless display

Foundry

Foundry

4. Start mirroring on the smartphone

While the “Connect” app remains open on the Windows PC with a large, blue background, switch to your Android device. Swipe down from the top of the screen to open the quick access bar.

The menu item for mirroring the smartphone display has different names depending on the manufacturer and Android version. The function may appear as “Transfer” or “Transfer screen,” but also as “Smartview,” “Screen Mirroring,” or “Screencast.”

Spiegelung auf dem Smartphone starten
Spiegelung auf dem Smartphone starten

IDG

Spiegelung auf dem Smartphone starten

IDG

IDG

If you do not see a corresponding option in the quick access bar, you can also find it in the settings under “Display.” As soon as you have activated the function on your mobile device, the Windows computer will appear in the list of display devices.

Select it with a tap to establish a connection. An icon in the status bar then indicates that the screen content is being transferred. As long as the screen is mirrored, you will see the content of your Android device in the “Connect” app on the Windows PC.

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HMA VPN review: An easy-to-use VPN with servers in every corner of the world

25 June 2024 at 09:00
At a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Easy-to-use interface
  • Decent speeds
  • Independently verified no-logs audit

Cons

  • Some features not available for all platforms
  • Can’t unblock most streaming services
  • Expensive monthly subscription

Our Verdict

HMA VPN comes with an easy-to-use interface, extensive global server network, and decent enough speeds. However, it’s lacking some common features that experienced VPN users want, and the features that are included aren’t available on every OS platform.

Price When Reviewed

$11.99

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HMA VPN — aka Hide My Ass! — has seemingly been around forever. Founded in 2005, by a high-school tech wiz who just wanted to game at school, it has since grown into a successful premium VPN service.

HMA now offers a sprawling network of over 1,100 servers across 297 country locations. That’s a far cry from the single URL-based VPN it used to be. But can this old ass learn new tricks? I pin the tail on this VPN to see if it really does live up to its humorous name.

HMA VPN in brief:

  • P2P allowed: Yes
  • Simultaneous device connections: 5
  • Business location: London, United Kingdom
  • Number of servers: 1,100+
  • Number of country locations: 297
  • Cost: $11.99 per month or $59.88 for one year

Further reading: See our roundup of the best VPN services to learn about competing products.

What are HMA VPN’s features and services?

HMA VPN

HMA VPN has one of the cleanest user interfaces of any VPN on the market.

HMA VPN

HMA VPN has one of the cleanest user interfaces of any VPN on the market.

Sam Singleton

HMA VPN

HMA VPN has one of the cleanest user interfaces of any VPN on the market.

Sam Singleton

Sam Singleton

When you first open up HMA VPN you notice right off the bat how simple it all looks. That’s simple in a good way, I mean. There is a large on/off switch in the middle with another large button to choose your location. There is also an animated hipster-looking donkey at the top — it’s an ass for “Hide My Ass!”, get it? Clever. Anyways, that’s basically it. The whole app is extremely easy to use and straightforward. It’s a refreshing change of pace from the overly complicated interfaces of other VPNs that seem to want to bombard you with as much data as possible.

There is a More button that brings up a side menu with, as you guessed it, more info about your connection. This includes up and down data traffic and connection preferences for kill switches and the auto-connect feature.

HMA VPN

HMA VPN doesn’t have a lot of user settings to choose from, but the kill switch and IP shuffler are highlights.

HMA VPN

HMA VPN doesn’t have a lot of user settings to choose from, but the kill switch and IP shuffler are highlights.

Sam Singleton

HMA VPN

HMA VPN doesn’t have a lot of user settings to choose from, but the kill switch and IP shuffler are highlights.

Sam Singleton

Sam Singleton

Click on the gear icon at the top left of the home screen and it brings up the settings menu. Here is where simplicity turns into inadequacy. There aren’t many features to speak of, especially for a premium VPN that charges what HMA does.

You do get comprehensive kill switch functionality. There is both an overall kill switch to restrict all traffic to your device should your VPN connection cut-out, as well as an app kill switch to choose only specific apps to restrict after an unexpected disconnection.

HMA VPN

HMA VPN only comes with the split tunneling feature on its Android app.

HMA VPN

HMA VPN only comes with the split tunneling feature on its Android app.

Sam Singleton

HMA VPN

HMA VPN only comes with the split tunneling feature on its Android app.

Sam Singleton

Sam Singleton

Other advanced features are available on different OS platforms, as well. For example, Android users will have access to a split tunneling feature, which is unavailable for PC users. Split tunneling is a useful feature that allows you to designate which apps will use the VPN connection and which will stay separate. I’m surprised and a little frustrated that HMA only supports the feature for Android users, as most premium VPNs nowadays offer it for multiple platforms.

One unique feature that HMA does include is an IP shuffler. This periodically randomizes and changes your IP address so that it’s harder for anyone to track your location. I actually really like the idea of this extra security measure and used it without issue during my entire testing process. You can customize the randomization time periods from daily all the way down to 1 minute.

Despite these nifty extras, it does feel as if HMA VPN is lacking some key VPN features. The absence of multi-hop, ad- and tracker-blocking, and split tunneling for all platforms is a letdown. Also, power users will be disappointed that there aren’t more tweakable configuration options or things such as Smart DNS and dedicated IP.

In regards to servers, HMA VPN comes with a decent, if unexceptional 1,100 plus total servers. What’s quite nice, however, is the server country spread. It provides a mixture of physical and virtual servers across 297 country locations, spanning most of the world. So even if you’re a Gibraltarian wanting to connect to your home country, there’s a server for you. And if you happen to be the Pope, there’s a Vatican server for you, as well.

One unique feature that HMA includes is an IP shuffler that periodically randomizes and changes your IP address so that it’s harder for anyone to track your location

How much does HMA VPN cost?

HMA VPN

HMA VPN comes in monthly, one-year, and three-year subscription plans.

HMA VPN

HMA VPN comes in monthly, one-year, and three-year subscription plans.

HMA

HMA VPN

HMA VPN comes in monthly, one-year, and three-year subscription plans.

HMA

HMA

HMA offers its VPN subscription in monthly, one-year, and three-year plans. The monthly plan starts at $11.99 per month, which is admittedly expensive for what you’re getting. Similarly priced top VPNs such as NordVPN ($12.99 per month) and ExpressVPN ($12.95 per month) give you much more in regards to extra features and OS availability.

However, switch to the annual plan for $59.88 per year, or $4.99 per month, and things become a lot more affordable — roughly in line with most other premium VPN services. If you decide to opt for the three-year plan it gets even cheaper at $107.64, or $2.99 per month. Three years is a long commitment though, especially in the fast-moving VPN market. If you just want to get your toes wet to see how you like HMA VPN, it does offer a 7-day free trial, as well.

It’s worth noting that all of these subscription prices come with five simultaneous device connections. If you wish for more, every subscription tier also offers the option for 10 connections for a little bit less than double the price.

Payments can be made with a credit card and PayPal.

How is HMA VPN’s performance?

When testing a VPN’s speeds I measure connection speeds across its servers in six different countries around the world and then compare them to my baseline internet speed.

HMA VPN’s speeds were passable. During the tests, HMA VPN was able to maintain 55 percent of the base download speed and 54 percent of the base upload speed. That puts it right in the middle of the pack, but well shy of the fastest VPNs.

I noticed that HMA’s speeds were markedly better for servers located physically closer to me than those further away. That may seem like an obvious outcome, but the differences were quite drastic. Servers in my same country maintained speeds well in excess of 80 percent of my base speeds while far-away servers in countries such as South Africa and Australia were dramatically slower — both countries’ servers clocked in below 20 percent of the base.

Of course, physical distance is just one of many factors that can lead to different speed outcomes. Others include: time of day, server load, server architecture, fluctuations in your own home connection, etc. It’s best to take not just these results, but all VPN speed results with a grain of salt. I simply include them here to help give some guideposts as to what you might expect. Overall, I believe that HMA’s speeds are just fine for most users.

When it comes to streaming, I can’t recommend HMA VPN as a good way to unblock geo-restricted content. I couldn’t get U.S. Netflix to work no matter how many different U.S. servers I tried. I was able to very occasionally access Disney Plus and Amazon Prime, but I had to dig around to find a server that worked. Other streaming services such as Hulu and HBO Max were all unsuccessful as well.

How is HMA VPN’s security and privacy?

HMA VPN uses industry-standard AES-256 encryption and the Windows app has access to the WireGuard, OpenVPN, and its own proprietary Mimic protocols. The Android app only comes with OpenVPN.

HMA VPN

WireGuard, OpenVPN, and HMA’s own Mimic are all available protocol options.

HMA VPN

WireGuard, OpenVPN, and HMA’s own Mimic are all available protocol options.

Sam Singleton

HMA VPN

WireGuard, OpenVPN, and HMA’s own Mimic are all available protocol options.

Sam Singleton

Sam Singleton

HMA’s Mimic protocol was developed by parent company Avast RSO (makers of the Avast antivirus software) as a way to bypass VPN restrictions. As the software is closed-source and I am not currently located in a country that has restricted internet usage, I couldn’t truly put it to the test. However, I always recommend WireGuard as my go-to protocol due to its open-source nature and excellent mix of speed and security.

When it comes to user privacy, HMA VPN has made huge strides in recent years. Prior to major updates to its privacy practices in 2019, HMA was criticized for dubiously storing user data such as IP address, connection timestamps, and some online activity. After the changes, the company switched to a no-logs policy, which it then backed up with an independent audit conducted by VerSprite a year later. 

That audit confirmed that HMA does not collect any data logs on users. According to the new privacy policy, it only keeps data regarding account information for billing and customer service purposes, approximate individual bandwidth usage to assist with network capacity improvements, and anonymous error reports.

While the switch over to a no-logs policy was a necessity, the independent audit was a welcomed addition. However, it has now been four years since that audit took place and I’d like to see the service undergo more regular audits in the future. Similarly, I’d like to see HMA VPN make the switch to RAM-only diskless servers, which are much safer and quickly becoming an industry standard among top VPNs.

HMA is owned by parent company Avast Group, and is headquartered in London, United Kingdom. The country unfortunately has mandatory data retention laws and is a member nation of multiple signals intelligence sharing agreements such as Five, Nine, and 14 Eyes alliances. Thankfully, the company’s no-logs policy mitigates the chance for user data to be collected by these governments.

Is HMA VPN worth it?

The rebranding to a more corporate sounding name doesn’t take away from the charm of the HMA VPN service. It has a well thought-out and friendly interface, making it quick and easy to get connected. There are also plenty of country locations to choose from and the speeds across most servers is above average.

The bones for a great VPN are here, but without meatier features such as split tunneling and multi-hop across all apps, it simply can’t compete against the best services such as ExpressVPN and NordVPN. Hopefully parent company Avast continues to improve upon this time-honored VPN service in the future.

Editor’s note: Because online services are often iterative, gaining new features and performance improvements over time, this review is subject to change in order to accurately reflect the current state of the service. Any changes to text or our final review verdict will be noted at the top of this article.

VPN

Yawn. Windows’ Copilot+ AI features feel like early tech demos at best

25 June 2024 at 06:30

Microsoft, Qualcomm, and their PC-manufacturing partners are seriously hyping Copilot+ PCs. They’d have you believe that these “next-generation AI laptops” are packed with AI smarts and useful features.

But, while the hardware for AI tasks is ready in these laptops, the actual features built into Windows aren’t making full use of it.

We’re in a weird position. We’re excited about these laptops because they’re the first seriously impressive Windows on Arm laptops. We’re excited about long battery life with snappy performance. And we’re excited that next-generation Intel Lunar Lake hardware is looking like a huge leap for traditional x86 laptops.

But we’re not excited about all these at-launch AI features being pushed by marketing campaigns. Snapdragon X Elite-powered PCs might be intriguing, but if you’re excited about an immediate AI upgrade to your Windows experience, you’re going to be disappointed. Here’s why.

Further reading: Microsoft Surface Pro 7 review: A new long-lasting, Qualcomm-powered era for Windows laptops

Copilot+ PC? More like Copilot- PC

The name “Copilot+ PC” conjures to mind a kind of PC with extra features relating to Microsoft’s Copilot AI chatbot. After all, “Copilot Pro” is a paid subscription that upgrades the Copilot chatbot experience.

That’s not the case at all. A Copilot+ PC offers no extra Copilot upgrades. You get a Copilot key on the keyboard, which first-generation “AI laptops” with Intel Meteor Lake hardware have been offering for many months now. That’s it. Copilot doesn’t run offline or use the new integrated neural processing unit (NPU) hardware to do anything at all.

In fact, the situation is much more dire than that. These machines ship with a new Copilot app experience—it’s no longer a sidebar, but rather a normal floating desktop window. That’s fine. But, as Tom Warren noted for The Verge, the new Copilot app experience is a step back. You can’t tell it to “turn on Dark Mode” or “empty the Recycle Bin” anymore.

Copilot message no dark mode
Copilot message no dark mode

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Copilot message no dark mode

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Microsoft may eventually improve the Windows integration in this new Copilot app. And, even if not, this new Copilot experience will eventually come to all Windows 11 PCs. But, at launch, Copilot is surprisingly less powerful on a Copilot+ PC than it is on a standard Windows 11 PC.

It also doesn’t have those fancy GPT-4o features that Microsoft showed off, where it can see your screen and talk you through Minecraft gameplay, for example. Those features will arrive at some point in the future—but when they do, they won’t need Copilot+ PC hardware. That impressive demo will work on all Windows 11 PCs.

AI image generation needs a Microsoft account and internet connection

A Copilot+ PC has some extra AI image generation tools integrated into various apps throughout Windows:

  • Paint has a Cocreator tool that can generate an image as you draw, modifying it to fit your drawing.
  • Photos has a Restyle tool that will let you use generative AI as a “filter” for your image. For example, taking a photo and making it look like it was a watercolor painting.
  • Photos also has an Image Generator feature that generates images to match your text prompts.

Here’s the thing: While these tools all use the NPU inside a Copilot+ PC, none of them work offline. They require a Microsoft account and an active internet connection to work. Why? To check your images for “AI safety” before showing them to you.

Image generation Microsoft account required message
Image generation Microsoft account required message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Image generation Microsoft account required message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Without getting into whether that’s necessary or not, one thing is clear: There’s no point to running these tools on your computer’s hardware if they also require a cloud service to function. You might as well use a cloud-based AI image generation tool running in a powerful data center somewhere. You’ll get better, more realistic results.

The introduction of these new tools has muddied the AI experience on Windows 11. All of the above tools sit alongside other AI image generation tools that do use Microsoft’s cloud servers. For example, the Image Creator in Microsoft Paint uses the cloud, while the Image Creator in Photos uses your PC’s local hardware.

On a Copilot+ PC, Windows contains a confusing mishmash of AI features that may or may not use the PC’s hardware and may or may not use Microsoft’s cloud services.

Live Captions gains some tricks, but already runs on all Windows 11 PCs

On any Windows 11 PC, you can open the Live Captions app from your Start menu to get AI-powered captions for speech. It uses Microsoft’s cloud servers to generate live captions in real time from any audio—audio in a video file, audio in an online meeting, or even audio being picked up by your PC’s microphone.

On a Copilot+ PC, Live Captions gets a little more powerful: it can now work entirely offline (unlike Microsoft’s AI image generation tools) and it can now translate speech from 44 different languages to English.

Live Captions offline message
Live Captions offline message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Live Captions offline message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

That’s a nice upgrade that some people will find very valuable. But if you don’t already use Live Captions, or if you do and you wish you had real-time translation or offline support, would that be enough reason to warrant buying a new Copilot+ PC? Likely not.

Windows Studio Effects are fine, but not much is new

Microsoft has been talking up Windows Studio Effects as one of the big AI features for Copilot+ PCs. These are real-time webcam effects that use the computer’s NPU to change how your webcam looks in any app.

I like them, really. You can enable fake eye contact or blur your background in any app, for example. And, because it uses the NPU, it’s a power-efficient way to do webcam effects. You won’t be wasting CPU or GPU power in an online meeting.

However, this isn’t exactly new. Windows Studio Effects is the one AI feature that functioned out of the box on first-generation “AI laptops” with Intel Meteor Lake hardware. You don’t need a Copilot+ PC for them.

There are some extra effects: you can use effects like “Animated,” “Illustrated,” and “Watercolor” to change how you look on your webcam in real time. It’s a nice idea, but I find the effects to be very subtle.

Windows Studio Effects illustrated effect example
Windows Studio Effects illustrated effect example

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Windows Studio Effects illustrated effect example

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Do I really look “illustrated” in the screenshot above? A little bit! Is that worth buying a Copilot+ PC for? Well, I don’t know about that…

Recall would have been the big feature

Recall will take screenshots of your PC’s display every five seconds, create a big database of your PC activity, and then let you search through it with plain language queries—just like when you talk to an AI chatbot.

Unlike the Copilot AI chatbot or AI image generation features, it will work entirely offline. That’s what Microsoft said when it announced Recall.

Microsoft Recall stage announcement
Microsoft Recall stage announcement

Microsoft

Microsoft Recall stage announcement

Microsoft

Microsoft

It’s clear why Microsoft made such a big deal about Windows Recall when it announced Copilot+ PCs. Without Recall, there’s a distinct lack of a centerpiece AI feature that really sells these PCs. Instead, it’s just a collection of little tech demos that shows off what the NPU can do.

But when Microsoft faced serious blowback regarding privacy and security concerns over Recall, it decided to pull Recall before launch and spend a few more months working on it before release.

Ultimately, this means none of the included “AI” software featured in Copilot+ PCs at launch is particularly exciting.

With Copilot+, you’re buying into a promise

I’m calling these features “tech demos” for a reason. They feel like they exist to demonstrate the power of the neural processing unit and the Windows Copilot Runtime that Microsoft is offering to developers.

The vision of a Copilot+ PC isn’t that Windows will totally transform itself. The vision is that third-party application developers will leverage this hardware to add AI features into their own applications.

It’s early days, for sure. If you’re excited about a Copilot+ PC because of the AI features, I recommend you slow down before buying one because you may be disappointed, especially without Recall.

I always recommend buying hardware for what it can do today, not based on what it might do in the future. (Already this year, buyers of first-generation AI PCs got burned for buying into a vision too early.)

But if you’re mainly excited about the battery life and performance promises of Copilot+ PCs? That may be a good reason to buy one! I’ve been very impressed with the battery life and snappy performance so far. I wish Microsoft and Qualcomm were talking more about that than AI with this debut Snapdragon X Elite laptops.

Let’s stay in touch! Sign up for my free Windows Intelligence newsletter—I’ll send you three things to try every Friday.

Laptops, Windows

Yawn. Microsoft’s Copilot+ AI features feel like early tech demos at best

25 June 2024 at 06:30

Microsoft, Qualcomm, and their PC-manufacturing partners are seriously hyping Copilot+ PCs. They’d have you believe that these “next-generation AI laptops” are packed with AI smarts and useful features.

But, while the hardware for AI tasks is ready in these laptops, the actual features built into Windows aren’t making full use of it.

We’re in a weird position. We’re excited about these laptops because they’re the first seriously impressive Windows on Arm laptops. We’re excited about long battery life with snappy performance. And we’re excited that next-generation Intel Lunar Lake hardware is looking like a huge leap for traditional x86 laptops.

But we’re not excited about all these at-launch AI features being pushed by marketing campaigns. Snapdragon X Elite-powered PCs might be intriguing, but if you’re excited about an immediate AI upgrade to your Windows experience, you’re going to be disappointed. Here’s why.

Further reading: Microsoft Surface Pro 7 review: A new long-lasting, Qualcomm-powered era for Windows laptops

Copilot+ PC? More like Copilot- PC

The name “Copilot+ PC” conjures to mind a kind of PC with extra features relating to Microsoft’s Copilot AI chatbot. After all, “Copilot Pro” is a paid subscription that upgrades the Copilot chatbot experience.

That’s not the case at all. A Copilot+ PC offers no extra Copilot upgrades. You get a Copilot key on the keyboard, which first-generation “AI laptops” with Intel Meteor Lake hardware have been offering for many months now. That’s it. Copilot doesn’t run offline or use the new integrated neural processing unit (NPU) hardware to do anything at all.

In fact, the situation is much more dire than that. These machines ship with a new Copilot app experience—it’s no longer a sidebar, but rather a normal floating desktop window. That’s fine. But, as Tom Warren noted for The Verge, the new Copilot app experience is a step back. You can’t tell it to “turn on Dark Mode” or “empty the Recycle Bin” anymore.

Copilot message no dark mode
Copilot message no dark mode

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Copilot message no dark mode

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Microsoft may eventually improve the Windows integration in this new Copilot app. And, even if not, this new Copilot experience will eventually come to all Windows 11 PCs. But, at launch, Copilot is surprisingly less powerful on a Copilot+ PC than it is on a standard Windows 11 PC.

It also doesn’t have those fancy GPT-4o features that Microsoft showed off, where it can see your screen and talk you through Minecraft gameplay, for example. Those features will arrive at some point in the future—but when they do, they won’t need Copilot+ PC hardware. That impressive demo will work on all Windows 11 PCs.

AI image generation needs a Microsoft account and internet connection

A Copilot+ PC has some extra AI image generation tools integrated into various apps throughout Windows:

  • Paint has a Cocreator tool that can generate an image as you draw, modifying it to fit your drawing.
  • Photos has a Restyle tool that will let you use generative AI as a “filter” for your image. For example, taking a photo and making it look like it was a watercolor painting.
  • Photos also has an Image Generator feature that generates images to match your text prompts.

Here’s the thing: While these tools all use the NPU inside a Copilot+ PC, none of them work offline. They require a Microsoft account and an active internet connection to work. Why? To check your images for “AI safety” before showing them to you.

Image generation Microsoft account required message
Image generation Microsoft account required message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Image generation Microsoft account required message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Without getting into whether that’s necessary or not, one thing is clear: There’s no point to running these tools on your computer’s hardware if they also require a cloud service to function. You might as well use a cloud-based AI image generation tool running in a powerful data center somewhere. You’ll get better, more realistic results.

The introduction of these new tools has muddied the AI experience on Windows 11. All of the above tools sit alongside other AI image generation tools that do use Microsoft’s cloud servers. For example, the Image Creator in Microsoft Paint uses the cloud, while the Image Creator in Photos uses your PC’s local hardware.

On a Copilot+ PC, Windows contains a confusing mishmash of AI features that may or may not use the PC’s hardware and may or may not use Microsoft’s cloud services.

Live Captions gains some tricks, but already runs on all Windows 11 PCs

On any Windows 11 PC, you can open the Live Captions app from your Start menu to get AI-powered captions for speech. It uses Microsoft’s cloud servers to generate live captions in real time from any audio—audio in a video file, audio in an online meeting, or even audio being picked up by your PC’s microphone.

On a Copilot+ PC, Live Captions gets a little more powerful: it can now work entirely offline (unlike Microsoft’s AI image generation tools) and it can now translate speech from 44 different languages to English.

Live Captions offline message
Live Captions offline message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Live Captions offline message

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

That’s a nice upgrade that some people will find very valuable. But if you don’t already use Live Captions, or if you do and you wish you had real-time translation or offline support, would that be enough reason to warrant buying a new Copilot+ PC? Likely not.

Windows Studio Effects are fine, but not much is new

Microsoft has been talking up Windows Studio Effects as one of the big AI features for Copilot+ PCs. These are real-time webcam effects that use the computer’s NPU to change how your webcam looks in any app.

I like them, really. You can enable fake eye contact or blur your background in any app, for example. And, because it uses the NPU, it’s a power-efficient way to do webcam effects. You won’t be wasting CPU or GPU power in an online meeting.

However, this isn’t exactly new. Windows Studio Effects is the one AI feature that functioned out of the box on first-generation “AI laptops” with Intel Meteor Lake hardware. You don’t need a Copilot+ PC for them.

There are some extra effects: you can use effects like “Animated,” “Illustrated,” and “Watercolor” to change how you look on your webcam in real time. It’s a nice idea, but I find the effects to be very subtle.

Windows Studio Effects illustrated effect example
Windows Studio Effects illustrated effect example

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Windows Studio Effects illustrated effect example

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Chris Hoffman / IDG

Do I really look “illustrated” in the screenshot above? A little bit! Is that worth buying a Copilot+ PC for? Well, I don’t know about that…

Recall would have been the big feature

Recall will take screenshots of your PC’s display every five seconds, create a big database of your PC activity, and then let you search through it with plain language queries—just like when you talk to an AI chatbot.

Unlike the Copilot AI chatbot or AI image generation features, it will work entirely offline. That’s what Microsoft said when it announced Recall.

Microsoft Recall stage announcement
Microsoft Recall stage announcement

Microsoft

Microsoft Recall stage announcement

Microsoft

Microsoft

It’s clear why Microsoft made such a big deal about Windows Recall when it announced Copilot+ PCs. Without Recall, there’s a distinct lack of a centerpiece AI feature that really sells these PCs. Instead, it’s just a collection of little tech demos that shows off what the NPU can do.

But when Microsoft faced serious blowback regarding privacy and security concerns over Recall, it decided to pull Recall before launch and spend a few more months working on it before release.

Ultimately, this means none of the included “AI” software featured in Copilot+ PCs at launch is particularly exciting.

With Copilot+, you’re buying into a promise

I’m calling these features “tech demos” for a reason. They feel like they exist to demonstrate the power of the neural processing unit and the Windows Copilot Runtime that Microsoft is offering to developers.

The vision of a Copilot+ PC isn’t that Windows will totally transform itself. The vision is that third-party application developers will leverage this hardware to add AI features into their own applications.

It’s early days, for sure. If you’re excited about a Copilot+ PC because of the AI features, I recommend you slow down before buying one because you may be disappointed, especially without Recall.

I always recommend buying hardware for what it can do today, not based on what it might do in the future. (Already this year, buyers of first-generation AI PCs got burned for buying into a vision too early.)

But if you’re mainly excited about the battery life and performance promises of Copilot+ PCs? That may be a good reason to buy one! I’ve been very impressed with the battery life and snappy performance so far. I wish Microsoft and Qualcomm were talking more about that than AI with this debut Snapdragon X Elite laptops.

Let’s stay in touch! Sign up for my free Windows Intelligence newsletter—I’ll send you three things to try every Friday.

Laptops, Windows

Surface Laptop 7 review: A new era for Windows laptops

25 June 2024 at 06:30
At a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Attractive, slim, and light
  • Class-leading battery life
  • Excellent wireless connectivity via Wi-Fi 7
  • Good performance in real-world situations

Cons

  • Vague keyboard falls short of competitors
  • IPS touchscreen’s image quality can’t compare to OLED
  • Gaming performance doesn’t hold up

Our Verdict

The Microsoft Surface Laptop’s strong processor performance and top-tier battery life prove that Windows’ transition to Arm has staying power, but even the most casual gamers should think twice.

Price When Reviewed

Starting at $999.99, as-tested $1999.99

Best Prices Today: Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 (13.8″)

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$999.99
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$999.99
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$999.99
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$999.99
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It’s a new era for Windows PCs.

The latest Microsoft Surface Laptop (alongside the revised Surface Pro) ditches Intel and AMD hardware for Qualcomm chips. This isn’t a first, as previous Surface devices like the Surface Pro 9 5G also used Qualcomm. But those devices were introductory sideshows to the main event.

The new Surface Laptop is available only with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite chip. No Intel or AMD variants are available or planned. This bold move helps the Surface Laptop achieve strong performance and outright spectacular battery life in a thin laptop, in addition to standing as Microsoft’s debut AI-infused Copilot+ PC.

Looking for more options? Check out PCWorld’s roundup of the best laptops.

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Specs and features

The Microsoft Surface Laptop’s most intriguing hardware is, of course, the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chip. It’s a system-on-a-chip that pairs up to 12 CPU cores with Qualcomm Adreno integrated graphics. Entry-level Surface Laptop variants have a 10-core processor, but the one I tested had the 12-core upgrade.

  • CPU: Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite (12-core)
  • Memory: 32GB LPDDR5x
  • Graphics/GPU: Qualcomm Adreno integrated graphics
  • Neural Processing Unit (NPU): Qualcomm Hexagon
  • Display: 13.8-inch, 2304×1536 resolution, 3:2 aspect ratio, 120Hz IPS-LED touchscreen
  • Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen 4 solid state drive 
  • Webcam: 1080p with dual-mic array
  • Connectivity: 2x USB-C, 1x USB-A, 1x Surface Connector, 1x 3.5mm combo audio
  • Networking: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
  • Biometrics: Windows Hello facial recognition via webcam
  • Battery capacity: 54 watt-hours
  • Dimensions: 11.85 x 8.67 x 0.69 inches
  • Weight: 2.96 pounds
  • MSRP: $999.99 to start, $1999.99 as-tested

Processor aside, the Surface Laptop was well-equipped with 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. These upgrades run up the price, though, which doubles from the entry fee of $999.99 to an as-tested price of $1999.99. That’s rather expensive, though comparable to other premium portable laptops like the Dell XPS 14 and Lenovo ThinkPad X1.

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Design and build quality

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Design Build
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Design Build

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Design Build

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

It’s easy to mistake the new Surface Laptop for an older model at a glance—and I mean that as a compliment. The new Surface Laptop, like its predecessors, has a sleek aluminum body that looks luxurious and feels rigid. It favors a minimalist look with no badging aside from the glossy Windows logo on the display lid.

Look closer, though, and a few details stand out. The display bezels are much smaller than prior Surface Laptop models, and they’re now rounded at the corners for a more organic, approachable look. The edges taper more aggressively than before, too, which makes the new laptop feel thinner in-hand. The new Surface Laptop is technically thicker than its predecessor, but feels more nimble.

The Surface Laptop weighs 2.96 pounds. That’s a bit heavier than competitors like the Apple MacBook Air 13 M3 and Dell XPS 13, both of which weigh 2.7 pounds. Though the difference seems trivial on paper, I did notice it. In fact, the first thing I said while unboxing the Surface Laptop was, “Wow, this feels a bit chunky.” Once placed in a backpack or bag, however, the Laptop’s extra ounces fade away.

Microsoft continues to stick with an unusual display aspect ratio of 3:2, which is far closer to square than the more common 16:9 or 16:10 aspect ratios. As such, the Surface Laptop feels a bit boxier than competitors and it might not fit in some sleeves meant for a 13.3-inch widescreen laptop, as its dimensions are different from the norm.

But the 3:2 aspect ratio is an advantage if you frequently work with text documents or web pages, as you can see more vertical space at once. (In fact, the 13.8-inch Surface Laptop’s vertical display height is identical to a 15.6-inch laptop with a 16:9 aspect ratio.)

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Keyboard and trackpad

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

The new Surface Laptop’s keyboard doesn’t live up to expectations. It has a roomy layout with large palm rests, which makes it comfortable to use, but key feel is an issue. Keys activate with a mushy, quiet, ill-defined action that lacks feedback.

Don’t get me wrong: it’s usable. But I don’t like it as much as the prior Surface Laptop (I own a Surface Laptop 4) or the keyboards found on competing laptops, like the Dell XPS 14 and Asus Zenbook 14 OLED.

A keyboard backlight comes standard—as is typical for a laptop in this price bracket—and offers three levels of brightness. It’s a bit dim even at maximum brightness, so the backlight isn’t easily visible when used in a bright room. However, the backlight’s minimum brightness is very low, which is preferable if you use the laptop in a nearly pitch-black space.

While the keyboard is a miss, the touchpad is solid. It measures roughly five inches wide and a bit more than three inches deep, which is comparable (or smaller) than other Windows laptops. But the touchpad felt extremely smooth and responsive.

It also handled multi-touch gestures with ease. Fans of Windows’ pinch-to-minimize (and other more complicated multi-touch gestures) will be pleased. It also supports haptic feedback, which convincingly emulates the feel of a mechanical button when the touchpad is tapped.

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Display and audio

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Display
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Display

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Display

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

As mentioned earlier, the Surface Laptop has an unusual 13.8-inch display with a 3:2 aspect ratio. It also has a unique resolution of 2304×1536, which works out to a pixel density of 200 pixels per inch.

That’s a bit less than 14-inch competitors with a 16:10 aspect ratio and a resolution of 2880×1600, which hits about 242 pixels per inch. It’s also less than a MacBook Air M3 13.6-inch, which delivers 224 pixels per inch. These numbers aren’t as meaningful as they seem, though, because all three pixel densities look sharp in the real world. Still, the Surface Laptop is at a slight technical disadvantage as far as sharpness.

The Surface Laptop also continues to lag in display technology, as it sticks to an IPS-LED display without a dynamic backlight. That’s bad news for the laptop’s contrast ratio, which is far less impressive than competitors with an OLED display panel or Mini-LED display backlight.

It’s not a problem when working in Word or Adobe Acrobat, but it’s easy to notice when playing games or watching movies, especially in a dark room. The Surface Laptop looks less immersive and engaging than competitors like the Dell XPS 14 and Asus Zenbook 14 OLED.

That said, Microsoft strikes back with a 120Hz touchscreen that feels snappy. Many Windows laptops have abandoned the touchscreen, and others that offer touch—like the Dell XPS 14—stick to a lower refresh rate that feels less responsive. Plus, the Surface Laptop’s traditional clamshell design isn’t well-suited to touch input (the hinge doesn’t even fold back 180 degrees), but if you like to smudge up the screen, the Surface Laptop has you covered.

The 120Hz refresh rate can also, in theory, deliver a more fluid experience while playing PC games. However, the Surface Laptop’s gaming performance and support isn’t great, so finding titles that can run at up to 120 frames per second will be a struggle.

Audio performance is good, if not amazing. The Surface Laptop’s speakers are extremely loud at maximum volume and sound good with less-complex content, like podcasts. Throw a bass-heavy track at the Surface, though, and the speakers become muddy and harsh.

The speakers are above-average for most 13- to 14-inch laptops, but still behind audio leaders like the Dell XPS 13 and Lenovo Yoga 9i.

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Webcam, microphone, and biometrics

A 1080p webcam is packed into the Surface Laptop’s thin top bezel. It provides acceptable video quality straight away, which is improved by AI-powered Studio Effects filters (a feature the Surface Laptop shares with other Copilot+ PCs). The filters add background blur, automatic framing, and real-time effects that, in practice, add up to decent video quality.

Microphone quality is great. It picked up my voice with excellent volume and easily filtered out background noise, including persistent noises (like a fan) just a few feet away from the laptop.

Biometric login is supported through Windows Hello facial recognition. It worked well in my testing and, because it uses an IR camera instead of the primary sensor, it’s reliable in both very dark and bright rooms. Many competitive laptops support the feature, but it’s good to see it included.

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Connectivity

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Keyboard and Trackpad
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Keyboard and Trackpad

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Keyboard and Trackpad

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

The bulk of the Surface Laptop’s wired connectivity comes from a pair of USB-C ports on the laptop’s left flank. Both ports support USB4, Thunderbolt 4, DisplayPort, and can accept up to 65 watts of Power Delivery. There’s also a single USB-A 3.1 port for older devices and a 3.5mm combo audio jack for headphones, headset, or microphone.

Microsoft’s Surface Connect is back. It’s a proprietary data and power connector that magnetically attaches to the right flank. The bundled 65-watt power adapter uses Surface Connect instead of USB-C but, as mentioned, the USB-C ports support Power Delivery and can be used to charge and power the laptop as well.

the best thunderbolt dock we've tested

Plugable TBT3-UDZ

Plugable TBT3-UDZ
Price When Reviewed: $369.00

Dedicated video-out (in the form of HDMI or DisplayPort) is missing, which might be annoying if you want to connect an older monitor or a modern TV. There’s no wired Ethernet, either. You’ll need a USB-C adapter, hub, or dock if you want to use the Surface Laptop with devices that require these ports. Though a tad disappointing, it’s typical for a portable Windows laptop.

Wireless connectivity is excellent, with support for both Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4. Wi-Fi 7 is the latest wireless internet standard. It’s so new, in fact, that very few people even have a Wi-Fi 7 router. Still, I think it’s the right move to make Wi-Fi 7 standard. (Anyone willing to pay almost $2,000 for a well-equipped Surface Laptop is likely to be an early adopter of Wi-Fi 7, after all.)

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Performance

Microsoft’s Surface Laptop is one of more than a dozen new Copilot+ PCs with a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chip. The Snapdragon uses the Arm instruction set instead of the x86 instruction set that’s common to Intel Core and AMD Ryzen processors.

Laptops with Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite processors, like the new Microsoft Surface Laptop, promise better battery life and efficiency. However, Arm and x86 aren’t natively compatible, which means Windows apps coded only for x86 won’t run on Arm.

To solve that, Microsoft has aggressively urged software partners to develop new Arm-compatible software, meanwhile providing an emulation layer (called Prism) that can run x86 software on Arm hardware.

What does that mean for performance? Let’s dig in.

Note: The Surface Laptop I tested had the 12-core Snapdragon X Elite, an upgrade over the 10-core chip in entry-level configurations.

Cinebench R20

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Cinebench R20
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Cinebench R20

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Cinebench R20

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

First up is Cinebench R20, a heavily multithreaded CPU benchmark. This version of the benchmark doesn’t support Arm, so the new Surface Laptop uses emulation to run the benchmark. The emulation’s stability was perfect in this test, with no crashes or bugs.

The Surface Laptop is certainly slower than the x86 competition in this test, but it’s not a bad result for software that runs under emulation. The performance of both the Surface Laptop and Surface Pro creeps close to the Dell XPS 13, which has an Intel Core Ultra 7 155H processor.

Handbrake

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Handbrake
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Handbrake

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Handbrake

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

Next up is Handbrake. Though it does have an Arm version available, that version is much newer and not comparable to the version of the software we typically use. Because of that, this benchmark runs under emulation.

And here, unlike Cinebench, the Snapdragon X Elite has problems. The benchmark was stable but required a dreadfully long time to finish. Clearly, emulation has met its match with this test.

Geekbench 6

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Geekbench
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Geekbench

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance Geekbench

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

Next up is Geekbench 6. This synthetic benchmark isn’t part of our normal test suite, so we have less data on laptops using it. It has an Arm native version, however, so no emulation is required. 

And what a difference it makes! The Surface Laptop hits an impressive multi-core score of 12,988. That edges out the Asus Zenbook 14 OLED (which itself is among the more capable laptops with an Intel Core Ultra processor) and easily defeats the OneXPlayer X1 (a Windows tablet forced to fit Intel’s Core Ultra in a tight wattage envelope).

And the new Surface Laptop is roughly twice as fast as Microsoft’s Surface Pro 9 5G. Launched in 2022, the Surface Pro 9 5G has a custom chip—the Microsoft SQ3—which was designed in collaboration with Qualcomm and based on the Snapdragon 8cx. Clearly, Qualcomm’s performance has improved since then.

3DMark

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance 3DMark
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance 3DMark

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Performance 3DMark

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

The Snapdragon X Elite’s processor performance looks good, but what about the integrated GPU? 

Qualcomm and Microsoft have spent less time marketing the performance of Qualcomm’s Adreno graphics, aside from a demonstration at Microsoft Build 2024 that showed games like Borderlands 3 and Baldur’s Gate 3 running through Prism emulation.

3DMark’s Time Spy and Night Raid tests provide a lot to dig into. Time Spy does not run native on Arm, but Night Raid does, and that has obvious implications for performance.

The Surface Laptop lags far behind Intel Iris Arc and AMD Radeon 780M integrated graphics in Time Spy. In Night Raid, however, Qualcomm’s Adreno powers the Surface Laptop to a respectable score of 23,348, which trades blows with Intel and AMD’s best integrated graphics.

Does Snapdragon X Elite work in the real world?

The Microsoft Surface Laptop’s benchmark results look solid on paper. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite is on par with, or slightly quicker than, Intel and AMD alternatives when apps have native Arm versions available. Performance under Prism emulation varies but, at its best, it doesn’t inflict a terrible penalty.

But a benchmark suite can only represent a small slice of apps, and my day-to-day experience was simultaneously worse than and better than these benchmarks suggest.

First, the bad news: I don’t think gaming is viable at launch. Microsoft knows this because, during the Reviewer’s Workshop held to answer questions from reviewers about the laptop, the company downplayed the laptop’s gaming performance. (Microsoft Devices VP Pete Kyriacou also told PCWorld that the Snapdragon X Elite-powered Surfaces will excel in productivity, not games.) Microsoft said Qualcomm chips don’t support discrete GPUs or external GPUs, so there’s no way to upgrade performance or side-step Qualcomm’s Adreno graphics.

These problems aren’t just in demanding games, like Cyberpunk 2077 or Total War: Warhammer III. I was surprised and disappointed to find that recent indie favorite, Halls of Torment, failed to play smoothly… despite the fact it relies entirely on 2D graphics. PCWorld will have more to report on the Surface Laptop’s gaming performance in an upcoming article, but for now I caution gamers to sit on the sidelines.

If you want a laptop for productivity and content creation, though, the Surface Laptop holds promise. The apps I use for professional work include the Microsoft Office suite (for writing, editing, and time tracking), GIMP (for photo editing), and Wondershare Filmora (for video editing).

While I expected Office to work without flaws, I was surprised to find that both GIMP and Filmora support Windows on Arm. Both apps worked flawlessly, and the Surface Laptop performed well enough when I opened the Filmora project file for my 43-minute-long video about the development of Baldur’s Gate 2. The timeline took a moment to fully load when flipping back and forth, but the video played in the editor without dropping frames. Cutting, moving, and copying clips were all smooth.

The list of productivity apps with Arm support is decent and growing. Notepad++, Adobe Photoshop and Lightroom, and DaVinci Resolve 19 all support Arm (though, in some cases, the Arm version is still in beta). Adobe Premiere Pro, Illustrator, InDesign, and After Effects will receive Arm updates this year.

Just want to browse the web and watch Netflix? You’re unlikely to run into issues. Most web browsers, streaming platforms, and video conferencing software support Windows on Arm. Apps that don’t support it yet should still run well under emulation. And while I can’t guarantee every app will work perfectly, I didn’t see problems in my testing. Aside from games, every app I used launched, and none crashed in my time using them.

A note about Copilot+ PCs

The Surface Laptop, like other Copilot+ PCs, has an integrated neural processing unit (NPU) that can handle up to 45 trillion operations per second, and it was meant to highlight Windows 11’s AI features. Instead, the Copilot+ PC launch is a public relations disaster.

The flagship feature, Microsoft Recall, is indefinitely delayed over security and privacy concerns. Microsoft has reeled in the features of Windows’ Copilot app, too. Earlier preview versions could adjust settings and search files, but the version currently available lacks those features. 

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Battery life

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite is quick, to be sure, but power efficiency is the chip’s real claim to fame. Microsoft says the Surface Laptop can provide up to 20 hours of video playback, a promise it easily fulfilled. 

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Battery Life
Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Battery Life

Matthew Smith / IDG

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7 13-inch Battery Life

Matthew Smith / IDG

Matthew Smith / IDG

Real-world battery life lived up to expectations set by the benchmark. I often used the laptop for several hours at a stretch, yet saw the battery reduce by no more than 10 percent. My use is light (mostly web browsing and writing in Word or Google Docs), but the Surface Laptop’s endurance is much better than usual for a Windows laptop.

These results are even more remarkable given the Surface Laptop’s modest 54 watt-hour battery. Many competitors with AMD or Intel hardware, like the Lenovo ThinkBook 13x and Asus Zenbook 14 OLED, have a battery capacity above 70 watt-hours.

Still, the Surface Laptop’s battery life is spectacular. In fact, I’d say it’s the most significant threat to alternatives with AMD and Intel hardware. Battery life like this fundamentally changes how the device is used, providing peace of mind when leaving the house without a charger.

Microsoft Surface Laptop 7: Conclusion

Microsoft’s Surface Laptop is a success, though not without its issues.

After years of misfires, Arm on Windows is finally a viable option. With it comes access to new hardware, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite, which proves an alluring alternative to Intel and AMD devices. Qualcomm’s chip isn’t a good choice for gaming, but it’s great for battery life and it scores well in CPU benchmarks with native Arm support. 

These traits make the Surface Laptop a solid choice for people who travel frequently or just don’t like to worry about battery life.

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This 1TB external hard drive is $50 off now

25 June 2024 at 04:00

The cloud is great for storing excess files that you can’t keep on your laptop. But it’s also a vulnerable online space and it’s possible your data could be hacked or stolen. A safer solution for your most important files (and the ones you’d prefer to keep handy without having to re-download from the cloud) is an external hard drive. Right now, you can get this 1TB Slim Portable USB 3.0 External Hard Drive for $50 off.

This handy drive is extremely slim and lightweight, made to fit easily in your everyday carry. It has a cutting-edge USB 3.0 interface that supports up to 120Mbps read speed and 104Mbps write speed, allowing you to easily transfer data to and from devices. You can store up to 1TB of photos, videos, music, documents, and other files in a secure drive that only you will have access to.

Keep your most important files safe and handy. Right now, you can get this 1TB Slim Portable USB 3.0 External Hard Drive for 45% off $109 at just $59.99.

 

Slim Portable USB 3.0 External Hard Drive – 1TB – $59.99

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Before yesterdayPCWorld

Best VPN for Indiana, Idaho, and Kansas: Pornhub workarounds

24 June 2024 at 15:22

On June 28th, residents in Indiana, Idaho, and Kansas are set to wake up and find that they can no longer access the adult site Pornhub. Due to newly passed age verification laws designed to prevent minors from viewing adult content, Pornhub will begin blocking access to users in these states in protest.

This is following a trend that has seen more than half a dozen states lose access to the incredibly popular NSFW site. A similar ban occurred in March of this year when access was blocked to residents in Texas

This is certainly inconvenient for age-appropriate residents of these states who want to access the site (which, it must be stated, receives First Amendment constitutional protection). Fortunately, there’s an easy fix: using a VPN. Just download and install your preferred VPN, connect to a server in a state that isn’t blocked, and enjoy the content.

Below you’ll find my top picks for VPNs to access Pornhub if you’re in states where Pornhub has blocked access. For even more great services, check out our list of the best VPNs overall.

ExpressVPN – Best overall

ExpressVPN

ExpressVPN
Price When Reviewed: $6.67 per month
Best Prices Today: $6.67 at ExpressVPN

ExpressVPN is my overall top pick for VPNs no matter the intended use. It packs a ton of great features including wide-device support, ad- and tracker-blocking, and plenty of domestic and international servers.

It also boasts great speeds, meaning you won’t need to downgrade your video quality to something that makes it look like the important bits are blurred on purpose. ExpressVPN even supports just about every device you could imagine so not only will you be able to access Pornhub, you’ll be able to view the content on any device you wish as well.

NordVPN – Runner-up

NordVPN

NordVPN
Price When Reviewed: $3.49 per month
Best Prices Today: $3.49 at NordVPN

NordVPN is a close second to ExpressVPN, only losing out due to a slightly more complicated interface and a more expensive long-term price. Let that not take anything away from how great this service is as well.

It’s consistently the fastest VPN I’ve ever tested, so you can stream in HD to your heart’s content. Plus, it comes with even more built-in security features than ExpressVPN.

Mullvad – Best for privacy

Mullvad

Mullvad
Price When Reviewed: $5.37 per month
Best Prices Today: $5.37 at Mullvad

Depending on what you’re looking for from a VPN, Mullvad might actually be your best option. Not only is it in our top five services for overall speed, it more importantly earns top marks for privacy.

Mullvad takes every effort it can to know as little about its users as possible. It doesn’t ask for an email address or name and it even accepts payments via mailed cash if you want. Plus, it costs just $5 per month regardless of the plan you choose.

ProtonVPN – Best free VPN

ProtonVPN

ProtonVPN
Price When Reviewed: $9.99
Best Prices Today: $9.99 at ProtonVPN

While I don’t usually recommend that anyone use a free VPN due to their proven security and privacy risks on certain devices, ProtonVPN is one of the exceptions. This service from Swiss-based Proton, has a spotless track record for user privacy. It’s also mercifully free of ads.

Just like all free VPNs there are limitations, but thankfully ProtonVPN keeps them relatively tame. For no cost whatsoever you’ll get a one-device connection limit and access to five servers located in different countries around the world (including the U.S.). It doesn’t impose any speed or data limitations on these free servers as well—something that is nearly unheard of with other free VPNs.

VPN

Best external drives 2024: Backup, storage, and portability

24 June 2024 at 14:30

External USB/Thunderbolt drives are a super-convenient way to quickly back up your important files, as well as store any data that you don’t need on your computer’s internal storage. They’re also an extremely handy way to transport data between locations and devices.

While any of these would be a great reason to pick up an external drive, the advantages of having reliable backup is the number-one reason your setup isn’t complete without one. Why? Chances are you have important data on your PC that you can’t afford to lose. To protect that data you’ll want to do two things: store it off-site on the cloud if possible and back it up to an external drive. This way you ensure your data is completely safe should anything go wrong with your computer.

While we highly recommend that you consider cloud storage as a backup option, restoring from local storage is generally far, far faster than pulling your data down from the cloud. Therefore, an external drive should be your primary hedge against disaster.

Why you should trust us: We’re PCWorld. We’ve been putting computer hardware through its paces for decades. We’ve seen it all and we know how to root out a drive’s strengths and weaknesses, using a combination of rigorous benchmark testing and real-world hands-on use. Below we offer our expert recommendations on the best external drives for everything from blazing-fast performance, to budget options, to portability, and more.

Updated June 24, 2024 to include a new recommendation for portable hard drive: the WD My Passport, Works with USB-C. Let’s face it, there are use cases where a high-capacity hard drive makes a lot of sense — for backups or a media server, for example. Read our summary below to find out why we’d choose this great drive for those purposes.

Crucial X9 Pro – Best 10Gbps external SSD

Crucial X9 Pro - Best 10Gbps external SSD
Crucial X9 Pro - Best 10Gbps external SSD
Crucial X9 Pro - Best 10Gbps external SSD

Pros

  • Super small form factor
  • Great 10Gbps performance
  • Handsome design

Cons

  • Not the least expensive 10Gbps SSD available
Price When Reviewed: 1TB:$109.99 I 2TB:$179.99 I 4TB:$239.99

Not everyone wants or even needs 20Gbps USB drive performance, which comes at a price premium anyway. The Crucial X9 strikes a compelling balance between top-shelf performance and affordability that should please the majority of users. In our benchmark tests, it traded top scores with the SK Hynix Beetle (our runner-up choice below), but at a significantly lower cost. Making it an indisputable win-win for consumers.

It’s also handsome, described by our reviewer as “a svelte object of desire.” More importantly, it feels well made, and is rated for IP55 dust and spray resistance, so you don’t have to baby this portable drive when you take it out.

Read our full Crucial X9 Pro review

SK Hynix Beetle X31 – Best 10Gbps external SSD runner-up

SK Hynix Beetle X31 - Best 10Gbps external SSD runner-up
SK Hynix Beetle X31 - Best 10Gbps external SSD runner-up
SK Hynix Beetle X31 - Best 10Gbps external SSD runner-up

Pros

  • Top 10Gbps performer
  • Compact, rounded design

Cons

  • Available only in pale gold
  • Pricier than the competition
Price When Reviewed: 512GB: $71.06 I 1TB: $92.69
Best Prices Today: $94.99 at Amazon

As stated above, the SK Hynix Beetle X31 is every bit the performer as our top pick in the 10Gbps realm, with the two enjoying an equal number of wins in our benchmarks and handily besting the competition. But where the SK Hynix loses its edge is on price. Right now, it’s about $13 more for 1TB than the Crucial X9.

It’s also more blinged out. Peep that gold scarab-inspired exterior. It will sit proudly on any desk, and for some buyers that might make the extra cost worth it.

Read our full SK Hynix Beetle X31 review

Crucial X6 Portable SSD (2TB) – Best budget 10Gbps external SSD

Crucial X6 Portable SSD (2TB) - Best budget 10Gbps external SSD
Crucial X6 Portable SSD (2TB) - Best budget 10Gbps external SSD
Crucial X6 Portable SSD (2TB) - Best budget 10Gbps external SSD

Pros

  • Ergonomic design
  • Good everyday performance
  • Very affordable for an external SSD

Cons

  • Performance tanks when cache runs out
Price When Reviewed: 500GB: $69.99 I 1TB: $109.99 I 2TB: $99.99 I 4TB: $179.99

The Crucial X6 Portable SSD is square to be hip (search Huey Lewis). Or placed in your hip pocket, at any rate. In a sea of portable SSDs whose shape and sometimes sharp edges makes them a literal pain when situated in your shirt or trousers, the thin, rounded-edge X6 is a sigh of relief. It’s not state-of-the-art fast, but it’s fast enough for most users and extremely affordable.

Read our full Crucial X6 Portable SSD review

SK Hynix Tube T31 USB SSD stick – Best thumb drive SSD

SK Hynix Tube T31 USB SSD stick - Best thumb drive SSD
SK Hynix Tube T31 USB SSD stick - Best thumb drive SSD
SK Hynix Tube T31 USB SSD stick - Best thumb drive SSD

Pros

  • Fast like an external SSD
  • Decently affordable
  • Small form factor
  • Captive Type-A USB connector

Cons

  • Costs more than the common thumb drive
Price When Reviewed: 512GB: $80 I 1TB: $100

There’s something to be said for the thumb drive form factor. It’s eminently portable, being both small and eschewing the necessity of a connector cable. It’s also versatile as it can slot into the ubiquitous USB-A port.

The SK Hynix Tube T31 combines all that thumb-drive convenience with SSD performance, for the best of the both worlds.

With 10Gbps NVMe storage, the wee Tube T31 performs like a cable-attached SSD, and definitively outperformed other thumb drives in its class. And while it’s priced relatively high compared to a standard thumb drive, it’s priced competitively for its performance.

There’s no better option if fast and cable-free storage is what you’re after.

Read our full SK Hynix Tube T31 USB SSD stick review

Lexar SL600 Blaze – Best 20Gbps external SSD

Lexar SL600 Blaze - Best 20Gbps external SSD
Lexar SL600 Blaze - Best 20Gbps external SSD
Lexar SL600 Blaze - Best 20Gbps external SSD

Pros

  • Good 20Gbps performer
  • Top bang for the buck
  • Five-year warranty

Cons

  • 4TB model not yet available
Price When Reviewed: 1TB: $129.99
Best Prices Today: $129.99 at B & H Photo

Let’s face it, the competition is very close in the top tier of 20Gbps external drives, with name-brand contenders trading wins up and down the benchmark charts. Nevertheless, a winner is a winner, and cumulatively, the Lexar nudged out our previous champ, Crucial’s X10 Pro, even if only by a hair.

The upshot is that you can expect excellent performance from the Lexar SL600. On top of that, it comes in a uniquely shaped form factor, complete with an opening to accommodate a lanyard, if that’s how you roll. You can even take the highly portable drive’s design a step further by opting for the SL660 variant that comes with RGB lighting around its miniature handle. The drive comes with the standard five year warranty.

When performance is this closely matched among products, the determining factor should be price. And in that respect, too, the SL600 is neck-and-neck with the Crucial X10 Pro, and priced slightly to significantly cheaper than some of its competitors, at least as of this writing — particularly at the 2TB level.

Read our full Lexar SL600 Blaze 20Gbps USB SSD review

Teamgroup M200 – Best budget 20Gbps SSD

Teamgroup M200 - Best budget 20Gbps SSD
Teamgroup M200 - Best budget 20Gbps SSD
Teamgroup M200 - Best budget 20Gbps SSD

Pros

  • Fast everyday performance
  • Available in up to 8TB (eventually) capacity
  • Attractively styled

Cons

  • No TBW rating
  • Company will change components if shortages demand
  • Writes slow to 200MBps off cache
Price When Reviewed: $40 for 256GB | $58 for 512GB | $260 for 2TB | $300 for 4TB

Rated for 20Gbps and selling for $90 with 1TB of storage, the Teamgroup M200 is an attractive (in a military fashion) external drive for the budget-conscious performance enthusiast.

It might not be as cheap as the Crucial X6, but for the extra outlay you get outstanding everyday performance — in many tests, it’s the fastest 20Gbps drive we’ve ever tested. At just 4.13-inches long and 2.18-inches wide and weighing under 3 ounces, it’s also extremely portable and its slick styling will appeal to gamers.

Read our full Teamgroup T-Force M200 20Gbps USB SSD review

Samsung T7 Shield 4TB – Best 20Gbps high-capacity performance drive

Samsung T7 Shield 4TB - Best 20Gbps high-capacity performance drive
Samsung T7 Shield 4TB - Best 20Gbps high-capacity performance drive
Samsung T7 Shield 4TB - Best 20Gbps high-capacity performance drive

Pros

  • Fast 1GBps sustained transfers
  • Excellent real world performance
  • Vast 4TB capacity
  • Svelte and handsome

Cons

  • Not cheap
  • Small 4K performance glitch under CrystalDiskMark 8 writing 4K files
Price When Reviewed: $469

Once our top pick overall, the Samsung T7 Shield has been overtake in raw speeds by the two newcomers above. But if the 2TB limit of the drives above has you feeling too confined, the T7 Shield 4TB is a good option.

The T7 Shield also leans into physical protection, with an IP65 ratings against particulate matter and water spray. Going hiking with your data? A T7 Shield is a good choice, and you can secure it with software-based password protection in lieu of a fingerprint.

With its top-tier speeds and large capacity, the T7 4TB model is capable of handling the largest end-user data sets on the go.

Read our full Samsung T7 4TB review

Sandisk Pro-Blade Transport – Best 20Gbps modular storage

Sandisk Pro-Blade Transport - Best 20Gbps modular storage
Sandisk Pro-Blade Transport - Best 20Gbps modular storage
Sandisk Pro-Blade Transport - Best 20Gbps modular storage

Pros

  • Fast 20Gbps performance
  • Modular storage
  • More affordable than you might think (as currently discounted)

Cons

  • Some non-fatal operational glitches
Price When Reviewed: $49.99 for dock I $159.99 w/1TB Mag I $219.99 w/2TB I $339.99 w/4TB

The SanDisk Pro-Blade Transport is a portable SSD dock that can be thought of as a cross between removable media and high-speed NVMe. It comes with easy-to-use removable storage cartridges for fast rotating backup. Additionally, it’s a good way to organize projects by their own media as well. The SanDisk Pro-Blade Transport’s modular design allows users to expand their TB count over the same connection and keep everything together and organized in neat, handsome cartridges.

The cartridges come in 1TB, 2TB, and 4TB capacities and are all capable of transferring at speeds of 20Gbps. In our speed tests, the Pro-Blade’s cartridges did well in both synthetic benchmarks as well as real-world transfers, with good sustained speeds throughout both the shorter 48GB and longer 450GB read/write tests. We did notice a few hiccups though when the drive’s system would lock up and we needed to manually reboot it to fix the issue. These only came about during rigorous testing scenarios and aren’t likely to affect day-to-day usage. Also, this is something that SanDisk should be able to fix with a software update and it wasn’t a major issue anyways. Overall, this sleek storage system is a great option for organizing your storage and for those who need ultimate flexibility.

Read our full Sandisk Pro-Blade Transport review

OWC Express 1M2 USB4 SSD – Best USB4/Thunderbolt combo external SSD

OWC Express 1M2 USB4 SSD - Best USB4/Thunderbolt combo external SSD
OWC Express 1M2 USB4 SSD - Best USB4/Thunderbolt combo external SSD
OWC Express 1M2 USB4 SSD - Best USB4/Thunderbolt combo external SSD

Pros

  • Over 30GBps transfers with USB4
  • Works with all USB and Thunderbolt 3/4 ports
  • Available unpopulated so you can leverage any NVMe SSD

Cons

  • A bit pricey when loaded with an SSD
  • Large (but beefy) for an external SSD
Price When Reviewed: 1TB: $219.99 I 2TB: $299.99 I 4TB: $529.99 I 8TB: $1,299.99
Best Prices Today: $219.99 at OWC

Sure the SanDisk Pro-G40 is a fast, dual USB/Thunderbolt drive, but the OWC Express 1M2 takes fast USB transfers to a whole new level with USB4. The new USB4 technology allows for blazing-fast data transfer rates up to a maximum of 40Gbps — the same as Thunderbolt 4. And the OWC Express proves it. In our tests, it was the fastest external drive over every bus: Thunderbolt 4, 20Gbps USB, and 10Gbps USB. So no matter what you choose to use, the 1M2 is the ultimate drive for speed.

The drive itself looks very much like a giant silver heatsink (the pink hue is the result of lighting) and feels quite large and hefty compared to some of the other drives on this list. We don’t mind it as the whole design makes the drive feel like it means business, but it doesn’t make the 1M2 the most portable external SSD either. Regardless, the OWC Express 1M2 is currently one of the absolute fastest external drives around if you’re feeling the need for speed.

Read our full OWC Express 1M2 USB4 SSD review

SanDisk Desk Drive 10Gbps USB SSD – Best external SSD for backups

SanDisk Desk Drive 10Gbps USB SSD -  Best external SSD for backups
SanDisk Desk Drive 10Gbps USB SSD -  Best external SSD for backups
SanDisk Desk Drive 10Gbps USB SSD -  Best external SSD for backups

Pros

  • Available in large 4TB and 8TB capacities
  • Good 10Gbps performer
  • Attractive and unusual, if somewhat large, heat-shedding design

Cons

  • Requires AC adapter
Price When Reviewed: 4TB: $250 I 8TB: $700
Best Prices Today: $249.99 at Western Digital

As the name suggests, the SanDisk Desk Drive isn’t meant to be portable, unlike many of the external drives on this list. It’s not only to bulky for a pocket, or even a laptop bag, but it also requires an AC adapter.

But that doesn’t detract from its utility, because the Desk Drive is really best suited for backups. That’s evident in the fact that it only comes in 4GB and 8GB capacities, priced competitively at $250 and $700 respectively.

Granted, that’s a lot more per-gigabyte than you’d pay for a backup hard drive. But with the Desk Drive you get brisk 10Gbps performance, and the assurance that comes from an SSD’s lack of moving parts. In other words, the price-per-performance makes it a wash with an HDD.

Read our full SanDisk Desk Drive 10Gbps USB SSD review

WD My Passport, Works with USB C – Best portable hard drive

WD My Passport, Works with USB C - Best portable hard drive
WD My Passport, Works with USB C - Best portable hard drive
WD My Passport, Works with USB C - Best portable hard drive

Pros

  • Up to 6TB of capacity
  • Super-low price per terabyte
  • Good looking and portable

Cons

  • Micro-B, not Type-C as intimated
  • Hard drive level performance
Price When Reviewed: 2TB: $85 I 4TB: $135 I 5TB: $150 I 6TB: $185

We can forgive the cumbersome name, and the fact that this drive, misleadingly, doesn’t actually use a USB-C connector, because there are other more substantial ways that it pleases us.

For starters, the WD My Passport, Works with USB-C offers a ton of capacity — up to 6TB — and at a far more affordable price per terabyte than one can get from an SSD (around $30/TB versus twice that for the latter). This makes the WD My Passport a natural fit for backup needs, particularly since those can be timed during off hours, mitigating the need for an SSDs superior speeds.

As for the misleading moniker, the My Passport does indeed work with USB-C, but it’s by way of the drive’s standard SuperSpeed Micro-B port, using the included Micro-B to Type-A cable and a bundled Type-A to USB-C adapter. Mind you, WD’s My Passport Ultra series, which actually do feature a USB-C port, don’t perform any faster than this drive, and even cost a bit more.

In fact, among all the 2.5 inch HDDs we’ve tested, the My Passport performs on par with the best of them, while being the best deal. If it’s a portable, high-capacity hard drive that you’re after, this is the one to pick.

Read our full WD My Passport, Works with USB C review

Our latest external drive reviews

  • Teamgroup PD20M: This lightweight drive is a great travel companion, complete with carrying case — but only recommended for light-duty chores, as this 20Gbps drive slows considerably when writing more than 20GB of data.
  • Adata SD810: This is a solid 20Gbps drive, as long as you aren’t in the habit of writing very large amounts of data to it on a regular basis, because in our tests, the drive slowed down considerably in that scenario. That being said, the 4TB capacity is a particularly good value at just $300.
  • Lexar SL500: A stablemate of the Lexar SL600 — our pick for best 20Gbps external drive — the SL500 stands out for its very slim and attractive form factor. It has almost identical performance to the SL600, with the exception of performing slower than its sibling in our 48GB file writes.
  • Corsair EX100U: This handsome drive, which could easily slide into a pocket, isn’t a great all-around performer, but if you’re mostly concerned with light workloads it will handle those tasks capably. On sale, it could easily earn its keep in that regard.

What you need to know before you buy

2880px certified usb4 40gbps logo.svg

Yes, USB4 will provide the same massive throughput as Thunderbolt 3 at lower prices eventually, and likely far more products too.

2880px certified usb4 40gbps logo.svg

Yes, USB4 will provide the same massive throughput as Thunderbolt 3 at lower prices eventually, and likely far more products too.

2880px certified usb4 40gbps logo.svg

Yes, USB4 will provide the same massive throughput as Thunderbolt 3 at lower prices eventually, and likely far more products too.

Capacity versus price

For most consumers, the primary shopping criteria for external storage are capacity and price. However, while you might think that the lowest-cost drives provide the most value–they don’t. In fact, dollar for dollar, cheaper low-capacity drives have always been the worst deal in terms of price per terabyte.

You can see the phenomena in the charts below where we compare the popular WD Elements desktop hard drive’s available capacities and prices. You’re paying more than twice as much per terabyte for the lowest-capacity drive versus the next step up. It’s almost as bad on the WD Elements Portable drive.

comparison tables of price per terabyte and price per gigabyte on portable hard drives and desktop external hard drives.

The worst value for an external hard drive is typically the lowest-capacity drive.

comparison tables of price per terabyte and price per gigabyte on portable hard drives and desktop external hard drives.

The worst value for an external hard drive is typically the lowest-capacity drive.

IDG

comparison tables of price per terabyte and price per gigabyte on portable hard drives and desktop external hard drives.

The worst value for an external hard drive is typically the lowest-capacity drive.

IDG

IDG

The best “value,” as you can see, typically means the most capacious hard drives. But it also means higher total cost, and not everyone needs maximum capacity.

How much capacity do you need?

So how much storage do you actually need? For backup, we recommend a drive that’s at least twice the capacity of the total amount of data residing on your PC’s internal storage.

If you have 1TB of storage in your PC, a 2TB drive allows you to make a full backup while keeping previous versions, as well as additional differential and incremental backups. I.e., the larger the capacity, the more backups over a longer period of time you can keep, or the more PCs you can back up to the same drive.

While a desktop hard drive (read 3.5-inch) provides far more capacity (up to 26TB currently if you’re a data center), it also requires a power cable, weighs more, and generally won’t be as shock resistant as a portable 2.5-inch hard drive. The latter is designed to take bumps in a laptop, even when powered up. Then again, if you really want rugged–go the SSD route.

Interface

The vast majority of external drives today are USB drives. However, USB comes in many speeds: 5Gbps, 10Gbps, 20GBps, and—eventually with USB4—40Gbps as with Thunderbolt 3/4. Ignore the version number (3.x) and look for the speed.

The USB Forum has changed its nomenclature to indicate throughput speed—SuperSpeed USB 5Gbps (formerly USB 3.x gen 1), SuperSpeed USB 10Gbps (formerly USB 3.x gen 2), and SuperSpeed USB 20Gbps (formerly USB 3.2 2×2). For the sake of brevity (and our sanity), we generally shorten those to, for example, USB 10Gbps, 10Gbps USB, 10Gbps etc.

All USB hard drives use a slower standard, typically USB 5Gbps. No hard drive, unless combined with other drives in RAID 0 or above, can saturate even the 5Gbps interface (roughly 500MBps real-world after overhead). Because of that, you’ll never see one rated higher.

Where SuperSpeed 10Gbps/20Gbps, USB4, or Thunderbolt are of value is with the aforementioned RAID hard drive setups, or more likely—an SSD. USB 10Gbps is fast enough for most users, and getting cheaper by the week. A 10Gbps Samsung T7 Shield can be had for $80 in a 1TB capacity.

Faster USB 20Gbps (Gen 2×2) basically doubles speed but moves you into a higher-price bracket, with the Seagate Firecuda Gaming SSD costing $100 for only 500GB of storage. Although far faster than 5/10Gbps, there still aren’t a lot of USB 20Gbps/USB4 ports out there.

Thunderbolt 3 and the newer Thunderbolt 4 (almost exactly the same thing with stricter implementation requirements) are the highest-performing interfaces for external storage. The key negatives are the premium pricing and a general lack of compatibility with the far more popular USB.

That said, there are dual Thunderbolt/USB SSDs available such as the Sandisk Pro-G40. The G40 is pricey at $160 for 1TB, but a fantastic drive for those who can afford it. Pure Thunderbolt external SSDs can be even pricier, as they’re almost all sold by Mac-oriented boutique vendors such as OWC and Sabrent.

usb portable drives

The top drive uses the older, slower Mini-USB interface. The second drive features the connector that replaced it: Micro B SuperSpeed. The Orange drive features both a SuperSpeed Micro B and Thunderbolt 2 (mini DisplayPort connector). The bottom drive features USB-C or USB Type C.

usb portable drives

The top drive uses the older, slower Mini-USB interface. The second drive features the connector that replaced it: Micro B SuperSpeed. The Orange drive features both a SuperSpeed Micro B and Thunderbolt 2 (mini DisplayPort connector). The bottom drive features USB-C or USB Type C.

usb portable drives

The top drive uses the older, slower Mini-USB interface. The second drive features the connector that replaced it: Micro B SuperSpeed. The Orange drive features both a SuperSpeed Micro B and Thunderbolt 2 (mini DisplayPort connector). The bottom drive features USB-C or USB Type C.

Ports

External drives come with a variety of ports, though they’re gradually (and thankfully) consolidating on the orientation-agnostic Type-C connector. Here’s the list of connectors you might see on your drive:

USB 3 Micro-B — This wider, flatter port is still very common on many lower-cost portable and desktop external hard drives. It’s actually the same Micro USB port used on your phone, but with more data lines to hit USB 3.0 speeds. It’ll do 5Gbps and is fine for hard drives and SATA (internally) SSDs. Micro-B cables are generally Type-A on the PC end.

USB 3 Type-B is the larger, squarer version of USB 3.0 Micro B. Type B ports are becoming rare, though you might find one on older 5.25-inch enclosures, printers, and scanners. It supports speeds up to 5Gbps and cables are generally Type-A on the PC side. 

USB Type-C or simply Type-C is the latest USB connector and the one the world is standardizing on. It’s small, easy to insert, and you don’t have to worry about which side faces up as with Type-A.

Keep in mind that Type-C refers only to the connector itself. What is carried over the wires varies greatly: USB 2.0 High Speed (480Mbps) to USB 3.2 SuperSpeed 20Gbps, as well as USB4 and Thunderbolt 3 and any combination of them.

USB Type-A You won’t find this familiar rectangular port on any drive, but you will still find it on plenty of PCs and laptops as well as the male version on the other end of most Type-B and Type-C adapter cables.

Thunderbolt 2 is dead at this point. It’s found on older Macs, but even Apple put it out to pasture in 2017. There’s no need to invest in a Thunderbolt 2 drive unless it’s for legacy support issues. That said…

…Apple sells a bi-directional Thunderbolt 1/2 to 3 adapter if you need to connect the one generation to the other. The adapter does not, however, carry power, so bus-powered external drives (no power jack) will require a powered dock.

eSATA is another legacy port that’s disappeared from newer tech. Created for attaching external storage to your computer’s SATA bus, eSATA was a cheap way in its day to move beyond the toddling 60MBps performance of USB 2.0.

5Gbps USB 3.0 put the last nail in eSATA’s coffin. As with Thunderbolt 2, the only reason to invest in an eSATA drive is for use with older computers.

Two drives for backup?

There’s a fundamental maxim in backup, appropriately named the Rule of Three. It states that you should always maintain three copies of your irreplaceable data: the original data, a backup, and a backup of the backup.

Preferably, the two backups are kept in separate locations, one being offsite (online, or another location). Keeping a copy online is great for smaller amounts of data and certainly meets the offsite criteria.

However, for vast photo, audio, and/or video collections, external drives in pairs (or more), are a far faster solution. Especially with most broadband still being relatively limited in upstream speed.  

For guidance on building out the best backup plan possible, see our roundups of the best cloud backup services and best Windows backup software.

How we test

Some of the older reviews you might find here feature results gathered on an Intel Core i7-5820K/X99 motherboard with 64GB of Kingston DDR4 memory running Windows 10. A discrete Gigabyte Alpine Ridge Thunderbolt 3 card and Ableconn USB 3.2 2×2 20Gbps card (Asmedia 2142 controller) were used for connecting the external drives. An Asus USB 3.1/10Gbps (Asmedia 1142 controller) card was employed for some of the really old drives on the chart. 

Subsequently, drives were tested using Windows 11 64-bit running on an MSI MEG X570/AMD Ryzen 3700X combo with four 16GB Kingston 2666MHz DDR4 modules, a Zotac (Nvidia) GT 710 1GB x2 PCIe graphics card, and the Asmedia ASM3242 USB 3.2×2 card. Copy tests utilize an ImDisk RAM disk using 58GB of the 64GB total memory.

Currently, we’re using Windows 11 64-bit running on an X790 (PCIe 4.0/5.0) motherboard/i5-12400 CPU combo with two Kingston Fury 32GB DDR5 4800MHz modules (64GB of memory total). Both 20Gbps USB and Thunderbolt 4 are on the board and Intel integrated graphics are employed. The 48GB transfer tests utilize an ImDisk RAM disk taking up 58GB of the 64GB of total memory. The 450GB file is transferred from a Samsung 990 Pro 2TB which also runs the OS.

We run various synthetic benchmarks including Crystal Disk Mark 6/7/8, AS SSD 2, and Iometer. We also perform real-world transfer tests using a 48GB batch of small files and folders, as well as a large 48GB and 450GB files. The testbed boots from a NVMe drive, but the real-world (Windows) file transfers are performed to and from a 58GB RAM disk.

Note that all review charts feature results garnered from the same test bed.

External drive FAQ


1.

What is the difference between an SSD and an HDD?

HDDs (hard disk drives) have been around for more than 50 years. They are essentially boxes containing spinning platters with read/write arms that skim across them to detect the orientation of, or re-align particles in, the magnetic material that coats the platters. 

SSDs (solid state drives), on the other hand, use flash memory and have no moving parts inside the drive. Data is instead stored in cells—aka, voltage traps—which are interconnected in a matrix. The matrix approach allows for data to be pushed or pulled to/from many different places at once and significantly increases both read and write speed—on the order of 100 times faster these days.

Generally speaking, SSDs are a better bet for your external drives due to their smaller size, faster speeds, and far superior ruggedness and durability. The main drawback to SSDs is that you pay quite a bit more per terabyte of storage. As technology and production techniques improve, the price of SSDs has and will continue to drop.

2.

How often should you back up your data?

Ideally, you should backup your data as often as possible. This is especially true if you are working on an important project or have data that you absolutely cannot afford to lose. 

If you have your external hard drive connected to your computer at all times, it is a good idea to automate the backup process and have the drive back up your data every hour or so. If you disconnect or travel with your external hard drive, you should try to remember to back up your data onto it every time you change your data or at least every day. See our roundups of the best Windows backup software and the best online backup services to learn more.

3.

Why is my actual hard drive storage smaller than specified?

This comes down to the perceived size of storage (KB, MB, GB, TB) versus the actual size of that storage. Most consumers are led to believe that a Kilobyte (KB) is 1,000 bytes when it is actually 1,024 bytes. Most consumers then are led to believe that a Megabyte (MB) is 1,000 KB when it is actually 1,024 KB. So a manufacturer’s hard drive that claims to have 1 TB of storage actually has only 931.31 GB of storage. It is essentially a rounding error that manufacturers neglect to advertise because round numbers are easier to understand. 

Another reason that actual storage may appear less than advertised is that hard drives have to be formatted to read and write data properly. When formatting, a portion of the storage space on the drive is allocated in order to catalog the data.

4.

How long does an external hard drive last?

The average lifespan of an external hard drive is about three to five years. However, this is highly dependent upon the make and model and the conditions of usage and storage. The more you use an external hard drive, the less reliable it becomes. 

One way to guesstimate the lifespan of your hard drive is to look at the manufacturer’s warranty and the TBW (total terabytes written) number. You can determine the estimated daily amount of storage you write and then extrapolate from there to see how long you can continue to use it everyday until you reach the TBW. These numbers are not entirely reliable, and drives can last much longer than these two values, but they give an idea as to when you will likely begin to encounter issues.

5.

How do external hard drives fail?

There are a number of ways that an external hard drive may fail. They are especially susceptible to failure due to frequent mishandling, outdated drivers, connecting and disconnecting, and unsafe or forced ejections. To ensure that you keep your hard drive working properly, keep it stored in a safe place, try not to drop it, update your drivers, and make sure that you connect and disconnect it from devices properly.

Business, Storage

Get this $15 page turner for your Kindle and read in absolute comfort

24 June 2024 at 12:23

Anyone who’s an avid Kindle reader is gonna want this tiny page turner for Kindle devices—and right now you can get it for just $15 if you’re an Amazon Prime member (or $18 if you aren’t).

This nifty gadget is a total game changer if you love reading ebooks but hate having to tap the screen all the time. You know, like when your Kindle is mounted on a stand (also on sale) and you don’t want to reach out to turn the page every time. Or when it’s winter and you want to keep your arms under the blankets while reading.

With the Inncarvs remote control, you can turn ebook pages with the click of a button. It’s not complicated to set up and doesn’t require Bluetooth—simply clip the device to your Kindle and you’re good to go.

This remote page turner works with most Kindle devices (excluding 8th generation Kindles), but it also works with Kobo e-readers, Apple iPads, Android tablets, smartphones, and more.

That means you can use this for more than just page turning. For example, use it with an onscreen camera app to snap photos from afar. It’s compatible with nearly any device that’s less than 0.46 inches thick. (If you have a case on your device, you may need to take it off.)

You don’t need batteries for this because it recharges via USB-C, and the battery life is pretty good. If you read for an average of two hours per day, the page turner will last about a month on a full charge and the remote itself will last about two months on a full charge.

This gadget will seriously upgrade your digital reading experience without breaking the bank. Again, Prime members can snag it for $15. If you aren’t a Prime member, sign up for a 30-day free trial to claim this deal and a bunch of other Prime-only deals.

This Kindle page turner is just $15 Gadgets

Save $160 on MSI’s 34-inch ultrawide OLED monitor

24 June 2024 at 11:43

Who doesn’t love a good deal? If you’re in the market for an ultrawide gaming monitor with a vibrant OLED flair, here’s a solid one for you: Today’s favorite find is this 34-inch MSI ultrawide OLED gaming monitor that’s now down to $740 at Amazon. Save $160 now and swap out your traditional dual-screen setup for this ultrawide winner.

The 34-inch ultrawide display has a 21:9 screen ratio for a 3440×1440 resolution, which is more than enough for an immersive gaming experience. Whether you’re into shooters or traveling through vast MMORPG worlds, it’ll change the way you game.

It has a smooth 175Hz refresh rate and a near-instantaneous 0.03ms (GtG) response time for minimal lag.

It also looks great! This monitor has an 1800R curved screen (easier for your eyes to see from one edge to the other), narrow “frameless” bezels (for a sleek appearance and minimal distractions), and HDR capabilities (delivering high clarity and details for the best experience).

Connectivity is well-covered in this MSI model: two HDMI 2.1 ports, one DisplayPort 1.4 port, one USB-C DisplayPort port, two USB-A ports, and even a USB-B port in case you need it. It’ll work with pretty much any device you have, from PCs to gaming consoles to peripherals.

This is a fantastic opportunity to upgrade your gaming setup with a high-performance ultrawide monitor for just $740. If you’re willing to spend just a teensy bit more, you can also check out the 34-inch Samsung Odyssey G8, which is also on sale at Amazon right now.

This 34-inch ultrawide MSI monitor is on sale! Monitors

Anker’s slim portable charger is only $18 right now

24 June 2024 at 11:08

Are you always on the move and need a reliable way to keep your phone, earbuds, and other devices charged? A good power bank is the ideal travel companion, ensuring you’ll never run out of battery.

And if you need a power bank, good news: the Anker 313 PowerCore 10K is now available for just $18 at Amazon, a superb price for an everyday gadget that’s so useful to have on you.

At 10,000mAh, the PowerCore 10K can fully charge a modern powerhouse phone at least one full time, while older phones with less capacity might even get two complete charges. It comes in super handy when your phone’s battery life isn’t what it used to be.

This Anker power bank is super slim, lightweight, and fits into any bag or even your pocket. It’s about the size of a smartphone and it weighs about 7.5 ounces, so carrying it around should be no problem.

It has two input options for charging the power bank: a USB-C port and a microUSB port. (Only one can be used at a time.) It has a single USB-A output port, with PowerIQ and VoltageBoost technology that detects what it’s charging and delivers up to 12 watts.

While we haven’t personally reviewed this particular power bank, the device has over 102,000 reviews on Amazon with 4.5 out of 5 stars, which is basically the next best thing.

Don’t miss out on this fantastic deal! For just $18, this slim power bank buys you peace of mind when you’re out and about. (Don’t forget to clip the Amazon coupon to get the best price.)

This slim Anker power bank is only $18 Mobile Phone Chargers

Microsoft erases guide for switching to local Windows accounts

24 June 2024 at 10:44

Did you know that it’s entirely possible to use Windows 11 with a local-only account, the way it worked way back when computers still used floppy drives?

You’d be forgiven for not knowing, because it seems like Microsoft is going out of its way to hide this option from you, hoping to push you onto a connected Microsoft Account instead. In fact, they’re straight-up erasing information that might tell you otherwise.

Microsoft keeps a pretty sizable collection of short, to-the-point guides for some of the most frequently searched functions on Windows. For example, this page tells you how to move from a local-only, non-connected user account to a full-on Microsoft Account.

But that page used to say a lot more. Tom’s Hardware discovered that the most recent version of the page has deleted information on how to go in reverse, to transition from a Microsoft Account to a local account. The change was made last week, just as the newest Surface devices hit the market. The original version of the page is still visible via the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine.

It’s disheartening, but not surprising. Microsoft has been incorporating more online, always-connected features into Windows for decades (including several unwelcome pushes to buy Microsoft Office or switch to the Edge browser). And this push only seems to be accelerating as Microsoft bets big on generative AI with Copilot, even going as far as offering a paid upgrade for more functionality.

It’s still possible to operate Windows 11 as a local user, only logging into Microsoft services via web browser like in ye olden days. But you have to set up an account first, then manually move yourself off of it.

Microsoft appears to be increasing that difficulty with intention. The recent changes to the Windows 11 setup process—and now yeeting instructions off its own support page—show that Microsoft wants every user to send over data constantly.

Windows

Keychron Q1 HE keyboard review: Who is this for?

24 June 2024 at 10:30
At a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Hot-swap magnetic switches
  • Great new programming tool
  • Typical Keychron quality

Cons

  • No game-specific profiles
  • Only three compatible switches, all linear
  • Wireless wake function is iffy
  • No adjustable feet

Our Verdict

Despite an impressive technical achievement with hot-swap adjustable actuation and great new programming software, the Q1 HE’s lack of switch choices and game profile settings mean its appeal is extremely limited. You can get better customization or better actuation options elsewhere.

Price When Reviewed

$219

Best Prices Today: Keychron Q1 HE keyboard

Retailer
Price
Keychron
$219
Price comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwide
Product
Price
Price comparison from Backmarket

Keychron is one of my go-to recommendations for keyboards. The company makes a ton of high-end mechanical boards that are both accessible and customizable, at a price well below those of the competition. With its apparent desire to fill every single possible niche, it was inevitable that the company would try its hand at adjustable actuation. So here we are with the Q1 HE.

The Q1 HE is a keyboard with magnetic hall-effect switches, meaning you can adjust the point at which they activate — how hard or soft you need to press the keys. It’s also the first adjustable actuation keyboard on the market with hot-swap switch sockets, something I’ve previously said is essential. That’s an impressive milestone, and the Q1 HE keeps up Keychron’s great build and feature set.

But because of the lack of options for switches, and a lack of one crucial feature for gamers, I’m not sold on this design. The Q1 HE does do what it says on the box, but its advantages over the Q1 Max are slight, and you give up a much wider selection for customization. It only makes sense for a tiny sliver of potential buyers.

Further reading: See our roundup of the best mechanical keyboards to learn about competing products.

Keychron Q1 HE design and features

From the outside the Q1 HE looks more or less like every Keychron Q keyboard, just with a snazzy red accent for the Enter and Escape keys. If you’ve been following the keyboard world for the last couple of years, you know the look: 75 percent layout, high-profile keycaps, big chunky aluminum case, and a volume knob. It ain’t broke, and Keychron ain’t fixing it.

Keychron Q1 HE knob
Keychron Q1 HE knob

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE knob

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

I’ll spare you the breakdown of all of Keychron’s features, and just say that the HE has everything that the Q Max series (which I’ve already reviewed) does. That includes the above metal case and knob, plus:

  • High-profile PBT keycaps
  • Hot-swap switch sockets
  • RGB lighting
  • Multiple internal layers of foam and padding
  • Triple-device Bluetooth
  • 2.4GHz wireless dongle with 1,000Hz polling mode
  • Screw-in stabilizers
  • Gasket mount PCB
  • Programming with QMK and the Keychron web tool

It’s hitting all the right notes for a high-priced mechanical keyboard. Purists might bemoan Keychron’s gasket quality and stabilizers compared to boutique designs. But we’re talking about a relatively small subset of users who will either build their own keyboard, or pay someone else $400+ to do it. For a high-quality, customizable board you get out of a box, Keychron remains damn hard to beat.

The big differentiator in the HE model is those magnetic switches, allowing for adjustable actuation. For why this is important (and why you might care about it), check out my breakdown of adjustable actuation keyboards. Tl;dr, you can adjust how hard or light you need to press each key, which gives you one more degree of customization, and opens up some interesting options for the most demanding PC gamers.

Keychron Q1 HE hot swap
Keychron Q1 HE hot swap

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE hot swap

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron takes this feature one step further than competitors like Razer, Corsair, and Wooting by adding in the option to swap out the switches. Adjustable actuation is complex whether you’re doing it with light or magnets, so previous designs simply omitted this option. On the Q1 HE, like most of Keychron’s premium designs, you can remove the switches in every socket and install alternatives.

But there’s a pretty big caveat here. Due to the way these magnetic switches work, they’re still incompatible with switches that use the standard Cherry MX format and far simpler electrical circuits. So while you can swap them out, you can’t replace them with almost any other switch on the market. At the time of writing the Gateron Nebula purple switches can only be replaced with other Gateron switches conforming to this specific standard, with just two other choices: Dawn yellow and Aurora green. All three choices are linear, pre-lubed switches with the only difference being their spring stiffness. So if you want a clicky or tactile switch in this board, you’re out of luck.

Keychron Q1 HE switches
The pink switch is a standard electrical key switch, the purple is a hot-swap magnetic switch. They’re not compatible with each other. Right: the tiny magnet on the bottom of the switch stem.
Keychron Q1 HE switches
The pink switch is a standard electrical key switch, the purple is a hot-swap magnetic switch. They’re not compatible with each other. Right: the tiny magnet on the bottom of the switch stem.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE switches
The pink switch is a standard electrical key switch, the purple is a hot-swap magnetic switch. They’re not compatible with each other. Right: the tiny magnet on the bottom of the switch stem.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Granted, that’s two more choices for switches than you get on any other adjustable actuation keyboard. But it’s an extremely specific and still limited option. Gateron may make more switches in this series in the future, but at the moment the biggest differentiator between the Keychron Q1 HE and its competition is barely a difference at all. Fortunately the switch stems are still standard, so custom keycaps will work just fine.

How is the Q1 HE for typing and gaming?

As I said earlier, the Q1 HE is almost identical to the Q1 Max, and that means it’s a very good keyboard. The fit and finish for this hunk of heavy metal is as good as anything else on the market, and its expanded wireless options (Bluetooth for flexibility, 2.4GHz USB dongle for reliability and speed) mean it’ll fit into just about anyone’s workflow. The 1,000Hz wireless option with the dongle even makes it suitable for gaming, though it doesn’t boast the same customization options as a dedicated gaming keyboard.

Using the Q1 HE as my primary board for a few weeks left me with no complaints…except two. One, Keychron’s big flagship designs still don’t have adjustable feet. You’re stuck with the same typing angle for all of them, and it’s a bit lower than I prefer. I’ve taken to buying these stick-on rubber feet specifically to alleviate Keychron’s deficiency. Other all-metal designs have feet options, and dammit, I’m tired of telling Keychron that they’re missing out here.

Keychron Q1 HE bottom

Pictured: a complete lack of adjustable feet. On a $220 keyboard. Boo.

Keychron Q1 HE bottom

Pictured: a complete lack of adjustable feet. On a $220 keyboard. Boo.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE bottom

Pictured: a complete lack of adjustable feet. On a $220 keyboard. Boo.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

The other quirk of the HE versus the Max series is that it appears to be very power-hungry, presumably because all those magnetic sensors are suckin’ down juice. To address this, Keychron made the HE particularly aggressive in terms of battery saving for wireless mode. While Max keyboards will automatically wake up with any key press, the HE needs you to press and hold the space bar for a second or so if you leave it unattended for 30 minutes or more.

This can be finicky, and it feels like about half the time the keyboard just won’t wake up. This meant I needed to toggle the wireless switch to “Cable” and back to dongle mode in order to reboot and reconnect. I updated the firmware twice in the course of this review, and the problem persists, forcing me to do this cumbersome move two or three times a day. It’s a drag.

Keychron Q1 HE control toggles

Get used to switching the right toggle a lot, because this keyboard’s battery wake function is all outta whack. 

Keychron Q1 HE control toggles

Get used to switching the right toggle a lot, because this keyboard’s battery wake function is all outta whack. 

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE control toggles

Get used to switching the right toggle a lot, because this keyboard’s battery wake function is all outta whack. 

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Other than that, the typing and user experience on the HE is excellent. It’s notably stiffer than other Keychron boards — either the gaskets aren’t as springy or the magnetic sensors are really weighing down the PCB. But that doesn’t really affect things for me, and the smooth, lubed switches are above average, as are the latest revisions in the stabilizers.

Note that because of the metal case and linear switches, the Q1 HE is pretty noisy as mechanical keyboards go, even though it has internal foam padding. And with only three extremely similar linear switch choices, there’s no way to go with a “silent” switch upgrade. If you’re concerned about disturbing others around you with typing noise, this isn’t the keyboard for you…though neither are any of the other adjustable actuation boards on the market.

New software

One of Keychron’s signature features is compatibility with QMK and VIA tools for programming. The Q1 HE still works with QMK, the more finicky and difficult option. But in place of VIA, Keychron now has its own self-branded tool available via the browser. In an impressive show of backwards compatibility, it should also work with most of the programmable keyboards they’ve released in the last few years, as well. I tried it out with my own personal K9 Pro, and it booted right up even without a firmware upgrade.

keychron q1 he programming tools

Keychron’s new browser-based programming tool is more straightforward than VIA, and works with older models too. 

keychron q1 he programming tools

Keychron’s new browser-based programming tool is more straightforward than VIA, and works with older models too. 

Keychron

keychron q1 he programming tools

Keychron’s new browser-based programming tool is more straightforward than VIA, and works with older models too. 

Keychron

Keychron

Keychron’s self-branded tool is good. It hits all the necessary points that VIA does, without the somewhat cumbersome need to import a custom profile (if the board isn’t already in VIA’s database). It’s also more straightforward, immediately applying changes as they’re made over a wired connection. And once identified, it dynamically added the “HE Mode” menu relevant to the Q1 HE’s adjustable actuation.

q1 he adjustable actuation
q1 he adjustable actuation

Keychron

q1 he adjustable actuation

Keychron

Keychron

This includes setting custom actuation distance, short or deep, for keys individually or in groups. You get all the usual goodies: rapid trigger mode, analog-style input for individual keys, and the option to activate multiple keys or macros at different depths. In fact Keychron enables four different functions on one key, if you somehow have the superhuman dexterity to precisely depress a 4mm switch to that many places.

It’s easy, it works, and it’s straightforward. Overall, it’s a great addition to Keychron’s products. So it’s a shame that in one particular area, it doesn’t go far enough.

Not enough for gamers

The Keychron Q1 HE’s box advertises it as a keyboard “for peak gaming experience.” The website mentions gaming five times, including competitive gaming. And it makes sense. While normal users might appreciate the ability to adjust how light or hard you need to press your keys, the real benefits are for gamers, and gamers who are far more intense and customize to a much deeper degree than most of us.

Keychron Q1 HE from the side
Keychron Q1 HE from the side

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE from the side

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

So I have to evaluate the Q1 HE as a gaming keyboard. And even with the great new programming tool, it falls at the same hurdle as Keychron’s Lemokey L3: There’s no way to assign per-game custom profiles or activate them upon game launch. Keychron representatives tell me this feature is in the works, but I’m not sure it’s even possible with a web-only programming tool. And as always, I can only review the hardware in the state it’s in at the time — a product can’t get extra credit for what it might be later.

The tool does give you three different profiles to customize, but they need to be manually selected in the browser. This might be enough for most gamers, but that lack of auto-launching functionality inevitably makes it less useful than competing gaming keyboards. And you still need to have the Q1 HE connected via USB to use the tool, undermining its excellent wireless features.

Should you buy the Keychron Q1 HE?

As I wrap up my time with the Q1 HE, I find it difficult to recommend for almost all users. For anyone who wants a high-end mechanical keyboard, the Q1 Max (or any of the Max series keyboards) will offer all of the same features minus adjustable actuation, at a slightly lower price. And they’re compatible wth hundreds and hundreds of different Cherry MX-style switches, not just three interchangeable linear-only options.

If you really do want that adjustable actuation function, it’s available elsewhere, with software that includes the crucial ability to set and auto-launch per-game custom profiles. The only way Keychron beats out offerings from Razer and the like is in its excellent wireless setup. Only SteelSeries also offers adjustable actuation in a wireless package, and it’s not a particularly good one…but it can still handle different game profiles.

Keychron Q1 HE with accessories
Keychron Q1 HE with accessories

Michael Crider/Foundry

Keychron Q1 HE with accessories

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

So the vast majority of people interested in the Q1 HE should go for either a Q Max keyboard, or Razer’s Huntsman V3 Analog at around the same price. Only if you love Keychron’s premium designs, want adjustable actuation, you’re okay with only three switch choices (at the moment), and you’re okay with just one layout setting most of the time, does the Q1 HE make sense versus the alternatives.

Between that tiny slice of potential users and the annoying battery and wake issues, the Q1 HE is a rare miss for Keychron. I hope they can bring both this and their other gaming-focused boards up in the future.

Keyboards

iFixit says Surface 2024 devices are even more repairable

24 June 2024 at 10:21

Microsoft’s Arm-powered Surface Pro tablet and Surface Laptop are the next big thing in PC hardware, but what happens when they break? That’s when you head over to iFixit, search for a repair guide, and maybe even look for replacement parts.

As they’ve done for several years, iFixit has torn down the latest Microsoft Surface hardware to see how easy they are to fix.

Microsoft has been pushing devices that can be repaired by end users (or, at least, by someone who knows their way around a Torx screw). And according to iFixit’s presenter Shahram Mokhtari, the latest devices live up to that even though it seemed as if the Qualcomm Snapdragon-based hardware would make it a harder job.

The new Surface Laptop is extremely accessible when it comes to its main compartment, with just four screws under the removable laptop feet and a few magnets holding the bottom cover in place. From there you just need to remove a few screws with a 3IP Torx driver to get the battery out.

The rest of the components are mostly simple, too, at least as far as mobile electronics go, Microsoft even includes “wayfinder” guides printed on the parts, plus a QR code linking to repair guides on its site.

The only major bummer is that the RAM is soldered into place next to the Snapdragon processor, though that’s hardly a surprise. Maybe a CAMM2 infusion can help address that in the future.

The Surface Pro tablet is much harder to repair, given its more dense arrangement and the fact that you need to remove the display first to access anything except the M.2 storage drive. (The drive can come out without even opening the case, as seen on previous models.)

Even so, it’s remarkably repairable for a tablet, with most of its components coming out without any glue or just a few flexible thermal shields covering them.

iFixit is giving both the new Surface Laptop and Surface Pro tablet an 8 out of 10 provisional repairability score, a big win for Microsoft. For sake of comparison, the entirely modular Framework Laptop gets a 10 out of 10, while the most recent iPad Air (which shares some Arm DNA with the Surface Pro) gets just 3 out of 10.

Microsoft is getting even more brownie points for posting the service manuals for both new Surface devices on day one.

Laptops, Tablets

Why are tech companies so willfully bad at privacy?

24 June 2024 at 09:00

You could once count on privacy as given. Even when PCs first became widespread in homes, they could serve as tools for this purpose. You could anonymously answer your most embarrassing questions using a digital encyclopedia or early online database.

But as internet usage rose, control over our personal information began to plummet. Now we’ve reached a stage where no one has complete say in the details shared about us—and more and more, tech products and services don’t just spill the beans, but they’re also digging deeper into our lives.

Further reading: Best VPN services 2024: Top picks for speed, price, privacy, and more

Take Microsoft Recall—a new feature with the potential to save hours of headache. When active, Windows captures screenshots of everything you do, then leans on AI to comb through that data when you want to find the recipe you looked at last week, or a message your coworker sent a few months ago. Essentially your PC surveils you, but for your benefit. And as announced, Microsoft Recall was on by default (for compatible PCs) and stored the data in a way that could’ve still allowed hackers to see all your activity if your system gets compromised. (Make sure you’re always running an active antivirus, folks.)

After fierce blowback, Microsoft quickly retooled Recall. The company set it to be off by default, required Windows Hello for use, and switched to decrypting the files only when accessed (aka just-in-time decryption). The speed of response was commendable, but also suggested Recall could have been announced in this incarnation from the start.

Microsoft Recall in action (Build 2024)
Microsoft Recall in action, as shown at Build 2024.
Microsoft Recall in action (Build 2024)
Microsoft Recall in action, as shown at Build 2024.

Microsoft

Microsoft Recall in action (Build 2024)
Microsoft Recall in action, as shown at Build 2024.

Microsoft

Microsoft

And so I’ve wanted to know why that didn’t happen—especially given how AirTags showed the dangerous ways that tracking technology can be used. Microsoft had the opportunity to learn from Apple’s slow reaction to the use of AirTags for stalking and then layer in the extensive knowledge it already has about online threats and data security. It chose not to.

Thirty years ago, the buoyant optimism of technology made sense. The world was less interconnected; access to the internet was new. Innovation could focus on the best-case scenarios. Much like small towns where front doors can be left unlocked, you could release fresh features with little concern that someone was going to exploit them.

Times have changed. I know the big tech companies are aware, as I’ve spoken to several recently about security. I’ve also talked with them about their efforts to broaden the voices at their tables and include more viewpoints. But inclusion isn’t just identity, but a diversity of experiences too. And either the design teams are lacking wide perspective or it’s being overridden, and that’s a shame.

Tempering optimism with realism doesn’t make for a weaker product. It broadens the appeal. Personally, I’m much more likely to try Microsoft Recall in its current form (whenever it launches, anyway). If a company takes clear steps to show they truly understand all the nefarious ways a technology can be used and have added in protections, I’m far more likely to try it.

Sometimes, it feels like the internet is now a sprawling metropolis—a place where you not only have to lock your front door, but sometimes add an iron gate in front of it (and perhaps over your bottom-floor windows, too). Any tech product or service that even touches on that connectivity is like a car that gets you around. But the people selling those cars don’t seem to listen when city folk tell them to empty their interiors before parking. Instead, they just add a steering wheel lock and are surprised when no one wants a car with broken glass.

Further reading: Windows includes built-in ransomware protections. Here’s how to turn it on

Security Software and Services, Windows

Acer Aspire 3 review: A budget laptop or is it just cheap?

24 June 2024 at 06:30
At a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Good budget build quality
  • Plenty of RAM and storage
  • Decent display for the price

Cons

  • CPU performance doesn’t impress
  • Integrated GPU is way behind the pack
  • Keyboard could be better, lacks backlight
  • Ships with Windows 11 Home S enabled

Our Verdict

The Acer Aspire 3 cuts performance to the bone as it limbos below a $500 MSRP.

Price When Reviewed

$499.99

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Budget Windows laptops in crisis. 

Buying a laptop for $500 is as easy as ever in 2024, but most that dart beneath that price do it with outdated processors that come paired with truly terrible integrated GPUs. 

The Acer Aspire 3 exemplifies the problem. It’s a capable laptop for basic tasks. But if you can stretch your budget to $700 or $800, you can snag a laptop that’s at least twice as quick and a much better value for your money.

Looking for more options? Check out PCWorld’s roundup of the best laptops under $500.

Acer Aspire 3: Specs and features

The Acer Aspire 3’s most prominent specification is the AMD Ryzen 5 7520U processor. It’s a relatively basic AMD CPU with a total of four processor cores and eight threads as well as a cut-back version of Radeon integrated graphics.

  • CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7520U
  • Memory: 16GB LPDDR5
  • Graphics/GPU: AMD Radeon 610M
  • Display: 15.6-inch 1920×1080 IPS non-touch 60Hz
  • Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen 4 solid state drive 
  • Webcam: 720p with dual-mic array
  • Connectivity: 1x HDMI, 1x USB 3.2 Type-A, 1x USB Type-C, 3.5mm combo audio, barrel plug power adapter
  • Networking: Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.1
  • Biometrics: None
  • Battery capacity: 50 watt-hours
  • Dimensions: 14.3 x 9.4 x 0.79 inches
  • Weight: 3.8 pounds
  • MSRP: $499.99

Acer doesn’t skimp on memory or storage, as the Aspire 3 has 16 gigabytes of memory and a terabyte of PCIe Gen 4 SSD storage. Many competitors, including Lenovo, Dell, and HP, offer similar RAM and storage for around the same price, but it’s still good to see these specifications aren’t sacrificed to stay below the five-hundred-dollar price point.

Acer Aspire 3: Design and build quality

Acer Aspire 3 design
Acer Aspire 3 design

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 design

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

The design of Acer’s Aspire lineup is well-established, with a basic silver-on-silver that lacks distinctive badging, patterns, or textures. It’s boring, to be honest, but that’s not unusual for a budget laptop.

Plastic is the material of choice, but the laptop is reasonably stiff and rigid. The display doesn’t show much flex when it’s opened and it feels rigid when moving it in and out of a backpack. It’s not an Apple MacBook or Razer Blade, but the Acer Aspire 3 feels well put together, especially for the price. 

Unfortunately, the Aspire 3 I received rattled when the laptop was picked up and even when typing on the keyboard. The culprit seemed to be a spring or component near the touchpad. It’s not a functional problem, but did make the laptop feel a bit cheaper than it otherwise would have. 

On the plus side, the Aspire 3 is portable for a budget 15.6-inch laptop. It’s a bit wide at 14.3 inches but only 0.79 inches thick and weighs a mere 3.8 pounds. It can easily fit in most bags meant to accommodate a laptop, and it’s light enough that it won’t feel tiring to haul around campus or between meetings.

Acer Aspire 3: Keyboard, trackpad

Acer Aspire 3 keyboard and trackpad
Acer Aspire 3 keyboard and trackpad

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 keyboard and trackpad

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

A spacious keyboard, which includes a number pad, stretches across the Acer Aspire 3’s interior. It has plenty of room to provide large keys, except for the left-side tab, caps lock, and shift keys, which are slightly undersized. The numpad keys are shaved down a hair but remain comfortable and easy to find.

Key feel is mixed. There’s enough travel for a good tactile sensation, but I found the action of each key was a tad too springy, and the rattle I mentioned earlier gave the keyboard an unpleasant sound.

A keyboard backlight is absent, making the laptop difficult to use in dimly lit rooms. While not unusual for a laptop around $500, this is a price point where keyboard backlights are available, and it would’ve been a nice feature to include.

The touchpad is a highlight, measuring over 5 inches wide and about 3 inches deep. It can’t compare to the size of touchpads on more expensive laptops but provides enough room for Windows’ multi-touch gestures. It also felt responsive and didn’t pick up any unintended inputs during my time with the laptop.

Acer Aspire 3: Display, audio

Acer Aspire 3 display
Acer Aspire 3 display

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 display

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer ships the Aspire 3 with a non-touch IPS display boasting a resolution of 1920×1080. It’s an acceptable display though, perhaps unsurprisingly, far from the best available.

The display makes a good first impression. Spreading 1080p resolution across a 15.6-inch display works out to a pixel density of 141 pixels per inch. A 27-inch 4K monitor has 163 pixels per inch, so the Acer’s display isn’t far behind and, in many cases, will look just as sharp. It’s also fairly bright with a maximum measured brightness of 324 nits. That could be higher, to be sure, but it’s acceptable for a budget laptop. 

However, the Aspire falls back in color performance and contrast. It can look dull or washed-out, especially when viewing darker movies and games, like The Batman or Resident Evil 4. It’s also not the best choice for content creation due to both its resolution and color performance. Video and photo editors, digital artists, and other creative workers are going to need to buy a more expensive laptop.

But it’s difficult to find a better display at this price. The display is comfortable to use for hours at a time in both brightly and dimly lit rooms. That’s not a high bar, but it’s one not all budget laptops can jump. The Acer Aspire 3 is up to the task.

The built-in speakers, on the other hand, are inadequate. They’re not loud even at maximum volume and often sound muddy or unclear, especially when bass is required. They also fire downward, which means audio performance worsens if the laptop is placed on a surface that absorbs sound (like, say, your lap). It’s not a great experience. 

Acer Aspire 3: Webcam, microphone, biometrics

A basic 720p webcam is squeezed into the Acer Aspire 3’s top bezel, and it’s bad. The webcam’s image quality is fuzzy, dull, and lacks both contrast and color. None of this is unusual for an inexpensive 720p webcam, but it remains a huge step down from the 1080p webcams that are now common in more expensive laptops. It’s ok for casual video calls, but that’s about it. 

The microphone performs better. It picks up good volume and filters out some annoying background noise, like the sound of a space heater or a dog barking outside. Recorded dialogue tends to sound distant and tinny, so I wouldn’t recommend recording a podcast, but the microphone is more than adequate for most voice and video calls.

Biometrics login isn’t available on the Acer Aspire 3. That’s not a surprise, as nearly all laptops sold below $600 omit this feature.

Acer Aspire 3: Connectivity

Acer Aspire 3 connectivity
Acer Aspire 3 connectivity

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 connectivity

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

The Acer Aspire 3’s connectivity, though basic, should be enough for most people. It has two USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 ports and one USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 port. The USB-C port also supports DisplayPort and USB-C Power Delivery, so it can be used to connect a monitor and/or charge the laptop (Acer doesn’t ship the laptop with a USB-C charger, however, and instead uses an old-school barrel plug). A 3.5mm combo audio jack and HDMI 2.1 port rounds out the options.

That covers most devices a typical owner will want to connect. The only port missing is Ethernet, which is a shame, because there’s enough room on the laptop’s flanks to accommodate it. Ethernet connections are possible, but you’ll need to use a USB-C to Ethernet adapter or a USB-C hub with an Ethernet port.

Wireless connectivity is a bit behind the curve. The laptop supports Wi-Fi 6, which is now a couple generations out of date; Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7 can offer better performance. Bluetooth 5.2 is available, too. 

Acer Aspire 3: Performance

The Acer Aspire 3 is powered by AMD’s Ryzen 5 7520U, an entry-level mobile processor launched in September of 2022. Its modest specifications include four processor cores, eight threads, and a maximum boost clock of 4.3GHz. It also has a rather low default thermal design power of 15 watts. None of this is great news for the laptop’s performance.

Acer Aspire 3 PCMark 10 results
Acer Aspire 3 PCMark 10 results

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 PCMark 10 results

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

PCMark 10, a generalized system benchmark, puts the Acer Aspire 3 off to a lackluster start with a score of 4,115. That’s not great, as it positions the Acer Aspire 3 far behind many other laptops we’ve tested recently. 

Clearly, the step down from a laptop with a current generation mid-range mobile SoC (like the Intel Core Ultra 5 125H or AMD Ryzen 7 8840HS) to the older AMD Ryzen 5 7520U is steep.

Acer Aspire 3 Cinebench results
Acer Aspire 3 Cinebench results

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 Cinebench results

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

Cinebench, a heavily multithreaded short-duration CPU benchmark, puts the Acer Aspire 3 in an even less favorable position. Core count is important in this test, so it’s not surprising to see the quad-core Ryzen 5 7520U fall behind more expensive alternatives with at least twice as many cores. 

Intel’s Core i3-N305 is the only recently tested processor that’s slower. It’s actually an eight-core CPU, but doesn’t support hyperthreading and relies entirely on Intel’s Alder Lake E-Cores, which aren’t nearly as quick as the P-Cores found in more expensive Intel processors. 

Still, this again is a steep step down. It suggests that laptops priced around $800 to $1,200 are more than twice as quick in bursty multi-threaded workloads, which brings the Aspire 3’s value into question.

Acer Aspire 3 Handbrake results
Acer Aspire 3 Handbrake results

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 Handbrake results

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

Handbrake, a heavily multithreaded long-duration CPU benchmark, doesn’t change the story. The Ryzen 5 7520U is much, much slower than more modern Intel Core Ultra and AMD Ryzen 8000-series CPUs. 

Acer Aspire 3 3DMark results
Acer Aspire 3 3DMark results

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 3DMark results

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

Next we get into graphics performance—and this is where the Acer Aspire 3’s stumble turns into a gnarly face-plant. 

The AMD Ryzen 5 7520U has Radeon 610M integrated graphics with just two (yes, two!) graphics cores. By comparison, the new AMD Ryzen 7 8840HS has Radeon 780M graphics with 12 graphics cores.

The Acer Aspire 3’s IGP severely underperforms most laptops we’ve tested in the last few years, aside from those with similar entry-level AMD Ryzen 3 and Ryzen 5 processors. Even the Acer Aspire Go 15, which has a cut-down version of Intel’s aged UHD Graphics, scores a small victory over the Aspire 3 in 3DMark’s Time Spy benchmark. 

While the Aspire 3’s CPU and integrated GPU fail to impress, the laptop offers 16GB of RAM and a 1TB solid state drive. That’s a lot of capacity for a $500 laptop, and it goes a long way towards making the laptop feel snappy and useful in typical day-to-day use. Despite its lackluster performance, it often feels as quick as far more expensive laptops—if you stick with less demanding applications like web browsers and office suites.

Acer Aspire 3: Battery life

At a glance, the Acer Aspire 3’s mediocre performance would seem to hint at excellent battery life. However, as noted, it uses an older version of AMD’s Ryzen mobile processor line which isn’t as efficient as more modern architectures. The laptop also makes do with a 50 watt-hour battery, which isn’t large for a 15.6-inch laptop in 2024 (many have 60 to 70 watt-hours, or more).

Acer Aspire 3 battery life results
Acer Aspire 3 battery life results

IDG / Matthew Smith

Acer Aspire 3 battery life results

IDG / Matthew Smith

IDG / Matthew Smith

That has a consequence for battery life. While Acer says the laptop could achieve over 18 hours of battery life in a best-case video rundown scenario, our standard video rundown test (which loops a 4K file of the short film Tears of Steel) drained the battery in roughly six hours and 45 minutes. 

General use didn’t sway my opinion. Using the laptop to write in Google Docs and browse the web sucked the battery at a rate consistent with six to eight hours of battery life. It’s not terrible for a budget Windows laptop, but certainly behind the curve. 

Acer Aspire 3: Windows 11 Home S

The Acer Aspire 3 is shipped with Windows 11 Home S mode enabled. Owners can upgrade to Windows 11 Home at any time, for free, and Acer sent the review laptop with this upgrade installed. 

Haven’t heard of Windows 11 Home S mode? It’s a mode found on some budget Windows laptops that locks app installation to those available on the Microsoft Store. The mode also locks the default browser to Microsoft Edge.

That’s not great. Swapping out of Home S mode is simple and free, but it’s an annoying extra step that might surprise users less familiar with Windows 11. 

Acer Aspire 3: Conclusion

The Acer Aspire 3 is a competent budget laptop with a decent display, lots of RAM, and spacious storage, but its lackluster CPU and GPU performance bring its value into question. 

The Aspire 3’s MSRP of $500 is extremely affordable, but spending a few hundred dollars more can snag you a laptop that’s roughly twice as quick in CPU benchmarks and over six times quicker in GPU benchmarks. It’s an acceptable choice if $500 stretches your budget to the limit, but it’s otherwise not the best value.

Shoppers considering this laptop may want to step down to an even more basic model, like the Aspire 3 A315-24PT-R288 or a Chromebook. That might seem strange, as those laptops are even less capable. But they’re also sold for as little as $300—and I don’t think the Aspire 3 can handle much they can’t. 

Laptops

6 powerful Windows apps that tweak, tune, and speed up your PC

24 June 2024 at 06:30

With tweaking tools such as WingetUI or Microsoft PC Manager, you can not only improve settings in Windows 10/11, but also fix problems. This often works faster and more effectively than with manual changes to the registry or other system files.

get windows 11 pro for cheap

Windows 11 Pro

Windows 11 Pro

In this article, we will show you some of the best tweaking tools currently available for Windows, which are also available free of charge. Some of the tools are portable, i.e. you do not need to install them, but can simply start them, even from USB sticks.

Further reading: Supercharge Windows with Microsoft’s free PowerToys

NetAdapter Repair – fix network problems

If Windows can no longer communicate properly with the network or the internet, the open source tool NetAdapter Repair is an ideal tool. Once started, various buttons are available to repair individual areas in Windows that are causing problems with the network.

Inexperienced users in particular can use it to fix problems that otherwise only experienced users would dare to tackle. In addition to simpler problems, such as deleting the DNS cache, retrieving a new IP address, or cleaning up the hosts file, you can also repair VPN settings, reset the Windows firewall, and much more.

The routing table can also be repaired in this area. It’s also possible to select and start several tasks at once at this point. The “Run All Selected” button is available for this purpose. To be able to perform all actions, you should start NetAdapter Repair with admin rights. On the right-hand side, you can also see the external IP address of the internet access and the IP settings of the computer.

NetAdapter Repair ist ein Tool für das Reparatur von Netzwerkverbindungen in Windows.
NetAdapter Repair ist ein Tool für das Reparatur von Netzwerkverbindungen in Windows.

Thomas Joos

NetAdapter Repair ist ein Tool für das Reparatur von Netzwerkverbindungen in Windows.

Thomas Joos

Thomas Joos

The tool therefore provides information on the network settings and the option to rectify errors at the same time.

Microsoft PC Manager helps to clean up Windows

With the free Microsoft PC Manager tool, users can very easily clean up and optimize their PC and search for errors.

The tool can perform a health check and a deep cleanup. Autostart programs can also be cleaned up. The tool also helps to block pop-ups and much more.

Der Microsoft PC Manager hilft beim Bereinigen von Windows und vielem mehr
Der Microsoft PC Manager hilft beim Bereinigen von Windows und vielem mehr

Thomas Joos

Der Microsoft PC Manager hilft beim Bereinigen von Windows und vielem mehr

Thomas Joos

Thomas Joos

PC Manager helps to clean up the system and can delete files that are no longer needed.

AutoPowerOptionsOK and saving energy

The small AutoPowerOptionsOK tool helps with the management and use of power options. The tool extends the standard options and integrates itself directly into the tray area of the taskbar. The tool can be used to access the Windows energy settings and further options are available via the context menu.

AutoPowerOptionsOK
AutoPowerOptionsOK

AutoPowerOptionsOK

AutoPowerOptionsOK

AutoPowerOptionsOK

AutoPowerOptionsOK

AutoPowerOptionsOK is therefore an ideal tool for notebooks or for computers where optimum power settings are important.

Winaero Tweaker is the top dog

WinaeroTweaker is one of the best-known tweaking tools on the market and can change a whole host of settings in Windows. Winaero Tweaker can also be extracted as a portable version during installation. The tool supports numerous settings that can be implemented with just a few clicks. In addition to Windows 10 and Windows 11, Winaero Tweaker can also customize settings in Windows 7 and Windows 8.1.

Winaero Tweaker enables the activation of complete context menus without the entry “Show more options” and the restoration of the classic taskbar and ribbon design in File Explorer. In addition, the position and size of the taskbar can be changed, all background apps can be deactivated simultaneously, and there are shortcut tools to start applications as an administrator without UAC confirmation or to open system folders and settings directly.

Users can create shortcuts to the classic shutdown dialogue and remove unwanted overlay icons from shortcuts. The tool makes it possible to restore the classic search in File Explorer, use the classic Windows photo indicator and the classic volume control, and permanently deactivate Windows telemetry, Windows Defender, and Windows Update.

Winaero Tweaker bietet zahlreiche Möglichkeiten zur Anpassung von Windows.
Winaero Tweaker bietet zahlreiche Möglichkeiten zur Anpassung von Windows.

Thomas Joos

Winaero Tweaker bietet zahlreiche Möglichkeiten zur Anpassung von Windows.

Thomas Joos

Thomas Joos

Adverts and unwanted apps can be blocked, the integrated administrator account can be activated, and automatic registry backups can be set up. Further adjustments relate to drag-and-drop sensitivity, deactivating notifications, and the Action Center as well as resetting the icon cache and all Group Policy options. Network options, such as changing the RDP port and making network drives accessible to elevated applications, are also available.

Customization of the Windows interface includes personalizing folders in Explorer, increasing taskbar transparency, displaying seconds in the taskbar clock, and disabling blurring on the logon screen. Winaero Tweaker also allows you to add useful context menus, hide unwanted entries, and customize default apps for image editing contexts.

These comprehensive functions make Winaero Tweaker an indispensable tool for in-depth customization and optimization of Windows systems.

TweakPower – The Windows Cleaner

Another tweaking tool for Windows is TweakPower. After installation, numerous setting options are also available here. The tool primarily helps with cleaning up Windows and optimizing the operating system.

TweakPower
TweakPower

TweakPower

TweakPower

TweakPower

TweakPower

TweakPower can be used to replace system and desktop icons, optimize network properties and memory, and adjust drive and security settings. The program allows you to clean the hard drive, split and encrypt files, and delete data irrevocably. Users can customize Windows to their liking by changing settings for the system, input devices, drives, and applications.

They can also customize the appearance of Windows by changing colors, icons, the Start menu, and other visual elements. TweakPower tidies up your PC by removing unnecessary files, cleaning the registry, and deleting internet traces. The security features protect the PC by managing firewall settings, automatic updates, and user account control.

Data can be securely deleted and encrypted to protect privacy. Economy Mode reduces power consumption and extends battery life, while Game Mode disables unnecessary processes to improve performance when gaming and streaming.

System maintenance includes managing autostart programs, fixing hard drive errors and typical Windows problems, and creating restore points and backups. Add-ons such as the file splitter and the defragmentation function improve file management and system performance, while the Task Manager provides control over active programs. The performance index evaluates the computer’s hardware components and displays the overall performance.

TweakPower supports multiple languages and is compatible with different versions of Windows, making it a valuable tool for system optimization.

Improve data protection in Windows 10/11

Windows 10 and Windows 11 are data octopuses when it comes to data protection. The small, free tool W10Privacy puts an end to snooping with just one click. The tool can also be used as a portable version during installation. Some virus scanners report a false-positive malware infection of the tool, mainly Microsoft Defender. However, if you download W10Privacy from the developer’s website, you will not catch a virus.

get windows 11 pro for cheap

Windows 11 Pro

Windows 11 Pro
Consumer Electronics

Every laptop user needs this backup battery

24 June 2024 at 04:00

What’s more horrific than having your laptop die midway through your morning commute or flight when you’re in the middle of a project? Maybe the fear that your work didn’t save, striking feels like the ending of the Titanic.

If you don’t want to experience that terror, you need a reliable backup battery like this power bank that has 30W PD and QC charging and 50,000mAh capacity, now $39.99 (reg. $59.99)—save 33% here.

That’s enough resurrection juice to power compact laptops like the Dell XPS, Acer Swift, Google Pixelbook, Chromebooks, and the newer MacBook Airs. It might also power modes with bigger batteries—Lenovo Yoga, Microsoft Surface, and Dell Latitude, among others—just at a slower rate.

The power bank has three USB-A ports for bringing more of your devices back to life while you’re out and about this summer. 50,000mAh capacity is enough to revive an iPhone 14 eleven times, an iPad five times, and AirPods forty times. 

Don’t carry your lifeless devices in your arms—just get this 50,000mAh power bank for $39.99 (reg. $59.99).

 

50000mAh Portable Power Bank With PD 30W and QC 4.0 Fast Charging – $39.99

See Deal

StackSocial prices subject to change.

Accessories

Best USB-C cables 2024: Get quality charging and data transfers

24 June 2024 at 00:00

It’s easy to think that all USB-C cables are the same, and that manufacturers are only claiming to be superior in order to jack up the price. After all, it’s just a cable, right?

That’s completely understandable, but not always accurate. We at PCWorld have tested a ton of USB-C cables and can say with certainty not all of them are made the same. In fact, there can be huge performance differences among cables when it comes to both charging and transferring data.

Hands-on evaluation of numerous cables ranging from the biggest, most-recognizable brand-names to the cheapest of the cheap has revealed some clear winners, which I highlight below.

Why you should trust me: PCWorld has been testing hardware since the 1980s and I’ve been poking and prodding PC components since I cracked open my Commodore VIC-20 in junior high school to see why it stopped working (who uses aluminum-coated cardboard that frays as an RF shield? Commodore, that’s who). I’ve also been a professional journalist for more than three decades and started my stint at PCWorld as an intern in 1993.

For my USB-C cable reviews, I don’t rely on consumer reviews like some “reviewers” — I purchase the cables retail and personally test each one of them, examining the resistance, how they are physically wired, and query the embedded eMarker (if it has one), and then performance test them where appropriate for charge rates, transfer rates, and display support. My picks are separated into two groups to avoid any confusion: USB-C cables that are best for charging, and those best for both charging and fast data transfer.

For more information you can refer to our guide on how to buy a USB-C cable on Amazon without losing your mind, and you can find out more about how I test cables below my picks. 

Updated on June 24, 2024: We’ve all been there. Trying to figure out why our USB-C device isn’t charging. Before you resort to bashing the device, or your head, against a wall, check out these USB-C troubleshooting tips. It could save you time, and your sanity.

Best USB-C cable for charging

Belkin BoostCharge 240-watt charging cable

Belkin BoostCharge 240-watt charging cable
Belkin BoostCharge 240-watt charging cable
Belkin BoostCharge 240-watt charging cable

Pros

  • 240W charging rate
  • Quality braiding and overmolding
  • Big-name brand

Cons

  • Lacks support for high-speed data transfers
  • Pricier than others
Price When Reviewed: $19.99
Best Prices Today: $17.99 at Amazon$19.99 at B&H

Ever since Apple stopped selling our top big-brand cable for charging, we’ve been looking for a suitable replacement and we may have finally found it with Belkin’s BoostCharge 240-watt charging cable.

This 6.6-foot, or 2-meter, cable supports the highest USB Power Delivery charge rate, comes from a recognized big-brand, and is the same price as Apple’s 100-watt cable that used to sell for $19.99 all day.

What happened to Apple’s 100-watt charging cable? In keeping with updated USB power delivery specs, which moves the bar from 100 watts to 240 watts for faster charge rates, Apple dumped the 100-watt 6.6-foot cable for a new 240-watt cable and *cough* increased the price from $19.99 to $29.99.

The good news is the Belkin BoostCharge 240-watt charging cable is a worthy alternative to Apple’s offering.

Internally, the cable is just about on par with the Apple cable for cable resistance. That’s a good thing because Apple’s cables are actually internally constructed quite well in our experience. It’s the outside of Apple cables that has a reputation for falling apart and fraying.

The BoostCharge gives us more confidence than Apple with its pleasant braiding, beefy overmolding and Belkin’s boast that the cable has been tested to more than 30,000 bends.

The BoostCharge also features dual eMarker chips, which support over-temperature protection. With 240-watt charge rates, that last feature is particularly important as the BoostCharge can detect if it’s overheating and signal the devices to pause until it has cooled down enough.

The biggest bummer is the lack of wiring to support video output or actual high-speed data transfers. The BoostCharge is basically a plain-Jane charging cable supporting 480MBps transfer rates (vs. 10Gbps or 20Gbps).

That’s fine though, because most people are simply charging a laptop, tablet, or phone, and don’t need all of those features nor the bulk (data cables tend to be much thicker due to the extra wiring). We actually recommend that most people buy a basic charging cable for the daily abuse of plugging and unplugging devices, and, if necessary, reserving a shorter and higher-capability cable strictly for transferring chores. This should make the pricier fast data and video cable last far longer.

Sure, the Belkin is $20 and perhaps not the best value, but for someone looking for the warm embrace of a big brand to make them feel better, we think the BoostCharge cable is a good pick. The TLDR is if you would have bought an Apple cable but you’re balking at $29 for the equivalent — pick up the Belkin BoostCharge instead. If the Apple brand makes you feel more comfortable, read on.

Anker New Nylon Series 3 USB-C to USB-C 2-pack

Anker New Nylon Series 3 USB-C to USB-C 2-pack
Anker New Nylon Series 3 USB-C to USB-C 2-pack
Anker New Nylon Series 3 USB-C to USB-C 2-pack

Pros

  • Great value
  • 12K bend cycles
  • Better than Amazon Basics

Cons

  • Limited to 60W charging
  • Lacks fast-transfer support
Price When Reviewed: $13.99

At the time of our review, the Anker New Nylon 2-pack was the No. 1 best-selling USB-C cable on Amazon and that’s probably for good reason. At roughly $14 for a pair of 6-foot USB-C to USB-C charging cables from a brand-name people trust, it’s a great value, and for most people looking to handle phone-, small laptop-, and tablet-charging duties-, you probably don’t need to read any further. Just click add to the cart, and move on. If, however, you are someone looking for the caveats with this Anker pair of cables, read on.

The New Nylon 2-pack cables are braided and Anker says they’re tested to 12,000 bend cycles, which is better than most budget charger cables advertise.

Inside, however, there isn’t much special to the Anker New Nylon 2-pack. As basic “charging cables” they’re limited to a maximum of 60 watts. If you’re confused by what a “charger cable” is and whether it can transfer data, just know that the Anker cables can, but only at the minimal 480MBps speeds, meaning it could take minutes to copy large files to your laptop or phone.

You should also know that the lack of faster data transfers also means the Anker cable can’t be used to hook your laptop up to a USB-C port for video.

The cables themselves are really nothing special other than on price and the Anker name. Internally, the construction is pretty basic with resistance, or how much electrical drag the wires place on the charge rate, meh as well. The good news is that the Anker New Nylon cables are still better than the Amazon Basics cables we reviewed in 2020 that are even more meh and even pricier at $10 per cable today.

While cable snobs may turn their noses up at the 60-watt charge performance, in reality, it doesn’t matter that much since even a cable as average as these will perform fine for charging a phone, tablet, or Dell XPS 13- or MacBook Air-class laptop with no issues at all.

That means if we were a new iPhone 15 owner looking to replace a pile of obsolete Apple Lightning cables, we’d buy two or four of these Anker New Nylon cables and stop wracking your brain trying to find the “best USB-C cable.”

The only reason to skip basic charging cables such as the Anker, would be for those who need to transfer large files or someone who wants to hook a monitor or actual fast USB-C drive to your computer.

For everyone else, are there better cables? Sure, see above. Higher-quality, with lower resistance and faster data rates and even sturdier construction? Yes, all those can be had — for more money. But truth be told, if all the cable is going to do is sit plugged into a charger waiting for you to come home and plug it in, who cares? The Anker does the job adequately and it’s from someone you trust at the right price.

SOOPII 100W 6.6ft USB C to USB C Cable Fast Charge

SOOPII 100W 6.6ft USB C to USB C Cable Fast Charge
SOOPII 100W 6.6ft USB C to USB C Cable Fast Charge
SOOPII 100W 6.6ft USB C to USB C Cable Fast Charge

Pros

  • Cool display that shows device charging rates
  • No problems after months of charging various devices

Cons

  • eMarker chip gets some details wrong
  • Outdated 100W power
  • Below average in terms of resistance
Price When Reviewed: $13.99
Best Prices Today: $13.99 at Amazon

We hate to admit it, but we can be suckers for gimmicks and SooPii’s USB-C to USB-C cable has a great gimmick with an integrated display that tells you in real time how much power your phone, tablet, or laptop is drawing.

Sure, most people won’t really care, but for nerds, that extra bit of insight can be compelling. The accuracy of the SooPii is fairy spot-on according to our Charger Lab Power-Z USB-C analyzer.

Unfortunately, once you get past the cool display, there are a few nagging issues: For one, the SooPii is rated at 100 watts (the older maximum power a C-to-C cable could support, which has now been supplanted by 240-watt cables.) There are also some inaccuracies reported by the cable’s eMarker chip, despite it getting the charging capabilities of the cable correct. t

The eMarker wrongly claims the cable is 1-meter long when it’s actually two-meters or 6.6-feet long. It also reports that the cable can transfer data at USB 3.2 and USB4 speeds up to 10Gbps and 20Gbps. But the truth is there are literally no wires to support data transfer at those rates at all. Rather, the SooPii can move data at the minimum data rate of 480Mbps but nothing faster.

The good thing is that SooPii’s product description plainly states it’s a basic charging cable, so the company isn’t trying to pull a fast one on you, but it doesn’t speak well of the QA process.

Internally, the wiring is a little below average for a good charging cable in terms of resistance — the electrical drag the internal wires have — but it’s still better than, say, the Amazon Basics cable we reviewed in 2020. And at $13.99 for the 6.6-foot cable, it’s only so-so value. We’ve seen better charging cables and better data-transfer cables at the same price or even lower.

But you’re not here for those features. You’re here for the cool display. And while the flat-out wrong specs encoded in the eMarker are unfortunate, the charging rate remains accurate. In fact, we’ve used the cable for basic charging of laptops, phones, and tablets for two months with no issues at all — and the gimmick works. It’s just nice to look at the cable and see our laptop is drawing 42 watts, and our phone is drawing 2 watts while being used.

For some, that’s worth overlooking the flaws; for the risk averse, you may want to pass in favor of one of the more reliably built cables from a name brand, such as those above.

For most people the above cables are what you’re looking for: reliable and fast charging (when paired with a good power bank). For those who also want to transfer data or connect a monitor though, these are our picks:

Best USB-C cables for charging and transferring data

Cable Matters 6-foot USB C cable

Cable Matters 6-foot USB C cable
Cable Matters 6-foot USB C cable
Cable Matters 6-foot USB C cable

Pros

  • Can transfer data and run a monitor
  • Long, 6-foot length

Cons

  • Limited to 20Gbps
  • Relatively heavy at 3.5oz
  • Pricey
Price When Reviewed: $18.99
Best Prices Today: $17.99 at Amazon

If you’re looking for a high-quality USB-C cable that will give you excellent performance, it’s hard to beat Cable Matters 6-foot USB-C cable. The cable can do it all and do it all well (well, almost) from charging at up to 100 watts, transferring data from your USB 3.1 SSD, or running a monitor. The only area where it doesn’t excel is in Thunderbolt performance, which is limited to 20Gbps. That’s not a ding in our book because that’s the tradeoff of a 6-foot cable. To hit 40Gbps, you’d have to step down to a shorter cable.

The other cost of this quality is weight and pliability. The cable weighs almost 3.5 ounces, making it the the heaviest cable we tested outside of the 4-meter (13-foot) cable we looked at above. Those thicker gauge wires also mean you can’t roll up as easily or compactly as other cables, too.

And no surprise, high performance and high quality mean it’s not cheap. At $18, it’s among the more expensive cables here. But if performance and quality is your jam, the Cable Matters 6-foot USB-C cable will have you humming.

Cable Matters USB4 2.6 foot USB-C cable

Cable Matters USB4 2.6 foot USB-C cable
Cable Matters USB4 2.6 foot USB-C cable
Cable Matters USB4 2.6 foot USB-C cable

Pros

  • USB4 rating
  • Can charge and fast-transfer data
  • Quality construction

Cons

  • Only 2.6 feet
  • Stiff
  • Niche appeal
Price When Reviewed: $19.99
Best Prices Today: $13.99 at Amazon

Cable Matters Cable is but 2.6-foot so it lacks the appeal of long cables. What appealed to us enough to buy the cable is its USB4 rating which promises high-performance.

And no surprise, the cable was able to charge our laptop at 100 watts, and offered the best voltage and lowest resistance thanks to the wires Cable Matters uses and its 2.6-foot length. That also translated into excellent USB 3.1 data transfer rates, monitor suppor,t and the only cable here capable of driving our Thunderbolt 3 SSD at a full 40Gbps data rates.

If you’re looking for high-performance in all things and don’t mind the length, the Cable Matters USB4 cable is our pick.

Its weaknesses are its stiff feel thanks to the higher-quality, thicker wires and construction Cable Matters uses, and its price. Looked at in dollars-per-foot, this $20 cable is about $8 per foot. With the Amazon Basics USB 3.1 USB-C cable below, you’re only paying $3.17 per foot. 

That Amazon cable can’t match the Cable Matters USB4 in Thunderbolt performance, but few need it. That makes the cable best suited to niche areas but it’s fast nonetheless with excellent construction.

Compared to our picks above, we wouldn’t advise purchasing any of the other USB-C cables we tested. Why settle for something inferior? But we understand some will want to see which cables didn’t make the cut and why.

USB-C cables that didn’t make the cut

Dockcase 8.5-inch USB-C cable

Dockcase 8.5-inch USB-C cable
Dockcase 8.5-inch USB-C cable
Dockcase 8.5-inch USB-C cable
Price When Reviewed: $9.99
Best Prices Today: $11.99 at Amazon

The Dockcase USB-C to USB-C cable is the worst value here if you only judge a cable by length and price. In capability though, this 8.5-inch cable is one of the better performers—a consequence of its short length. The shorter the cable, the less the resistance and, well, the better the performance, even with thin wires.

The Dockcase advertises a 100-watt charge rate, 4K video support, and even Thunderbolt 3 support. The company doesn’t mention it but that Thunderbolt 3 speed is limited to 20Gbps, not the full 40Gbps Thunderbolt 3 users expect, so take note. It’s not practical, but we did charge our laptop at 100 watts with the Dockcase.

Physically, the cable is a flat design with a rubbery outer sheath. The strain relief where the cable connects to the housing is minimal, as well, which makes us question its durability over time. 

Its length is best suited for an ultra-fast portable USB-C SSD, and can pinch hit for charging or running your monitor. We personally wouldn’t recommend it for use with a high-speed Thunderbolt drive or device though, given its aforementioned limitations with that spec.

Amazon Basics 6-foot USB-C USB 2.0 cable

Amazon Basics 6-foot USB-C USB 2.0 cable
Amazon Basics 6-foot USB-C USB 2.0 cable
Amazon Basics 6-foot USB-C USB 2.0 cable
Price When Reviewed: $8.62
Best Prices Today: $9.99 at Amazon

The Amazon Basics USB-C to USB-C USB 2.0 is the cable that epitomizes minimum effort. At 6-feet long, it will do its job to charge your phone or tablet, and even your laptop at up to 60 watts, and that’s about it. Since it’s a USB 2.0 cable, data transfers to or from your computer will be dog slow compared to a USB 3.1 cable. Moving a 1GB file might take a few seconds on a USB 3.1 cable and nearly a minute with the Amazon Basics USB-C Charging cable.

The cable itself is amazingly light. In fact, it’s probably too light, which means Amazon didn’t really use the thickest wires it could for this cable. That shows up with some of the highest resistance among the cables 6 feet or longer in this roundup, meaning less power delivered to your phone or tablet. Granted, we are talking about 2 percent lower wattage compared to the best of the longer cables here. But still, that’s like a school report card that says “present” as its main selling point.

It’s not all bad for the Amazon Basics cable. It does carry a big-name brand. And its lack of wires to support higher-speed USB 3.1 makes it relatively thin and light, and very pliable.

Would we use this cable to charge our laptop every day? Probably not, but for someone charging a phone or tablet, its lightweight feel can be be a plus. 

Anker 6-foot Powerline USB-C cable

Anker 6-foot Powerline USB-C cable
Anker 6-foot Powerline USB-C cable
Anker 6-foot Powerline USB-C cable
Price When Reviewed: $11.99
Best Prices Today: $14.99 at Amazon

This is Anker’s oldest Powerline cable but it’s still available alongside the Powerline II and Powerline III models. As its name tells you: This version is a USB 2.0 (480Mbps) cable, so transferring large files to your phone or tablet from your computer will be tedious at best.

It has a black plastic sleeve without the tacky rubbery feel some cables have. On the inside it’s about average, with actual charging performance somewhat better than the Amazon Basics USB 2.0 cable but not in the class of the Javex cable, which supports charge rates up to 100 watts instead of the Powerline’s 60 watts. Phones, tablets, and light-duty laptops are its best use cases.

Unfortunately, while it’s a decent cable for certain uses, its pricing hurts it. At its typical pricing of $12 it’s not worth it. We’ve seen it more recently for $8, which makes it slightly more attractive, but even at that price, we’d recommend you buy the Javex instead.

JSAUX USB C to USB C Cable 60W 2-pack

JSAUX USB C to USB C Cable 60W 2-pack
JSAUX USB C to USB C Cable 60W 2-pack
JSAUX USB C to USB C Cable 60W 2-pack
Price When Reviewed: 6.99
Best Prices Today: $6.99 at Amazon

Do you get what you pay for? JSAUX “USB C to USB C Cable” kinda proves the old adage that says if the price is low, there’s a reason for it. Not only do you get a 6.6-foot / 2-meter USB-C to USB-C cable in the box—you get two of them for what other brands might charge you for just one cable. Unlike some lesser-known cables on Amazon, the JSAUX cables are at least properly marketed with warnings that it is NOT a Thunderbolt 3 cable, it can NOT output video, and its charge rate is limited to 60 watts, with data limited to a very slow 480MBps. It’s essentially a basic USB-C charging cable and not the greatest one. We looked at the internal resistance of the cable itself and found it to be pretty mediocre. In fact, we haven’t seen a USB-C to USB-C cable with worse resistance. That pretty much means it skimps on internal wiring and potentially may not hold up over time as the cable is flexed over and over again. With all this said, most people don’t actually need high charge rates on a charging cable (where less resistance would be more valuable) and we think that’s reflected in the more than 31,000 reviews of this top-selling cable—with most of them positive—from around the world.

We’d pass for a slightly pricier cable, and would even prefer the Amazon Basics cable to it, but we do recognize that for charging a smart phone and tablet, it’ll probably be fine, which explains how there are 31,000 happy customers. There are, however, better choices out there for those willing to pay for it.

How we test USB-C cables

For this roundup, we purchased retail USB-C cables for our testing. We physically measured and weighed each cable and examined each connector. A proper USB-C cable should use a one-piece shell rather than a folded shell with a visible seam in it. None of the cables we purchased used the lower-strength folded shells.

We do want to point out that weight does tend to matter. All cables are essentially tiny metallic wire strands bound together with insulation. Sure, the connector, housing,  braiding, and outer shell all factors in its weight, but lighter-duty cables literally have fewer wires and are far lighter. For example, the Cable Matters high-performance USB 4 cable is 32-inches long and weighs more than the Amazon Basics low-performance USB 2.0 cable, which is more than twice as long.

That’s not always better though, as a cable with more wires that are a heavier gauge—or thicker—are less pliable and also take up more space in your bag.

Are they all wired correctly?

You’d think you could tell whether a cable is USB-C 2.0 cable by looking at the wires in the connector but that’s not the case. Some cables use connectors with pins that aren’t hooked up to anything.

To check each cable, we use a BitTradeOne USB Cable Checker 2.0 to first see what actual wires are inside of the cable and whether they are hooked up correctly and what they do. For example, a USB-C cable that is fine for charging but a dog in data transfer   will show up as being wired only for USB-C 2.0, as you can see below by the green LEDs. The “CC” LED indicates the Cable Configuration channel is wired up correctly. 

usb c 2.0

The basic Amazon Basics USB-C cable is wired only for USB 2.0 data rates.

usb c 2.0

The basic Amazon Basics USB-C cable is wired only for USB 2.0 data rates.

usb c 2.0

The basic Amazon Basics USB-C cable is wired only for USB 2.0 data rates.

A full-featured USB-C cable has additional wires to carry higher-speed data and the USB Cable Checker 2.0 shows this Cable Matters USB 4 cable in the picture below with the correct wiring all available. The small LED display also tells us that the cable has an ID e-Marker chip, the shell is properly grounded to the cable, and it does a quick resistance test too. The cable tester also checks to see if the metal shell of the cable is grounded to the ground wire of the cable, which is required by spec. Every cable here was properly grounded.

Resistance is futile

The resistance check from our cable checker is quick and dirty, so we augmented that by also measuring the resistance of the cable’s ground wire and vbus wire using a milli-ohm meter connected via a pair of USB-C breakout boards. The breakout boards at both ends add about 30 mohms to the total. By spec, a USB-C cable should not exceed 83 mohms on the ground wires and 167 mohms on the voltage bus.

Many of the cables we tested were within spec or close enough that it didn’t matter, since there’s likely even more resistance we’re not able to account for with our method. We definitely could tell which cables used heavier-gauge or thick wires with less resistance to restrict the flow of electricity, and which ones cheaped out.

usb c 4

This Cable Matters USB 4 cable has all the features you want for transferring data or connecting your monitor.

usb c 4

This Cable Matters USB 4 cable has all the features you want for transferring data or connecting your monitor.

usb c 4

This Cable Matters USB 4 cable has all the features you want for transferring data or connecting your monitor.

What did the e-Marker say?

Since each of the more advanced cables carries an e-Marker that tells the computer what the cable can do, we noted that and the validity of the e-Marker’s claims. All but one of the cables met those claims, but the one that was wrong was way, way wrong. It claimed USB 3.2 10Gbps transfer speeds and a 1-meter length, when it literally didn’t have the wires for the faster transfer speeds and was actually 2 meters long.

emarker

Some USB-C cables feature a chip or e-Marker that contains information the device reads. This two meter cable’s e-Marker is incorrect.

emarker

Some USB-C cables feature a chip or e-Marker that contains information the device reads. This two meter cable’s e-Marker is incorrect.

emarker

Some USB-C cables feature a chip or e-Marker that contains information the device reads. This two meter cable’s e-Marker is incorrect.

We then looked at how fast the cable would charge and transfer data, and whether it supported an alternate mode to run a monitor, using real-world hardware.

For charging speeds we recorded the maximum wattage at which the cable could charge an Asus ROG Strix 15 gaming laptop over its USB-C port using USB-Power Delivery with an Aukey 100 watt USB-PD charger as the source while the laptop was under load. USB-PD today is limited to 100 watts (with a 240-watt spec on the way). Any USB-C to USB-C cable should handle 3 amps at 20 volts, or 60 watts. All of the USB-C to USB-C cables fell into the standard 60-watt or 100-watt camps.

We didn’t test the temperature of each cable’s housing, but we did test the cheapest cable by running it at 5 amps and 20 volts for an hour. The housing heated up by 50 degrees Fahrenheit, and the cable itself became relatively warm (see the thermal image below). Not ideal, but it did this without failure. We subjected other cables to two-hour loads without failure, as well.

For one final charge test, we tasked each cable with a 20 volt, 3 amp and 20 volt 5 amp load (for the 5-amp rated cables) and measured the voltage delivered at the end of the cable using our CT-3 meter.

The cables with the thinnest-gauge wires add more resistance, which in turn reduces the voltage delivered to your laptop, tablet, or phone.

thermal usb c

The thinner the wires used in a cable, the greater the resistance, and the greater the heat as you can see from this thermal image of a $5 6.6-foot USB cable carrying a 5 amp, 20 volt, 100-watt load for one hour.

thermal usb c

The thinner the wires used in a cable, the greater the resistance, and the greater the heat as you can see from this thermal image of a $5 6.6-foot USB cable carrying a 5 amp, 20 volt, 100-watt load for one hour.

thermal usb c

The thinner the wires used in a cable, the greater the resistance, and the greater the heat as you can see from this thermal image of a $5 6.6-foot USB cable carrying a 5 amp, 20 volt, 100-watt load for one hour.

For data transfer, we measured the speed using Crystal Disk Mark 8 while plugged into the USB-C/Thunderbolt 4 port of an MSI Prestige 14 Evo laptop. Since the cables can also be used to transfer data from a Thunderbolt storage drive, we measured how fast that happened using a high-speed SSD-based SanDisk Professional Thunderbolt G-Drive. We found three transfer modes among the cables tested: Thunderbolt 20Gbps performance, Thunderbolt 40Gbps performance, or zero performance because the cable would not work at all with a Thunderbolt drive.

1

Basic USB-C charging cables will not enable advanced drives such as this G-Drive Thunderbolt 3-based SSD, despite the USB-C plug fitting.

1

Basic USB-C charging cables will not enable advanced drives such as this G-Drive Thunderbolt 3-based SSD, despite the USB-C plug fitting.

1

Basic USB-C charging cables will not enable advanced drives such as this G-Drive Thunderbolt 3-based SSD, despite the USB-C plug fitting.

Our last test looked at each cable’s capability running an Asus ROG Strix 17.3-inch portable gaming monitor. The monitor is a high-performance gaming monitor with a resolution of 1920×1080 and refresh rate of 240Hz—which is basically the same bandwidth requirements of a standard 4K 60Hz display.

FAQ


1.

What are the different types of USB-C to USB-C cables?

There are a number of different types of USB-C to USB-C cables including: USB 2.0, USB 3.1 Gen 1, USB 3.1 Gen 2, and Thunderbolt 4.

The main difference between all of these is their data transfer rates and their charge rates. Basic charge cables give you very slow data transfer speeds and typically only up to 60 watts. For a phone, tablet, and even most small laptops such as a Dell XPS 13 or MacBook Pro 13 that’s fine. As you move up to larger laptops such as a Dell XPS 15 or MacBook Pro 16, 60 watts will limit how fast you can charge.

The other key differentiator is speed. USB 2.0 is a plodding 480Mbps. USB 3 cables range from 5Gbps to 20Gbps. While USB4, and Thunderbolt 3 and Thunderbolt 4 can support up to 40Gbps of throughput.

Thunderbolt, USB4, and many USB 3 cables also support display support using DisplayPort.

2.

What are USB-C cables used for?

USB-C cables today are used for transferring data, running monitors, and charging everything on the planet from $5 LED trinkets to $2,000 laptops and even power tools now. It is basically the most common type of cable for electronics today and thanks to its universal and open design it has rapidly replaced all other competitors including Apple’s Lightning as well as older USB cables. It’s appeal is the reversible nature so you no longer have to look for alignment. With its ability to handle 240 watts now, USB-C to USB-C cables will likely begin replacing other proprietary cables as well.

3.

What is the difference between a Type A and Type C cable?

There are a few key differences between the two. A USB-C to USB-A cable has a rectangular connector on side with 4- to 9-pins in it. As you know from trying to plug a mouse into your PC, it only fits in one way and you usually never get it right the first time. On the other end of a USB-C to USB-A cable, you will find the modern oval USB-C connector, which fits in both ways and packs far more pins and wires inside. The short story is that a Type A to Type C cable will typically charge at much slower speeds than a Type C to Type C cable as well as transfer data at far lower data rates. That isn’t always the case as some phones that use special Type A to Type C chargers and cables will indeed charge very fast—but they’re usually proprietary. With most new phone chargers going to USB Type C, you’re probably going to usually want a Type C to Type C cable.

4.

Should you buy a USB-A to USB-C or USB-C to USB-C cable?

The right answer depends on what you want to plug the device and cable into. If you are charging your Galaxy S24 Ultra or iPhone 15 into a charger using a USB-A port, then obviously, you’ll want to buy a USB-A to -C cable.

If you’re wondering what the capabilities are between a USB-A to -C versus a USB-C to -C cable, that largely depends on the cable.

In pure capabilities, a USB-C to -C can potentially charge up to 240 watts and transfer data at up to 40Gbps (and higher eventually with USB4). These are all things even the best USB-A to -C cable can only dream about.

The thing is, while a “full-featured” high-end USB-C to -C cable can do more, most phones can’t take advantage of its features. For example, you have to have an iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro Max, or a high-end Android phone such as the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra or Google Pixel 8 Pro to be able to transfer data at 10Gbps. Most budget phones and tablets transfer data over USB at a plodding 480Mbps even if you have a USB-C to -C cable capable of 40Gbps transfer rates. And you guessed it, if a phone’s top transfer speed is only 10Gbps, pairing it with a 40Gbps-capable USB-C to -C cable still limits you to 10Gbps transfer speeds. The simple truth is that for data transfer, a USB-A to USB-C cable that supports USB 3.2 10Gbps or 20Gbps transfer rates is more than enough for most people.

Where it likely matters more to pay for a USB-C to -C cable is charging speed. Outside of proprietary fast-charging designs used by a few phone makers such as Huawei, Oppo, and One Plus, USB-A on even the newest iPhone and Galaxy generally top out in the 15-watt to 20-watt range. Using a USB-C to -C cable and an appropriate USB-C charger will let you reach 30-watt charge rates or more depending on the phone.

We would be remiss if we didn’t point out that despite USB-C charging generally outperforming USB-A — in reality, you’re not giving up that much performance since most phones don’t charge at their maximum charge rates most of the time.

TLDR: A USB-A to -C cable with support for USB 10Gbps will work fine for the majority of fast phones for data transfer but won’t hit the higher charge rates you desire.

5.

Is USB-C the same as USB PD?

The short answer is no. USB-C is the standard that defines the physical “oval” reversible USB-C plug and connector and nothing more. It doesn’t refer to the underlying transfer protocols such as how fast data is transferred. A USB-C connector can be a very slow 480Mbps “USB 2.0” or it can be the fastest 40Gbps USB4 or Thunderbolt 4.

USB PD, or USB Power Delivery, refers to the advanced charging capabilities over a USB-C a connector and cable. The newest USB Power Delivery 3.1 spec allows for charging up to an impressive 240 watts, although we’ve yet to see any laptops that support it yet.

6.

Why won’t my cheap USB-C device charge over USB-C?

USB-C is the standard for charging phones, tablets, and laptops, and is rapidly becoming the standard for even cheap $5 USB fans and other electronic trinkets.

While there can be many reasons why your device won’t charge — such as a bad cable or bad charger — the most common reason no-name USB hardware won’t charge when using a USB-C to -C cable, but will charge using a USB-A to -C cable is likely the fault of a poorly designed device.

Charging from USB-C is complex and requires devices to negotiate charge rates before the USB-C Power Delivery charger will supply any power. Many cheap USB-C devices don’t include this hardware, so the USB-C charger will not activate. 

Take that same cheap USB device and plug it in with a USB-C to USB-A cable to a USB-A charger and it will suddenly charge. This is because old-fashioned rectangular USB-A ports are dumb and are designed to supply a slow charge rate no matter what.

7.

Why won’t my cheap USB-A to USB-C cable work for transferring data?

Obviously, one answer is the cable is simply bad or damaged, but if you’re finding that a brand-new cable that came with your $5 USB fan or $7 LED USB-trinket won’t transfer data at all, you’re probably using the “free” USB-A to -C cable that came with that cheap device.

Many of these cheap cables contain wires that only supply power to charge that cheap trinket and don’t support data transfer at all. You can sometimes see this by looking into the square USB-A cable connector where only two connections are visible. A standard USB-A cable usually features at least four connections inside of it.

You can “fix” this by buying a USB cable that supports data transfers.

8.

Is it safe to use USB-C cables with magnetic connector ends?

No. It is generally not recommended that you use a cable with a magnetic detachable end due to the risk of shorting out the device or charger it is plugged in to. These magnetic USB-C adapters slot into a USB-C port and connect to the cable using a magnet to reduce the likelihood of damage from a connector being abruptly yanked from its port.

But the risk comes from the exposed pins that may short out if a piece of metal rubs against them. Since the adapters use magnets, which attract metal, you can see why most USB-C experts say not to use magnetic connectors.

9.

I have an iPhone 15 — what cable should I buy for the fastest charging and fastest data transfer?

First, you should know the the maximum transfer speed of the iPhone is limited by the phone. An iPhone 15 Pro, for example, can allow for up to 10Gbps transfer speeds. The plain iPhone is limited to 480Mbps data transfers. Basically, unless you have an iPhone 15 Pro, the speed of the USB-C cable won’t matter much.

If you have an iPhone 15 Pro, however, you should look for a name-brand USB-C to USB-C cable that supports 10Gbps speeds at a minimum if you indeed are concerned about data-transfer performance.

For charging performance, there’s no difference between any of the iPhone 15 models, and any USB-C to USB-C cable paired with a good charger will get you pretty much the maximum charging performance.

10.

Should I buy Apple’s Thunderbolt 4 cable to go with my new iPhone 15 Pro?

Can a cable be controversial and cause resentment? Apparently, yes, because people are still screaming over the $130 Apple is charging for its newest 1.8 meter Thunderbolt 4 cable. Yes, $130 — for a cable.

Although we haven’t reviewed the cable itself, others have performed X-ray inspections and have determined that there is indeed a lot going on inside of Apple’s cable that can somewhat justify its seemingly exorbitant price tag.

Even if the cable is pretty awesome, it’s probably still overkill for most people buying it to pair with a phone.

For an iPhone 15 Pro that will be connected to a computer to transfer files at high speed, or to output video from any iPhone 15 (Pro or non Pro), a Thunderbolt 4 cable is way more than you need. You can get by with any quality USB-C to USB-C cable for charging needs. And for transferring data or connecting to a monitor, a quality cable such as the 3-foot Cable Matters 10gbps will max out an iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15 and set you back only $15.

Yes, the 1.8 meter Thunderbolt 4 cable is longer and can reach very high speeds — but those speeds can’t be used by the iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15, so why pay for it?

Accessories, Power

Turn your TV into a museum with $20 off Dreamscreens

23 June 2024 at 06:00

Your TV is a centerpiece in your living room, but when you’re not using it, it’s just a big black space. When you’re entertaining or relaxing without watching TV, that’s a missed opportunity. But you can take it back with Dreamscreens, the innovative program that turns your TV into a digital art gallery.

Dreamscreens is a simple USB drive that plugs into your TV, giving you instant access to more than 500 4K renderings of some of the world’s most iconic paintings. From Van Gogh’s Starry Night to Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam, there’s a wide range of works from different eras and movements. Simply plug it in and play, and you can choose to stay on one painting, shuffle through a slideshow, or play as a video with background music. It all depends on the mood you’re in.

Turn your living room into an art gallery. From 6/18 through 11:59 pm PT on 6/26, you can get Dreamscreens for just $31.97 (reg. $49).

 

Dreamscreens: Turn Your TV into a 4K Digital Art Gallery – $31.97

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StackSocial prices subject to change.

Accessories

Save $70 off this touchscreen display for your car

23 June 2024 at 04:00

New cars today almost always have a central display with a backup camera and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility. You don’t have to get a new car to enjoy that hands-free convenience, though. Instead, you can get the 6.8″ Foldable Touchscreen Car Display with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto Support for a fraction of the price.

This foldable touchscreen display is compatible with both Apple CarPlay and Android Auto so you can connect quickly and access your apps hands-free. You can use Google Assistant or Siri to make calls, navigate, do more hands-free, and stay safer while driving. Connect via Bluetooth, FM transmitter, or AUX jack — whatever works best for you.

Drive safer and keep your phone out of your hands. From 6/18 through 11:59 pm PT on 6/26, you can get this 6.8″ Foldable Touchscreen Car Display with Apple CarPlay & Android Auto Support for just $89.97 (reg. $159).

 

6.8″ Foldable Touchscreen Car Display with Apple CarPlay & Android Auto Support – $89.97

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Accessories

Commit to learning with a discounted subscription to Rosetta Stone

22 June 2024 at 06:00

Everyone should invest in themselves. And one of the best ways to do that is by learning new things. That’s not always the easiest thing to do when you’re busy with work and life. But you can invest in yourself in your own time with help from The Unlimited Lifetime Learning Subscription Bundle.

This bundle includes lifetime subscriptions to Rosetta Stone and StackSkills Unlimited. With StackSkills Unlimited, you get more than 1,000 courses from 350 of the web’s top instructors. From business development and growth marketing to graphic design, coding, and more, you’ll be able to delve into all kinds of important topics based on your interests. Rosetta Stone speaks for itself. Trusted by international organizations like NASA and TripAdvisor, Rosetta Stone is one of the most popular ways to learn a new language on your own time.

Learn something new with discounts on both Rosetta Stone and StackSkills Unlimited. From 6/18 through 11:59 pm PT on 6/26, you can get The Unlimited Lifetime Learning Subscription Bundle for $179.97 (reg. $849) using coupon code: ROSETTA10.

 

The Unlimited Lifetime Learning Subscription Bundle ft. Rosetta Stone – $179.97

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Accessories

Secure up to ten devices with FastestVPN for $330 off

22 June 2024 at 04:00

Working online carries risk, especially if you’re doing so on public WiFi. Hackers, trackers, and snoops are always out there, and one of the best ways to protect your privacy is with a VPN. For a limited time, you can get a lifetime subscription to FastestVPN for a major discount.

This powerful VPN service offers protection for up to ten devices, including Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, smart TV, and router devices. It operates with 99.9% uptime and gives you access to more than 600 high-speed servers around the world so you can download, stream, and bypass geographic restrictions without any limitations. FastestVPN also includes a NAT firewall, ad blocker, and anti-malware software, and has a strict no-logging policy, keeping your data anonymous even from them.

Protect up to ten devices at once. From 6/18 through 11:59 pm PT on 6/26, you can get a lifetime subscription to FastestVPN for just $31.97 (reg. $360).

 

FastestVPN: Lifetime Subscription (10 Devices) – $31.97

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VPN

New Windows update makes it easier to move files around

21 June 2024 at 13:03

Microsoft continues to roll out new test versions of Windows 11 with useful features. Recently, the “jump lists” feature from Windows 10 were reintroduced and now the company has launched the slightly smaller Windows 11 Build 26241 beta, which makes it easier to move files around in Explorer.

Windows File Explorer breadcrumbs
Windows File Explorer breadcrumbs

Kristian Kask

Windows File Explorer breadcrumbs

Kristian Kask

Kristian Kask

With the new feature, you can simply move files around on your computer by dragging them to the address bar or “breadcrumbs” in Explorer. For example, if you are browsing My Computer > Local Disk (C:) > Users > Your Name > Documents, you can simply drag the files to one of the folders in the address bar.

Windows 11 Build 26241 should also fix some small bugs, but the new feature in Explorer is the main novelty of the new beta. Build 26241 has also started rolling out to members of Microsoft’s Windows Insider program.

get windows 11 pro for cheap

Windows 11 Pro

Windows 11 Pro
Windows

How PCWorld tests and evaluates external storage

21 June 2024 at 13:00

Modern external computer data storage technologies (DAS, or Direct Attached Storage) run the gamut from USB hard drives, to optical discs (yes, still), to USB thumb drives, to the latest, greatest NVMe SSDs in high-speed Thunderbolt or USB 4 enclosures.

PCWorld has been reviewing external storage since the 1980s and the era of floppy drives, though these days we stick with SSDs and the occasional hard drive. Everything else seems, well… quaint. Not to mention, drearily slow.

What does PCWorld look for in an external storage device?

Capacity

Generally speaking, more capacity is better, but determining capacity takes no effort on our part — it’s generally written plainly on the box. Capacity by itself doesn’t score a lot of points unless it’s a jump from the norm, however…

Price

…the cost per gigabyte counts heavily in our evaluations. That said, the star rating is weighted more toward the quality of the product, not how much it costs. But all things being equal, the cost per gigabyte can tip the scales.

Performance

Basic performance obviously depends on the technology involved: HDDs, SSDs, USB, Thunderbolt, etc… We run benchmarks and perform real-world operations to determine its speed relative to others of the same ilk. Performance relative to a device’s peers as well as in the grand scheme counts greatly in the final rating. There’s far more granular info on our testing methodology and consideration below.

Durability

Of course, speed is nothing if a device gives up the ghost in six months. HDD failure has become progressively rarer since the bad old days when up to 15 percent of hard drives failed per year. Early SSDs also had their issues, but the only problem we’ve heard of recently was with the SanDisk Extreme Pro line. Every SSD we’ve tested is still going strong, as are all the hard drives from the last five years or so.

That said, SSDs are still a relatively young technology, and NAND blocks/cells can only be written to so many times. We make special note of the TBW ratings for SSDs. That’s an acronym for terabytes written, or the number of terabytes that may be written before a drive runs out of replacements (overprovisioning) for worn-out cell blocks.

MTBF (mean time before failure) ratings for HDDs are a guess at best, and rarely accurate or provable, so we generally don’t pay attention them.

Seagate Ultra Touch HDD
Seagate Ultra Touch HDD

Seagate Ultra Touch HDD

Seagate Ultra Touch HDD

Seagate Ultra Touch HDD

Seagate Ultra Touch HDD

Given the limited time we have between testing and publication, 100 percent accuracy on long-term reliability is impossible. We keep our test units in service, but it can take years for a problem to crop up.

One thing we can check is how well an external device sheds heat — the general enemy of electronics. If the temperature of an SSD gets too high, the controller will slow down/throttle operations to reduce said temperature to avoid damage to the components.

We also check the quality of construction and the materials used. With SSDs, shock mounting and shock resistant silicone covers are plusses, but with HDDs they’re an absolute must.

Many devices are IP rated — i.e., designed and tested to ward off dust and liquids. We’ll always discuss this with any ruggedized device, and it does score brownie points.

Portability

When it comes to portability, smaller is obviously better. Thumb drives are generally the smallest and most portable. Their integrated Type-A or occasionally Type-C connector eliminates the need for an additional USB/Thunderbolt cable or power adapter, which takes up space and which you must remember to bring with you. If a device is designed to be portable, the overall ease of transport is obviously considered.

Corsair E1000U

Corsair E1000U

Corsair E1000U

Corsair E1000U

Jon L. Jacobi

Corsair E1000U

Corsair E1000U

Jon L. Jacobi

Jon L. Jacobi

Devices designed for your desktop might be portable to a degree, but a bit of size and heft is in order. Anyone who’s ever inadvertently sent a small, light drive flying across the table (or room) understands. It’s especially true for 2.5-inch external hard drives, which can’t absorb nearly as many G’s as an SSD. With desktop drives, we also rate such stability — i.e., we check for non-skid feet, etc.

Power requirements

AC adapters are required with 5.25-inch hard drives (still the only way to get more than 8TB in a single unit!), and with very large-capacity USB 3.x SSDs. Single, external 2.5-inch hard drives rarely require an AC adapter; however, some RAID units with more than one drive will. At least non-Thunderbolt types.

Sandisk-Desk-Drive-Ports

Sandisk’s 8TB USB 3.2×2 SSD requires an AC adapter (the round port). Most single external SSDs and HDDs do not.

Sandisk-Desk-Drive-Ports

Sandisk’s 8TB USB 3.2×2 SSD requires an AC adapter (the round port). Most single external SSDs and HDDs do not.

Jon L. Jacobi

Sandisk-Desk-Drive-Ports

Sandisk’s 8TB USB 3.2×2 SSD requires an AC adapter (the round port). Most single external SSDs and HDDs do not.

Jon L. Jacobi

Jon L. Jacobi

Speaking of which, both USB 4 and Thunderbolt deliver more power over their connections than older USB 3.x, which is why you generally won’t need external power unless, as mentioned, there’s more than one drive in the enclosure.

One exception to this is when using Thunderbolt generational adapters (Thunderbolt 2 to Thunderbolt 3/4), which may not pass through power. In that case, external power, or a dock with power, may be required.

How does PCWorld test external storage?

Connectivity/bus speed considerations

Connectivity, i.e. the transport protocol or bus type, is the essential indicator of expected performance and compatibility and obviously the first thing we consider. Highly compatible 5Gbps USB SSDs will max out somewhere south of 500MBps, while also highly compatible 10Gbps USB SSDs top out at around 1GBps.

20Gbps USB 3.2×2 drives can reach 2GBps, but only on the still somewhat-rare 3.2×2 connector or USB 4. But even that’s not a given. While Macs (and many PC Thunderbolt ports) support USB 4 20Gbps, they only support 10Gbps when using USB 3.2×2 SSDs. Why? Don’t know. USB 4 and Thunderbolt 3/4 SSDs can operate at 40Gbps, or around 4GBps.

In USB 4 and Thunderbolt 3’s case, it’s not actually specified that they support anything greater than 20Gbps. Yeah, it’s a mess of a “standard,” but we always test drives on their native bus at their highest possible speed. Note that the Thunderbolt 4 ports on our test bed also support all flavors of USB, including USB 4.

All USB drives are backwards compatible to at least USB 2.0, but they’re always limited to the speed of the bus they’re on.

Generally speaking, though faster is always better, we compare external storage devices with their technology peers: 10Gbps USB to 10Gbps USB, Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 3, hard drive to hard drive, etc.

Internal technology considerations

The technology inside a device (SATA, NVMe) also has a lot to do with its expected performance. For instance, a SATA SSD will never go much faster than 500MBps even across USB 4 or Thunderbolt 3/4. SATA HDDs rarely top 250MBps (3.5-inch) or 120MBps (2.5-inch).

NVMe on the other hand is fast enough that the bus is a major limiting factor. For example, the fastest internal PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSD we’ve tested clocked almost 15GBps, while the fastest Thunderbolt SSD could muster only 4GBps.

All HDDs to a small degree, and SSDs to a large degree write slower as they fill up so the benchmark numbers we publish are best case. Drive slowdown is why we recommend that you always buy at least twice the SSD capacity that you might think you need. This is not generally necessary with HDDs, but a good idea.

Again we generally compare similar internal technologies in our reviews: SATA vs. SATA, 20Gbps USB vs. 20Gbps USB, etc.

NAND and SSD design considerations

When it comes to testing, SSDs have “special needs.” Mostly because of the way they cache data to achieve and maintain best performance. Primary caching is either done with onboard DRAM, which offers the fastest random performance, or in the case of cheaper Host Memory Buffer (HMB), your device’s system memory. Recent implementations of the latter have turned in startlingly good numbers with sequential transfers.

But the primary cache is generally a relatively small amount. A couple of gigabytes with DRAM and 58/64MB with HMB. Hence SSDs use another method as secondary caching.

A controller can write 3-bit (Triple Level Cell/TCL) or 4-bit NAND at either their native bit depth or, far faster, as on/off 1-bit SLC. This single-bit writing is used for secondary caching. Data is later rewritten at the greater bit depth to reclaim the lost space.

The reason writing at greater bit depths is slower is due to the error-checking required to determine if the correct voltage (one of 8/16 levels with TLC/QLC) was written to a cell, rather than the simple charged/not charged binary of 1-bit SLC.

This screen cap shows the slowdown in write speed due to secondary cache running out.
This screen cap shows the slowdown in write speed due to secondary cache running out.
This screen cap shows the slowdown in write speed due to secondary cache running out.

How vendors handle this secondary caching technique mostly affects performance during very long writes. Some fix the amount of NAND that can be used for secondary caching, while some allocate it dynamically. We often have to rewrite the 450GB file several times, depending on the capacity of the SSD, before the drive will drop to its native 3-bit/4-bit write speed, which can vary anywhere from 150MBps (slow QLC) to nearly 1GBps (faster TLC).

Note that as a drive fills up, performance may suffer as there is less NAND available to allot as secondary cache. We test with empty drives but warn users that performance may degrade over time. It’s also why we recommend that you overbuy in terms of capacity.

Many NMVe SSDs use DRAM for primary caching and some use your computer’s own memory as cache (Host Memory Buffer/HMB). The former greatly improves random performance, while the latter can actually improve sequential performance.

The number of chips on an SSD can also affect performance, as the more chips there are, the more data paths there are to shotgun data over. This is, again, why we warn you in each review that our results apply only to the capacity SSD we tested.

All these factors must be accounted for and inform our modus operandi when it comes to testing SSDs.

Further reading: Best external drives

What tests does PCWorld run to determine how fast an external storage device is?

Benchmarks

NVMe SSDs, as they have matured, have broken the nearly 1:1 ratio of benchmark to real-world transfer performance that existed right up through SATA SSDs — drastically, when it comes to internal SSDs, and to a lesser, but still noticeable extent with bus-constrained external SSDs.

The benchmarks aren’t errant, they simply use their own I/O, which has matured to take advantage of NVMe’s unique capabilities such as multiple threads and queues.

Operating systems, and the vast majority of software have not. For example, Windows Explorer never uses more than a single queue or thread. Hence our test transfers proceed at a far slower pace than what’s actually possible, and spoken of by the benchmarks. A drive capable of reading at 15GBps in benchmarks, will barely manage 4GBps under Windows.

We benchmark using CrystalDiskMark 8 and AS SSD 2.0. There are other perfectly valid benchmarks, but these are two whose results have consistently matched the level of the technology involved over the years.

Also, we have a huge set of results from years past to compare. On occasion, at vendor request we will run other benchmarks such as ATTO or IOmeter to simulate a particular workflow that a drive has been optimized for.

Real-world tests

To augment the benchmarks and give users an idea of what they’ll actually see under Windows, we perform a series of real-world transfers. Firstly, a 48GB folder full of smaller files and folders, and a single 48GB virtual hard drive (VHD) written to and read from the device. The second drive is actually a 58GB RAM disk that is faster than the fastest NVMe SSD we’ve tested to date. But it’s getting to be a close contest, so we may have to come up with other means in the near future.

Our final test is writing a single 450GB VHD file to the drive. This is not to measure performance as such, but to test the secondary caching. See above.

Note that both our 48GB and 450GB VHD files are filled with data, to minimize the impact of any compression techniques. Some controllers can compress all zeros with lighting speed, which throws a monkey wrench into the results.

What hardware does PCWorld use to test external storage devices?

We test all storage products on a dedicated X790 (PCIe 5.0) motherboard/i5-12400 CPU combo with two Kingston Fury 32GB DDR5 modules (64GB of memory total). The Intel integrated graphics are used as well as Windows 11 (22H2) 64-bit. The 48GB transfer tests utilize an ImDisk RAM disk taking up 58GB of the 64GB total memory. The 450GB file is transferred from a Samsung 990 Pro 2TB, which also contains the operating system.

PCW test bed

PCW storage test bed. USB 4 is tested over Thunderbolt.

PCW test bed

PCW storage test bed. USB 4 is tested over Thunderbolt.

Jon L. Jacobi

PCW test bed

PCW storage test bed. USB 4 is tested over Thunderbolt.

Jon L. Jacobi

Jon L. Jacobi

On occasion, should any aberrations arise on the main test bed, we also test on our older AMD test bed. This consists of an MSI MEG X570 motherboard socketing an AMD Ryzen 7 3700X 8-core CPU and 64GB of Kingston DDR4. The same software is used as on the Intel platform. This machine is also the software test platform.

For Mac-oriented products or those tested for Macworld, a first-gen Mac Studio M1 Max with 32GB of memory and a 1TB internal SSD is employed. This system has the aforementioned interesting limitation common to all Apple Silicon Macs — it supports USB 4 20Gbps, but does not support USB 3.2 2×2 20Gbps. Sigh.

How does PCWorld determine an external storage device’s rating?

As noted, our overall ratings reflect a lot of factors, but the performance/cost ratio carries by far the most weight. And with only a 10-level system (five full stars, five half stars), the star ratings aren’t particularly nuanced.

Therefore, it’s important to actually read the reviews for the particulars, and at least the pros/cons to see the major strengths and weaknesses when trying to decide which storage device you want to buy.

Computer Storage Devices, Storage

You’ve never been able to get a 49-inch OLED monitor this cheap

21 June 2024 at 12:00

Hot damn! We’re finally seeing some great deals on OLED monitors. Getting a standard LCD display in a 49-inch, super-mega-ultrawide format at $900 would already be a decent deal, but this is an OLED gaming monitor from Gigabyte. It’s $200 off the initial price, the best price we’ve seen yet for an OLED this large.

The Aorus CO49DQ features a massive resolution of 5120×1440—that’s basically two QHD panels smooshed together with a slight 1800R curve—with a 144Hz refresh rate. That’s not the fastest around, but it’s about as much as you’ll need for any gaming PC that’s pushing this many pixels in any sort of taxing game.

But this monitor is more than just a pretty face. In addition to certification for AMD FreeSync and VESA HDR True Black 400, you get DisplayPort 1.4, double HDMI 2.1, and USB-C video support.

At 18 watts, it’s not going to power a gaming laptop alone, but two extra USB-A ports should be good for a few extra goodies. Plus, there’s a one-button switch to hop between USB-C and regular video inputs.

And yes, it has those 5-watt speakers that manufacturers keep putting into monitors (which you absolutely should not use). The display supports standard VESA mounting, though you’ll probably need an extra-sturdy monitor arm if you don’t want to use the included stand.

Looking for a gorgeous way to show off your gaming PC’s prowess at an incredible bargain price? Head over to Amazon and snag this Gigabyte 49-inch monster for $200 off!

Gigabyte's 49-inch ultrawide OLED is just $900 Monitors

Get $70 off on Samsung’s rugged 1TB portable SSD right now

21 June 2024 at 11:24

We have some excellent news: our top-pick portable SSD is currently on sale! The Samsung T7 Shield is heavily discounted at Amazon right now, with the 1TB version’s price down to $100 from its MSRP of $170 for a cool savings of $70.

The T7 Shield is a super-fast storage option that’s sleek, gorgeous, and rugged enough for almost anything you throw its way. It was designed to withstand the elements—IP65 rating for water and dust resistance—making it a solid portable SSD for when you’re out and about.

When we reviewed the Samsung T7 Shield, we found it to be excellent, granting it 4.5 out of 5 stars and our Editors’ Choice award.

Thanks to PCIe NVMe technology, the T7 Shield offers blazing-fast read and write speeds up to 1,050/1,000 MB/s. “The T7 Shield was also the fastest 10Gbps external SSD we’ve tested writing 450GB, and somewhat surprisingly, bested two of the 20Gbps drives we’ve tested,” wrote our expert Jon Jacobi in his review.

Compatibility isn’t an issue with this tiny portable SSD, either. Samsung’s T7 Shield works just as well with Windows PCs, speedy Macs, Android devices, gaming consoles, and more.

The 1TB version is the most affordable, but there are also larger storage options: the 2TB version is $195 (down from $285) and the 4TB version is $318 (down from $500). We also recently spotted the non-Shield version of the T7 on sale at a significant discount that’s still available.

But the best deal is the 1TB version of the Samsung T7 Shield, which you can grab right now for just $100. Don’t miss it!

Save $70 on Samsung's T7 Shield right now Computer Storage Devices

Best laptops for video editing 2024: Work faster with these expert picks

21 June 2024 at 11:18

Video editing can put quite a heavy burden on any computer. So, when shopping for a laptop for video editing, you’ll want to make sure you’re loading up on enough heavy hardware firepower to get the job done. While you might not need the absolute top-of-the-line gear, simply buying a gaming laptop and calling it a day is probably not going to cut it. Beyond just processor and graphics performance, serious video editors need to take into account a few things such as the quality of the display, port selection, and onboard storage capacity.

Why you should trust us: PCWorld has been covering PCs since 1983, and reviews more than 70 notebooks a year in our never-ending quest to find the best laptops. Our expert reviewers evaluate every machine using a combination of performance benchmarks and rigorous usability standards, with an eye toward identifying the best laptops for specific needs and at various price points. We also edit lots of videos ourselves, with the results appearing on PCWorld’s YouTube channel. Take a look at our top picks for video editing below, followed by buying advice and more details about our testing process.

If you’re on a budget or just looking to save some money, you may also want to check out our daily roundup of the best laptop deals to scope out any discounts on content creation notebooks.

Update June 20, 2024: In addition to updating the list of recent laptop reviews, we’ve also replaced the Best Ultraportable for Video Editing pick with the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 ($1,599.99). It’s far less expensive than our former pick and it’s lightweight and has a wide range of connectivity options.

The best laptops for video editing

Dell XPS 17 (2023) – Best laptop for video editing

Dell XPS 17 (2023) - Best laptop for video editing
Dell XPS 17 (2023) - Best laptop for video editing
Dell XPS 17 (2023) - Best laptop for video editing

Pros

  • Expansive 17-inch 16:10 display
  • Thin chassis
  • Incredible battery life

Cons

  • Expensive
  • 720p webcam
Price When Reviewed: From $2,449 | Model reviewed $3,099

Why we like the Dell XPS 17 (2023)

The Dell XPS 17 (2023) is a fantastic laptop for content creation because it has a gigantic display and a good amount of graphics firepower. The OLED touch display, which measures a massive 17-inches, features a crystal clear resolution of 3840×2400 and a maximum brightness of 550 nits. It’s perfect for media editing, multitasking, and so much more. The machine is also powered by an Intel Core i7-13700H CPU and an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070, which means it’s more than capable of handling any video editing you throw at it. The specific configuration we reviewed will cost you well over $3,000, so it’s likely not a viable option for the budget-conscious, but if your time is money, the Dell XPS 17 is money very well spent.

Who should buy the Dell XPS 17 (2023)

We feel the Dell XPS 17 is a phenomenal option for serious or professional video editors. The 4K screen is divine and it has the perfect amount of horsepower as far as internal components go. It also includes an SD card reader and multiple Thunderbolt 4 ports for quickly offloading videos or photos. Finally, the Dell XPS 17 can run up to 11 hours on a single charge, eliminating the need to go outlet hunting. Although we would’ve liked to have seen this model with an OLED screen, it’s still a top-notch pick.

Alternative option: The Dell XPS 16 is another good option for content creators. In fact, the hardware is almost identical to our top pick. The only real difference is that the Dell XPS 16 has an OLED screen and the Dell XPS 17 9730 does not. That said, the Dell XPS 16 didn’t make the cut because it doesn’t have as many Thunderbolt 4 ports and the keyboard is a real headache to use due to stiff keys.

Read our full Dell XPS 17 9730 review

Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra – Best laptop for video editing (if you don't need 4K)

Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra - Best laptop for video editing (if you don't need 4K)
Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra - Best laptop for video editing (if you don't need 4K)
Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra - Best laptop for video editing (if you don't need 4K)

Pros

  • Fantastic battery life
  • Solid GPU performance
  • Gorgeous OLED screen that can be used outdoors
  • Great audio
  • AI-powered Core Ultra inside

Cons

  • Chargers keep getting bigger
  • Still not a great keyboard
Price When Reviewed: $2999.99

Why we like the Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra

The Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra offers powerful performance as well as a gorgeous OLED display. Thanks to the Intel Core Ultra 9 185H CPU and the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 GPU, it’s well equipped to handle any video editing task you throw at it. Plus, the 16-inch OLED display has a resolution of 2880×1800 and a refresh rate of 120Hz–so you can expect a crisp-looking picture with rich colors. Sure, it’s not 4K, but it’s still a fantastic screen for content creation. Battery life is absolutely absurd, too. This machine lasted a whopping 18 hours and 54 minutes on a single charge. Wall outlet? Who is she?

Who should buy the Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra

Anyone looking for a powerful, long-lasting laptop and doesn’t need to edit 4K videos. In addition to the stunning OLED display and the long battery life, the audio is also quite punchy, sounding great up and down the audio range. If you switch on the Dolby Atmos feature, you’ll hear even richer sound. Though content creators may not necessarily need good audio (or likely use dedicated headphones), it’s still a nice perk.

Read our full Samsung Galaxy Book4 Ultra review

Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro) – Best MacBook for video editing

Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro) - Best MacBook for video editing
Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro) - Best MacBook for video editing
Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro) - Best MacBook for video editing

Pros

  • Good performance
  • 18GB of RAM
  • Runs quiet

Cons

  • Low performance advantage over M2 Pro
Price When Reviewed: $1,999

Why we like the Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro)

The Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro) will kick you in the teeth with its power (in the best way possible). Inside, you’ll find a 14-core GPU as well as 18GB of RAM and 512GB of SSD storage. That amount of RAM will keep things running nice and smooth while the beefy GPU will chew right through any intense edits, though intense video editors will want to upgrade to a model with more storage or invest in an external SSD for added capacity. The 14.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR display also has a ridiculously high resolution of 3024×1964, so editing should be a delightful experience. It even comes with three Thunderbolt 4 ports for speedy data transfers.

Who should buy the Apple MacBook Pro (M3, Pro)

Anyone who prefers Apple’s ecosystem. This configuration shows a 44 percent increase in performance (according to Geekbench’s Compute Metal test) compared to the M3 (sans Pro) model. You’ll also be able to see every detail of your photo or video editing work thanks to the gorgeous Liquid Retina XDR display. Battery life isn’t too shabby, either. The M3 Pro MacBook Pro will last you over ten hours on a single charge, which is more than a full work day.

Alternative option: If you’re looking for a bigger screen, then you should check out the MacBook Pro, M2 Pro. The Liquid Retina XDR display measures 16.2-inches and has a resolution of 3456×2234, so visuals should be sharp as knives. The M2 Pro also comes loaded with a powerful 19-core GPU.

Read our full Apple 14-inch MacBook Pro (M3 Pro, 2023) review

Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition – Best budget laptop for video editing

Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition - Best budget laptop for video editing
Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition - Best budget laptop for video editing
Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition - Best budget laptop for video editing

Pros

  • All-day battery life
  • Stunning display
  • Durable build

Cons

  • 720p webcam
  • Keys feel too soft
Price When Reviewed: $1,099.99

Why we like the Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition

The Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition is a good option for those on a tight budget, as it ticks off all of the right boxes for a sub-$1,000 machine. For one, colors appear rich and varied on the 16-inch 1200p FHD display. Sure, it’s not 4K, but it’s still a good screen–our reviewer was surprised by the “depth of the blacks and greys.” As for internals, the AMD Radeon RX 7600S GPU and the AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS CPU should blitz right through graphically demanding tasks like video editing. It also lasted a whopping 11 hours on a single charge, which is shocking for a gaming laptop.

Who should buy the Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition

Anyone who’s looking to save money on a capable and long-lasting laptop. You don’t have to go outlet hunting because of the long battery life and the 1200p display offers nothing but stunning visuals. While the keys feel a bit mushy and the 720p webcam won’t be doing you any favors on video calls, we feel as though the pros far outweigh the cons, especially given the reasonable price point.

Alternative option: The Lenovo LOQ 15 is another good budget option to consider. It has a better GPU (RTX 4060) than our current top pick. Despite the high star rating, it didn’t end up making the cut because of the poor battery life (not unusual in a gaming laptop) and limited connectivity options. The Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition just stands out from the pack, especially where battery life is concerned, but the Lenovo LOQ would be a good budget option if your workflow is accelerated by Nvidia features and technology.

Read our full Asus TUF Gaming A16 Advantage Edition review

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 – Best ultraportable laptop for video editing

Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 - Best ultraportable laptop for video editing
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 - Best ultraportable laptop for video editing
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 - Best ultraportable laptop for video editing

Pros

  • Very light and compact design
  • Excellent performance for its size
  • Robust build
  • Visually stunning display

Cons

  • Keys feel soft and mushy
  • The webcam isn't the best quality
  • The downward facing woofers sometimes sound muddy
Price When Reviewed: 1599.99

Why we like the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14

The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 is “exceptionally sleek and compact,” according to our comprehensive review. Not only does it tip the scales at just 3.31 pounds, but you can easily pick it up with an index finger and a thumb. The slim form factor is impressive given the hardware inside, which consists of an AMD Ryzen 9 8945HS CPU and an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 GPU. That means it’s powerful enough to handle editing photos in Adobe Photoshop and playing games with the graphics turned up. The connectivity options are also quite good and the OLED screen has a high resolution of 2880×1800. It’s not 4K, but you can still expect a sharp picture. The port selection includes two USB-A 3.2 Gen 2, one USB-C 3.2 Gen 2, one USB-C 4, one HDMI, one 3.5mm combo jack, and one microSD card reader.

Who should buy the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14

Anyone that likes to work on-the-go. In addition to its slim form factor, it’s also quite tough with “premium CNC-milled aluminum alloy” throughout the chassis. It even achieved impressive frame rates in a couple of modern games. In fact, it managed 133 frames-per-second during the Shadow of the Tomb Raider benchmark and 101 frames-per-second during Rise of the Tomb Raider benchmark, which is newer and more demanding. If you’re looking for reliable gaming performance in a tiny package, look no further than the Asus ROG Zephyrus G14.

Read our full Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 review

Recent laptop reviews

  • Acer Aspire Vero 16: The Acer Aspire Vero 16 is pretty average in most areas, but at just about every turn it avoids being bad. This makes for a good all-around package that’s pleasant to use and rarely feels like a letdown.
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 2-in-1: Lenovo delivered a 2-in-1 ThinkPad with great build quality, a nice pen, and serious battery life. But you may want to wait for a next-generation model powered by Intel’s Lunar Lake hardware.
  • Acer Chromebook Plus 514: Acer’s Chromebook Plus 514 is a decent budget Chromebook that beats competitors on RAM and storage.
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 13x: Lenovo’s ThinkBook is a better business laptop for most people than a top-of-the-line ThinkPad, but the lack of ports may be a problem.

How we tested

The PCWorld team puts each and every Windows laptop through a series of benchmarks that test GPU and CPU performance, battery life, and so on. The idea is to push the laptop to its limits and then compare it against others we’ve tested. Chromebooks, on the other hand, go through a series of web-based tests. It wouldn’t be fair or possible to run the same kinds of tests on a Chromebook, as they’re Chrome OS-based machines.

Below, you’ll find a breakdown of each test and the reasons why we run them. For a much deeper look at our review methodology, check out how PCWorld tests laptops.

Windows laptops

  • PCMark 10: PCMark 10 is how we determine how well the laptop handles lighter tasks like web browsing, word processing, spreadsheets, and so on.
  • HandBrake: HandBrake is more intensive than PCMark 10. It basically measures how long a laptop’s CPU takes to encode a beefy 30GB file.
  • Cinebench: Cinebench is a brief stress test of the CPU cores. It does this by rendering a 2D scene over a short period of time.
  • 3DMark: 3DMark checks if 3D performance remains consistent over time by running graphic-intensive clips.
  • Video rundown test: To gauge battery life, we loop a 4K video using Windows 10’s Movies & TV app until the laptop dies.

FAQ


1.

What should I look for in a laptop for video editing?

The first thing to look for in a laptop for video editing is its CPU and GPU. The faster your hardware, the faster your edits.

If your workload is primarily CPU-driven, we’d recommend springing for the Intel Core i7 or the Intel Core i9. HX is designed for raw horsepower, which id deal for gaming and content creation, and the Ultra is built around power efficiency. For a more in-depth look at the difference between the two processors, we’ve done a thorough compare and contrast piece that really lays it all out. For those on a strict budget, you can get by with an Intel Core i5, but it’s going to be slower.

You probably won’t need a dedicated graphics card everyday video editing, but if you work on motion graphics, then the extra firepower really comes in handy. For most video editing projects, we’d suggest the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 or higher, though having any RTX GPU onboard can help accelerate some specific workloads. For those who prefer AMD over Nvidia, we’d recommend the AMD Radeon RX 7600S or higher. Unless you’re looking to play AAA games on the side, you don’t really need the best graphics card out there. A mid-range GPU will serve most people.

Another thing to consider is storage size. A 4K video, for example, will require more storage space than a 1080p video. In other words, you’re going to need quite a bit of storage, otherwise your laptop might get too bogged down. For those who work with 4K resolution, you should go for at least 1TB of SSD or higher. You could probably get by with just 512GB of SSD storage, but you’ll probably need to keep offloading files onto an external storage device.

RAM is important too, as it determines how fast your laptop will generally run. Video editors tend to work with large files, which can cause your laptop to slow down. That’s why we’d recommend at least 16GB of RAM. However, if you’re editing 4K video, you’ll definitely want 32GB of RAM or more. More RAM reduces the likelihood of bottlenecks, which can be a real pain in the neck when you’re in the middle of an important edit.

2.

What kind of display should I get?

You’re going to want a display that’s both bright and color accurate. For example, a display that’s close to 100 percent of the sRGB spectrum is ideal. While a 4K display isn’t necessary, we’d strongly recommend it for serious video editing. A high resolution display will produce sharper images, which helps reduce eye strain, and allow you to edit 4K video at full resolution. A larger screen like a 15- or 17-inch is preferable as well, as it provides better visibility for editing.

3.

What do the experts recommend?

PCWorld video director Adam Patrick Murray stresses that an ideal laptop for video editing includes an SD card reader for grabbing video off of a camera. He also recommends opting for a notebook with a 4K, 60Hz panel over the ultra-fast 1080p panels often found on gaming laptops that would otherwise be ideal for video editing. You need a 4K panel to edit 4K videos well and blazing-fast refresh rates don’t mean anything for video editing like they do for gaming. If color accuracy matters to you—it might not if you’re only creating casual videos for your personal YouTube channel, for example—then support for the full DCI-P3 color gamut is also a must along with Delta E < 2 color accuracy.

You won’t often find those sorts of specs listed for (or supported by) gaming laptops, but dedicated content creation laptops should include that information. That said, if you want the fastest possible laptop for video editing that can also satisfy your gaming proclivities, you can always pair that burly gaming laptop with a color-accurate external monitor for creation tasks.

Laptops

This 27-inch, 1440p Dell monitor for $160 is an absolute steal

21 June 2024 at 10:56

Sure, huge ultrawide monitors are gorgeous and fun, but they’re also super expensive. There’s nothing wrong with humble, reliable, “normal” monitors—especially for work and everyday browsing.

And if you need another monitor, today’s your lucky day because this 27-inch Dell monitor is on sale for its best price yet of $160. This limited-time offer will save you $60 on a superb QHD monitor.

QHD means you’ll get a crisp 2560×1440 resolution, and that’s paired with a 100Hz refresh rate. While that’s far from the best you can get for gaming these days, it’s still above average for the price and a perfect setup for home, school, or work use — especially since this panel rocks vibrant IPS technology, rather than the lackluster TN panels you often find at this price.

This monitor also comes with two integrated 5W speakers that promise clear audio, so you can keep your desk decluttered without separate speakers. It also has several audio preset profiles, including ones for watching movies, listening to music, or gaming.

As far as connectivity, you get two HDMI 2.1 ports and one DisplayPort 1.2 port, with an HDMI cable included with it. And the monitor stand is height-adjustable, with adjustments available on all three axes (tilt, swivel, and pivot). It’s a solid and versatile daily driver.

This 27-inch monitor is going fast with a limited stock before the deal runs out, so grab one quick if you want it!

Save $60 on this 27-inch Dell monitor Monitors

Watch PCWorld build a pair of SFF video production PCs!

21 June 2024 at 10:54

Video production requires some serious power, but that doesn’t mean your PC has to be a massive RGB-laden behemoth. Adam Patrick Murray and Alex Esteves are looking to shrink down their PC footprint with two of the most stylish small form factor cases on the market. You can watch the whole thing, start to finish, on our YouTube channel.

Adam’s AMD-based build is going in the brand new Fractal Design Mood, a vertical SFF case that was revealed at Computex. Alex’s Intel machine is a little more conventional in the SSUPD Meshroom S, which is all about maximum airflow in a tiny 14.9-liter space. Both of them are getting some serious parts in there despite the small dimensions and might need some PC building expertise to fit everything in.

The full double-machine build is just over three hours long — a great background video if you happen to be building your own PC, or I dunno, assembling some Ikea furniture. Give it a watch to see how the pros build itty-bitty and subscribe to PCWorld on YouTube if you want to see more live builds.

Desktop PCs

Gamesir Nova HD review: A budget controller contender

21 June 2024 at 10:30
Editors' ChoiceAt a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Fantastic value
  • Easy layout switching
  • Hall-effect sticks

Cons

  • Short trigger travel
  • Some games don’t like Switch format

Our Verdict

The Nova HD has all the features you want in a basic controller, plus a ton of extras like hall-effect analog sticks. It’s not great for driving fans, but everyone else will love its value and flexibility.

Price When Reviewed

$34.99

Best Prices Today:

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Amazon
$35.99
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35.99
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Price comparison from Backmarket

Controllers are expensive. They always have been, at least if you insist on buying the first-party gamepads for consoles or Microsoft’s de facto standard for PC, the Xbox controller. And there have always been cheaper alternatives, the bane of visiting gamers and younger siblings everywhere. Gamesir’s Nova HD hopes to buck that trend. 

And it does. Shockingly well, in fact: Not only does the Nova HD have several features you won’t find on standard console controllers, it can go multi-platform, switching between PC, mobile devices, and the Nintendo Switch with ease. And unlike some other controllers that require adjustment for Nintendo’s stubborn insistence on its weirdo layout, the Nova HD can swap between standard and Nintendo face buttons on the fly, no driver software required. 

Gamesir Nova HD action buttons
This controller uses the Nintendo layout, but don’t worry, it’s easy to fix.
Gamesir Nova HD action buttons
This controller uses the Nintendo layout, but don’t worry, it’s easy to fix.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Gamesir Nova HD action buttons
This controller uses the Nintendo layout, but don’t worry, it’s easy to fix.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

While it lacks the fit and finish of “premium” controllers, its extra features — specifically that layout swap option and hall-effect analog sticks — mean that Gamesir’s option is a legitimate contender for anyone who wants to save a little cash. For $35, you give up nothing versus the Xbox controller or Switch Pro controller, and even gain a few options. 

Gamesir Nova HD features

I was sent the Nova HD in its “retro” colorway, with muted beige, grays, and purples clearly meant to evoke the Super NES. Not really my style, but I appreciate the theming, especially since Gamesir’s logo goes along with it — not every brand is that flexible. It’s also available in a more radical ’80s-flavored transparent teal.

The rear of the controller is more monotone, but once you turn it on you get a bit of a light show. Multicolor circles light up around the analog sticks, a trend that’s common enough to be spotted here on budget controllers and on premium devices like the ROG Ally. Again, not to my taste, but you can turn it off if you like. More on that later. 

For $35, you give up nothing versus the Xbox controller or Switch Pro controller, and even gain a few options. 

Gamesir Nova HD RGB
Gamesir Nova HD RGB

Michael Crider/Foundry

Gamesir Nova HD RGB

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Other than that, this is a bog-standard Xbox-style controller. Buttons feel good if not amazing, the layout is nice and familiar, the sticks are a bit on the loose side (common with hall effect). If I have a complaint, it’s that the triggers, which feel more like the PS5 controller than anything else, are a little short on the travel. 

In addition to a mode switcher on the front and one extra contextual button to be compatible with the Switch, you get two assignable buttons on the back, a feature that’s become more and more popular as of late. While you’re back there, note a very light diamond texture on the back of the grips — appreciated if you’re prone to sweating in long sessions, like a gamer who shall remain nameless. (It’s me. I’m talking about me.) 

nova hd carrying case
nova hd carrying case

Michael Crider/Foundry

nova hd carrying case

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

The package also includes a free carrying case. I’d have preferred a USB dongle instead, but hey, at this price beggars can’t be choosers.

Good all-round, not great for driving

Playing through an unhealthy amount of Hades II, I never encountered any serious issues. Initially the sticks were prone to float a bit, causing Melinoë to walk slowly in a circle. Call it a side effect of those hall-effect components having no friction points. But it seemed to work itself out after a few hours and never showed up again. Well worth it for a design that is, as far as I know, immune to the dreaded stick drift

Gamesir Nova HD trigger
The triggers are a notable downside with very short travel.
Gamesir Nova HD trigger
The triggers are a notable downside with very short travel.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Gamesir Nova HD trigger
The triggers are a notable downside with very short travel.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Playing plenty of Brawlhalla left me with no complaints, though I imagine that a more serious fighting game fan might wish for clickier face buttons. When trying racing games I found the Nova HD passable, but those triggers are much more prone to clicking at full throttle than slowly ramping up to it. Any driving-heavy game is one I’d avoid with this controller. 

Pairing and layout options

The Nova HD offers three pairing modes in addition to its generic controller default: Switch, Android, and “Receiver,” activated by powering on with the home button + X, B, and Y, respectively. I didn’t get to try the controller’s USB-based receiver, I was all-Bluetooth, all the time. I don’t even see a receiver on Gamesir’s store, so I’m not sure what the deal is. 

Gamesir Nova HD rear
Gamesir Nova HD rear

Michael Crider/Foundry

Gamesir Nova HD rear

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Anyway, I found very little difference in the pairing modes, especially since Steam lets me customize controls already. And I was already anticipating that need, since the default layout is Switch-style, with the A button on the east position. But it turns out I needn’t have bothered. In addition to a bunch of other settings adjustments baked into the firmware, the Nova HD lets you swap between the Nintendo default layout and the Xbox, with A on the south position. 

All you have to do is hold the Mode switch button, M, and B, for two seconds. Bam! The controller swaps between the two primary layouts used in just about every game platform, and it remembers it when you turn off the power. This is the first time I’ve seen a controller with this option, no external software required. It’s freakin’ brilliant. Though there’s nothing it can do about the actual legends printed on the buttons, this means it can effortlessly swap between my gaming PC and the Switch that also lives on my desk. 

Gamesir Nova HD switch
Press the M button and B for two seconds to switch between Xbox and Nintendo layouts. That’s it. That’s all it takes.
Gamesir Nova HD switch
Press the M button and B for two seconds to switch between Xbox and Nintendo layouts. That’s it. That’s all it takes.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Gamesir Nova HD switch
Press the M button and B for two seconds to switch between Xbox and Nintendo layouts. That’s it. That’s all it takes.

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

The Nova HD needs no other software to pull its party tricks. The LED lights on the sticks can be adjusted — brightness, effect animation speed, or general color — with the M button and other combos. Ditto for enabling dead zones in the sticks, and programming macros or turbos into the rear “paddle” buttons. You’ll probably need to keep the manual handy (or download the PDF) for a while as you learn all the combinations, but before long you’ll be doing it without thinking. 

Compatibility issues

There is one big let-down for this otherwise excellent controller, and it’s that games that just don’t like the Switch Pro gamepad (which it emulates, including a gyroscopic sensor) don’t like the Nova HD either. For example, Rocket Racing in Fortnite just would not cooperate and detect the controller’s triggers. This, even though the closely related Rocket League worked fine, caused it to instantly default to both Xbox-style inputs and matching interface indications. 

So yeah, there may be an occasional headache with some games. I think you’ll be able to overcome them between individual game settings and Steam’s excellent “all are welcome” controller support, but consider yourself forewarned. 

Should you buy the Gamesir Nova HD? 

For just $35, the Nova HD is a fantastic budget pick, rivaling even the excellent 8BitDo in terms of value and capability. For someone who wants to use the same affordable controller on Switch, mobile, and PC, it’s darn hard to beat. 

Gamesir Nova HD lights
Gamesir Nova HD lights

Michael Crider/Foundry

Gamesir Nova HD lights

Michael Crider/Foundry

Michael Crider/Foundry

Racing fans won’t like the triggers, and I wish it came with a USB dongle in the box. But considering that you get a full controller with customizable rear buttons, rumble, and hall-effect sticks, plus the option to swap between the two most common layouts on the fly, I’m more than willing to forgive those shortcomings. 

If you need a multi-platform controller for dirt cheap, Gamesir’s Nova HD should be at the top of your shopping list. 

Computer Accessories

Latest Windows update patches critical Wi-Fi vulnerability

21 June 2024 at 10:26

Windows updates don’t just exist to annoy you and make you reboot your computer twice as often as you normally would. They often include some actually important stuff.

This week’s update has a critical patch for a known Wi-Fi vulnerability, which Microsoft rates as an 8.8 out of 10 in terms of danger—so, go ahead and spin up Windows Update sooner rather than later.

As The Register reports, the CVE-2024-30078 bug fix prevents remote code execution (that means “running scary stuff on your PC from somewhere else”) via a Wi-Fi driver. The details of this vulnerability aren’t public, and it doesn’t appear to be being exploited “in the wild,” but Microsoft isn’t leaving things up to chance. Hackers might be able to figure it out now that it’s been addressed.

The same can’t be said for the critical CVE-2024-30080 patch, which allows remote code execution via the Microsoft Message Queuing system. This one’s dangerous enough that it gets a 9.8 rating, and it may be being exploited at the moment.

Rounding out the security patches is an older issue, CVE-2023-50868, which can be used as a remote denial of service method by overloading resources using Domain Name System Security Extensions. It’s mostly a server issue and less important for regular users.

These fixes should be applied for all Windows 10 and Windows 11 users, so don’t delay. That’s the KB5039214 update for builds 14393.7070, 22621.3737, and 22631.3737 — if you see any of those numbers on your System>About page, you’re all set.

Windows

Fast charge 4 devices at once with Anker’s compact charger, now $40 off

21 June 2024 at 10:14

Having a single wall charger for all your devices can save you time and keep your space decluttered. Need a charger like that? The Anker 747 Wall Charger is it, and it’s currently available for its best price yet.

Down from its normal $110, you can get it for just $70 right now—a spectacular 36% discount for a powerhouse device.

Imagine this: Your laptop is running low on battery, your smartphone isn’t far behind, and your wireless headphones are about to die, too. But there’s only one power outlet and no power strip.

One option is to plug in your laptop, then charge your phone and headphones through the laptop. But that would take a while. Why do that when you could instead fast charge all three at once?

The Anker 747 offers high-speed charging for two simultaneous laptops, four simultaneous smaller devices, or an impressive 100W output for a single device. It has four total ports: three USB-C and one USB-A. Altogether, it can deliver 150W total power.

Powered by GaN technology, this charger isn’t just fast—it’s also more energy efficient than traditional chargers. And it’s pretty darn compact, about 38% smaller than Apple’s 140W charger.

So, whether you’re a frequent traveler, a tech enthusiast, or someone who just hates clutter, the Anker 747 Wall Charger is a game changer. It’s small, it’s versatile, and, most importantly, it’s on sale right now!

This 4-device Anker wall charger is 36% off Mobile Phone Chargers

Still use Kaspersky antivirus? The US is banning it, so prepare to switch

21 June 2024 at 09:37

In 2017, Russia-based Kaspersky Antivirus Software was deemed an unacceptable risk to US national security, thus fully barred from use by federal agencies in 2018. Then, in 2022, Kaspersky earned a spot on the US Federal Communications Commission’s blacklist.

But while federal subsidies could no longer be spent on Kaspersky, individuals and private businesses were still free to buy licenses. This will soon change with an upcoming US ban on Kaspersky’s products.

Announced Thursday by the Bureau of Industry and Security (a branch of the Department of Commerce), the prohibition applies to antivirus and other cybersecurity software developed and distributed by Kaspersky and its affiliates. The Biden administration cited high potential for interference from the Russian government in Kaspersky’s operations as the reason for its decision—the first of its kind.

The ban will roll out in two phases: starting on July 20 at 12:00am ET, Kaspersky can no longer sell its products to new US persons or agree to integrate its software into third-party products (like white-labeled services); then, on September 29 at 12:00am ET, all reselling, existing integrations, and licensing must cease. Virus definition and app updates will end, as will operation of the Kaspersky Security Network within the US and on devices belonging to US residents and citizens.

This window gives consumers and businesses time to transition to new software—and there are no legal penalties for continuing to use Kaspersky while you hunt for a replacement.

OUr Current Top Pick for Best Antivirus

Norton 360 Deluxe

Norton 360 Deluxe
Price When Reviewed: $49.99 for the first year

If you’re currently a Kaspersky user, you should switch to an alternative before that September cutoff date—don’t leave your PC and other devices unprotected from new threats. If you’ve been using the free version of Kaspersky, one easy fallback is Windows Security, the built-in antivirus, malware, and network protections offered by Microsoft with both Windows 10 and 11. For more premium options, check our recommendations of the best antivirus software, where you’ll find apps comparable to the Kaspersky product you’re currently using.

For a fuller rundown of the US government’s investigation of Kaspersky, you can check out the Bureau of Industry and Security’s dedicated site. Among the other details given, it explains the reasons for why Kaspersky is now considered a high security risk.

The biggest reasons include the possibility of the Russian government compelling Kaspersky into releasing sensitive data about its US customers, using Kaspersky as a vehicle to plant malware on devices owned by US persons, and spreading malicious code through white-label software to unsuspecting end users.

There’s even a link to the documentation that meticulously lays out the government’s actions, including its communication with Kaspersky about its analysis. (That could sound like the equivalent of paint drying, but you may find the BIS teardown of Kaspersky’s proposed mitigations an interesting read.)

Antivirus

Buying a prebuilt gaming PC is like eating Fugu – it’s all about trust

21 June 2024 at 09:00

Pre-built gaming PCs aren’t just the domain of noobie gamers. No, many an experienced gamer has been enticed by the glittering imagery and exciting performance promises of a shiny new manufacturer-made rig. But beneath the flashy neon pics and the impressive list of hardware specs are often gremlins lurking, ready to bite.

If you haven’t already guessed from that opener, I’m not in the “buy a pre-built gaming PC camp.” That’s not just because I’m a tech editor who likes to painstakingly oversee and choose every component in a new build until I reach performance perfection.

I also don’t have any illusions about wanting to be the go-to tech support guy among my family and friends — I am that guy anyways. No, it’s just that pre-built gaming PCs are incredibly risky business.

In fact, I’d go so far as to liken buying one to dinning on a meal of Fugu, a Japanese delicacy made from the porcupinefish (puffer fish). If you’re unfamiliar with Fugu, parts of it are so full of poison it needs meticulous preparation by a chef, and not just any chef, one with the know-how and steady hands of a brain surgeon.

Dinning on Fugu, then, is like taking the ultimate leap of faith. Sure, you could get a delicious, safe meal of tasty puffer and not keel over. Or a single bite may see you drop your chopsticks and leave your mortal coil for good. The big question then is: Do you trust the chef?

A top-end prebuilt gaming pc you can trust

Falcon Northwest FragBox (Intel 14th-gen)

Falcon Northwest FragBox (Intel 14th-gen)
Price When Reviewed: $2966 baseline | $5850 as reviewed
Best Prices Today: $2966 at Falcon Northwest

In the same way, you may have no problems with your pre-built gaming rig, or a ton of problems once you get it through the front door.

The poison to look out for here is bloatware, malfunctioning hardware, overheating, the incorporation of low-grade hardware and poorly configured hardware (mostly from a lack of care) — all scourges of a mass-produced item rather than a bespoke one that’s been carefully planned and put together for you and your needs.

But that’s not all, because there’s also the fact that you could be paying an over-inflated price for a rig whose performance is lackluster, or just downright terrible at worst, no matter the specs.

Hardware problems, in the worst case, could stop you in your tracks before you’ve even peeled the brand stickers off your machine’s shiny exterior, let alone launched a game. But with most pre-builds having manufacturers’ warranties, they’re arguably not as bad as the more insidious performance problems you could encounter.

Desktop gaming PC

Some gamers have reported malfunctioning hardware, bloatware, low-quality hardware, and proprietary hardware in pre-built gaming rigs. 

Desktop gaming PC

Some gamers have reported malfunctioning hardware, bloatware, low-quality hardware, and proprietary hardware in pre-built gaming rigs. 

Dreamstime: Chiradech Chotchuang

Desktop gaming PC

Some gamers have reported malfunctioning hardware, bloatware, low-quality hardware, and proprietary hardware in pre-built gaming rigs. 

Dreamstime: Chiradech Chotchuang

Dreamstime: Chiradech Chotchuang

RAM is often a cause of those performance problems. If the rig isn’t shipping with ultra-slow RAM, it may be fast RAM with poor latency (CL22 on 2933MHz RAM was an often-reported problem in pre-builds in years past). Manufacturers have also been known to pass off a single stick of RAM as dual channel, simply because the PC has a slot to run RAM as dual channel.

Then there’s performance issues linked to the build itself. Take Alienware’s 2022 R13 pre-built gaming PC as an example. One configuration of this rig shipped with an Intel Core i9-12900KF CPU and RTX 3090 GPU — that sounds glorious, doesn’t it?

But thermal performance benchmarks by Gamers Nexus showed its $570 CPU performed only as well as a step-down $340 Intel Core i7-12700K when compiling the same code, which amounted to a 16 percent downgrade in performance. The culprit? Gamers Nexus concluded that Dell’s sub-optimal build affected the CPU’s thermal and power limits.

Intel Core i9-14900K in a motherboard
Intel Core i9-14900K in a motherboard

Adam Patrick Murray / Foundry

Intel Core i9-14900K in a motherboard

Adam Patrick Murray / Foundry

Adam Patrick Murray / Foundry

Before you say, “but I could fix that in a jiffy,” in this case that would be easier said than done because of another scourge of pre-built gaming rigs: the proprietary hardware they often have.

That refers to hardware that’s been made especially for your pre-built PC — tech that’s basically useless anywhere except inside the rig itself, that you can’t just swap out for parts of your choosing.

In the case of the 2022 Alienware R13, there was a whole heap of it — from the cooler that came attached to the proprietary case, to the proprietary motherboard with a front-facing I/O that you would need to change out completely if it stopped working. The worst part of all is that the R13 shipped for a whopping $5,000 — which I have only one word for: ouch!

A worthy prebuilt desktop

Acer Predator Orion 3000 (PO3-650-UR17)

Acer Predator Orion 3000 (PO3-650-UR17)

I’m not down on Dell’s Alienware products. In fact, they’re usually kick-ass gaming PCs that any gamer is lucky to have. Indeed, this problem can (and does) happen to other manufacturers too; the internet is peppered with examples — which is entirely my point.

Of course, pre-built rigs aren’t always bad; you could get lucky and land something like the HP Omen 45L that has three 120mm RGB intake fans and a 360mm liquid cooler. HP also promises tool-less upgradability, which bodes well for futureproofing the rig’s performance. You can also trust reviews of specific prebuilts by testers you trust, be it us here at PCWorld, GamersNexus, or whoever else.

Counterpoint: I bought a pre-built desktop gaming PC and I’m not sorry about it

Buying a pre-built has also helped some gamers through tough times. Indeed, at the height of the GPU shortage crisis back in 2022-2023, it was one of the only ways you could get a GPU at a reasonable price. But right now, that’s not as much of an issue.

So, take my advice and build your own gaming rig, one that you know is going to be the right price, have minimal issues, and perform well. You don’t even need to build it yourself; you just need someone who knows their stuff to help. In other words, a “chef” that you can trust.

Desktop PCs

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i review: Close to perfection

21 June 2024 at 06:30
Editors' ChoiceAt a glance

Expert's Rating

Pros

  • Excellent keyboard with a full number pad
  • Huge, precise trackpad
  • Sharp display
  • Loud, clear speakers
  • Good-quality aluminum build
  • Impressive performance even in games

Cons

  • High price
  • Some annoying bloatware
  • Slightly weak battery life

Our Verdict

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i is one of the best mainstream Windows laptops on the market, with great specs, a gorgeous display, and a killer keyboard.

Price When Reviewed

$1,699.99

Best Prices Today: Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i

Retailer
Price
Lenovo
$1482
Best Buy
$1699.99
Price comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwide
Product
Price
Price comparison from Backmarket

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i would not look out of place in an office, but this 16-inch laptop has another side. A laptop this size offers a good mix of portability and screen real estate, and there’s also room for some serious hardware. This machine is well-made, attractive, and extremely powerful—it can even play modern PC games with surprising fluidity. On the other hand, even the base-model is very expensive, and most PC users don’t need this much power. 

Looking for more options? Check out PCWorld’s roundup of the best laptops available right now.

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Specs and features

The Yoga Pro 9i is Lenovo’s flagship laptop, and it comes in a number of configurations. Lenovo fiddles with pricing and specs almost constantly, but you can expect to pay a minimum of roughly $1,480 for the machine. Fully specced out, it’s around $2,100. This computer sits at the top of Lenovo’s mainstream notebook offerings, but some of the company’s Legion gaming laptops are more capable and expensive. 

Despite being a Yoga-branded laptop, this is not a 2-in-1. The 16-inch touchscreen’s hinge stops at 180-degrees like other traditional notebooks. That display is either a standard IPS LCD or miniLED, both at 3200 x 2000 resolution. There are two CPU options, too, a Meteor Lake Core Ultra 7 or Core Ultra 9. There are also two GPU options in the form of an Nvidia RTX 4050 or 4060, something you don’t get on the step-down Yoga 7i. Here are the full specs of the review unit. 

  • CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 185H
  • Memory: 32GB
  • Graphics/GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050, 6GB, 100W TDP
  • Display: 16-inch 3200 x 2000 IPS, 165Hz, 400 nits
  • Storage: 1 TB PCIe Gen4 NVMe
  • Webcam: 5MP with IR for Windows Hello
  • Connectivity: 1x USB-C with Thunderbolt 4, 1x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2, 2x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1, 1x HDMI, 1x 3.5mm audio jack, 1x SD card reader
  • Networking: Wi-Fi 6e, Bluetooth 5.3
  • Battery capacity: 84 Wh, 170W slim tip charger
  • Dimensions: 14.28 x 9.99 x 0.70 inches
  • Weight: 4.41 lbs
  • MSRP as tested: $1,699.99

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Design and build quality

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i design
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i design

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i design

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

The Yoga Pro 9i is a relatively large laptop, but it’s a good size given the hardware inside. It’s only 0.7 inches thick when closed, and the 4.41 pound weight is a bit lower than other high-end laptops. Despite having a large display, the bezels are nice and slim, so it should fit in most laptop sleeves and compartments. The top bezel is a bit unusual with Lenovo’s trademark “reverse display notch,” which houses the 5MP webcam and microphones. It looks a bit strange at first, but it does offer a nice lip when closed to make the machine easier to open. 

Some laptops feel rickety and too flexible when you pick them up, but not the Yoga Pro 9i. The entire chassis is aluminum, and all the panels are thick enough to feel solid and resist flexing. The hinge is also nice and tight, keeping the screen stable if you need to pick up and move the machine, but opening cleanly with one hand.

While there’s no physical camera shutter, Lenovo does have a button on the right edge that electronically disables the camera when not in use. In addition to video chats, the camera can be used to your presence and put itself to sleep if you walk away for added security. The right side is also where you’ll find the USB-A ports, card reader, and the power button. On the opposite side, you get the USB-C ports, HDMI, 3.5mm, and the power port.  

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Keyboard and trackpad

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i keyboard and trackpad
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i keyboard and trackpad

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i keyboard and trackpad

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo has some of the better laptop keyboards on the market, even on cheaper models. The Yoga Pro 9i offers generous key spacing and deep 1.5mm travel, making it easier to get up to speed without making excessive typos. It’s worlds better than the current Dell XPS lineup in that respect. 

The keys have above average tactility, and the bottom out is solid, not bouncy or mushy at all. The keys are backlit, as you’d expect on a premium laptop. The lighting is even, and it doesn’t bleed around the keys too much, but there are only two manual brightness stops—I’d like to see a few more options. 

If you are so inclined, this laptop sports a dedicated key for Microsoft Copilot. We’re going to see this new key a lot—it’s between the arrows and spacebar, taking the place of the rarely used menu key. Speaking of the arrows, I wish Lenovo would use full-sized keys here. You get a full key for the left and right arrows, but up and down occupy a single key unit split down the middle. That can make it hard to find the arrows by feel.

I appreciate the inclusion of a full number pad on the Yoga Pro 9i. At 14 inches wide, there’s just enough speed to fit everything, but Lenovo did have to reduce the size of the keys. The numbers are also right up against the modifiers (shift, enter, etc.), which can increase the frequency of accidental presses. Again, it can be hard to find this division by feel. 

The keyboard is shifted to the left to make room for the number pad, and the trackpad is off to the side with it. I usually prefer to have trackpads in the middle regardless of the keyboard layout, but it’s not much of an issue here because the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i has an enormous trackpad that covers much of the available space below the keyboard. The trackpad’s high-precision, Gorilla Glass-covered surface is a delight. I bumped the sensitivity a bit higher, and I hardly missed my mouse. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Display and audio

Lenovo Yoga Pro hero
Lenovo Yoga Pro hero

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro hero

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i really wows with its display. I’m testing the lesser of the two screen options, a 16-inch IPS LCD at 3200×2000. It supports a 165Hz refresh rate, but the default mode has the machine locked to 60Hz. It also supports multitouch if you want to try to use Windows with touch. While the OS can be frustrating to poke, the glass is smooth and resists fingerprinting well. It would be more useful if the hinge allowed full rotation, though. 

The miniLED version offers more vibrant colors and higher brightness, but the LCD is no slouch. It’s extremely crisp, and the 400 nits brightness rating is good enough for use in bright lighting. However, the glass screen cover is very reflective, and the brightness isn’t enough to make up for that if you try to use the computer outdoors. 

Laptop speakers are rarely what you would call “good,” but the Yoga Pro 9i earns that distinction and then some. It has an impressive six-speaker setup, including four subwoofers and two tweeters. That’s even more robust than the Dell XPS 16, which PCWorld praised for its audio quality. The Yoga’s sound is clear, loud, and doesn’t distort at high volumes. The speakers also drive home the quality of the overall computer—there’s some minor vibration in the chassis when you crank the volume, but it doesn’t rattle or produce any unwanted noise. Even bass-heavy media will sound great on the Yoga Pro 9i, although don’t expect deep thumping. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Performance

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i can tear through spreadsheets, documents, and other general computing tasks, but it can also satiate your appetite for games once work is all wrapped up. The Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 is not the most capable laptop GPU, but it’s a rocket ship compared to the integrated GPUs most mainstream laptops use. I ran this machine through the usual battery of productivity tests, plus some of the benchmarks we usually reserve for gaming laptops. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i PCMark results
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i PCMark results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i PCMark results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

PCMark 10 is designed to test a machine across a variety of metrics like web browsing, video chat, and photo editing. Here, we’re looking at the overall score, and the Yoga Pro 9i puts up one of the best scores we’ve seen thanks to that Core Ultra 9 CPU, which has a TDP of 30W. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Cinebench results
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Cinebench results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Cinebench results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Cinebench is a CPU-focused test that shows how a machine handles heavy but brief multi-core workloads. The Lenovo machine does well here, coming in just behind the Alienware m16 R2. While that machine has a lower-specced CPU, its default power profile doesn’t leave as much performance on the table. The Yoga Pro 9i still beats all the other mainstream notebooks we’ve tested lately. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Handbrake results
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Handbrake results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Handbrake results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

The Handbrake test is similar to Cinebench in that it shows how a computer handles multithreaded tasks, but this is a longer-duration test where thermals matter more. Again, the Yoga Pro 9i comes in just behind the performance-tuned Alienware m16 R2. However, it’s a cut above all the other mainstream laptops in our database—it’s about a third faster than the Dell XPS 14, for example. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 3DMark Time Spy results
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 3DMark Time Spy results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 3DMark Time Spy results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

While the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i is not technically a gaming laptop, it’s equipped with a capable RTX 4050 GPU, and the upgraded model has an RTX 4060. In 3D Mark’s Time Spy benchmark, the Yoga leaves other mainstream laptops in the dust. Even the Dell XPS 14 with the same GPU falls well behind the Lenovo machine. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Shadow of the Tomb Raider results
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Shadow of the Tomb Raider results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i Shadow of the Tomb Raider results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

To get a better handle on gaming performance, I ran the Yoga Pro 9i through the Shadow of the Tomb Raider benchmark, which is an excellent real-world test of gaming power. Comparing the Yoga Pro 9i to a slate of gaming notebooks, this laptop holds its own. Computers with the RTX 4070 and 4090 are well out in front, but the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i can surpass even some machines with more powerful RTX 4060 GPUs. 

I’ve used the Yoga Pro 9i alongside gaming notebooks, and it’s more than good enough to push some pixels after a long day of office work. Using DLSS upscaling, it’s possible to play games like Baldur’s Gate 3 and Cyberpunk 2077 on the gorgeous 3200×2000 display with good visual fidelity. You won’t be able to crank up advanced graphical features like ray tracing, but most games will still look great on this machine. 

In general day-to-day usage, the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i has never felt sluggish. Apps open fast, the ample RAM keeps multiple windows and a gaggle of browser tabs running, and Windows hasn’t crashed once. Lenovo’s excellent Vantage settings app also makes it easy to control the features and performance of the machine in one place. As for the rest of the software, it’s a standard Windows experience after you ditch the McAfee app and a few other pieces of bloatware in your way. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Battery life

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i has an 84Wh battery, which is on the small size for a 16-inch laptop. Combined with the powerful hardware and high-resolution screen, the battery life is acceptable but not particularly good. Our battery test consists of playing a 4K copy of Tears of Steel on repeat in the Movies & TV app (in airplane mode) until the laptop runs out of juice. The Yoga Pro 9i managed just under nine hours in this test, which is below most mainstream notebooks. However, it runs a little ahead of gaming notebooks. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i battery life results
Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i battery life results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i battery life results

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

IDG / Ryan Whitwam

We ran this test first in the default 60Hz refresh mode. While the screen looks nice in 165Hz mode, it takes a big bite out of your battery—the laptop loses about an hour in the video benchmark. When there’s no power to plug in, I’d suggest sticking with 60Hz mode. The higher refresh rate will have a bigger impact in general computing compared to video. That said, even at 165Hz, you should be able to make it through a work day with the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i. 

Plenty of laptops are relying entirely on USB-C for charging now, but not this one. Because there’s a dedicated GPU inside this machine, it needs more power than current USB devices can supply. The 170W “Slim Tip” charger keeps the machine running at full speed, and it recharges quickly. However, you can plug a USB-C cable with USB Power Delivery support into one of the two ports to charge the machine at up to 100W. The system will throttle performance when powered over USB-C. 

Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i: Conclusion

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i is one of the best mainstream Windows laptops on the market right now. The performance is top notch, whether you’re juggling spreadsheets or getting a few frags in before bed. The battery life is passable; it might be nice to have a bit more longevity, but I like the aggressive performance tuning. The build quality is also solid, with a full aluminum housing with no flex or rattle. I would have preferred a fully rotating screen, but the Yoga Pro 9i gets the traditional laptop form factor right. The screen is easy to open with one hand, and it stays where you leave it even if you move the machine around or pound on the keyboard. 

Speaking of the keyboard, Lenovo did a good job of making the keys feel spacious even with that full number pad. The tactility is excellent for a laptop, and the keys feel solid at bottom out with almost no mushiness. I’m also a fan of the huge trackpad, which is clad in glass and feels buttery smooth. The audio-video experience is top tier, as well. Even the base model IPS display is excellent compared to similar laptops, and there’s a miniLED upgrade available. The speakers are also good—and not just good for a laptop. 

The fantastic hardware brings us to this machine’s biggest con: the price. You’re looking at around $1,500 for the cheapest variant. My test unit clocked in at $1,700, and it doesn’t even have the upgraded miniLED screen. You can easily spend over $2,000 on the Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i with all the trimmings. All the prices feel a bit too high—that’s MacBook Pro money. The model I reviewed has already been on sale as low as $1,500, and that seems about right. The good news is Lenovo shuffles prices frequently, so the Yoga Pro 9i will undoubtedly go on sale again.

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