Author: Admin

  • Amazon Prime Day Deal: This $25 Magsafe Wallet Doubles as an iPhone Stand

    Amazon Prime Day Deal: This $25 Magsafe Wallet Doubles as an iPhone Stand

    I’m always on the lookout for travel accessories, because, well, I travel quite a bit. I work from home, so I take my work with me every now and then, carrying my phones, laptop, tablet and headphones. And because of all my gadgets, I also need accessories to make my journey easier. I’ve got a water-resistant backpack with several pockets to fit all my tech, a few power banks to keep everything charged and, of course, cables, cables and more cables.

    My most recent addition though, which is currently on sale for Amazon’s October Prime Day event, has been a game-changer.

    The ESR magnetic wallet is a slim MagSafe-compatible wallet that you can attach to the back of your iPhone, allowing you to carry up to three individual cards, like your driver’s license, ID and debit or credit card. I don’t always like to have my full-sized wallet when I travel — it’s got a lot going on, and I don’t always need access to all my cards, receipts, coupons and spare change.

    Instead, I pull out a couple of my more important cards from my full-sized wallet, place them into my magnetic wallet and then attach it to the back of my iPhone 15 Pro Max (it works with the iPhone 12 and later).

    Wallet with cards

    It’s not just a wallet, though. The ESR magnetic wallet also works as a stand for your iPhone. If you unlatch the top half of the wallet, you can create a kickstand to prop up your phone and read the news, watch videos and scroll through social media. You can rotate the magnetic wallet to place your phone horizontally, which is great if you want to watch a movie on a flight or hop on a Zoom call in a coffee shop.

    Wallet being used as a phone stand

    The ESR magnetic wallet also comes in a $46 version that features Find My functionality, so that you can see where it is in real-time in case you lose your wallet, phone or both.

  • iOS 17.1 Beta 3: Your iPhone Could Get These New Features Soon

    iOS 17.1 Beta 3: Your iPhone Could Get These New Features Soon

    Apple released the third iOS 17.1 public beta for the iPhone on Wednesday, one day after the company made the beta available to developers. The third beta arrived about three weeks after the release of iOS 17. This beta brings a few new features and bug fixes to the iPhones of developers and other beta testers who want to see what’s coming down the pike from Cupertino.

    We recommend downloading a beta only on something other than your primary device. Since this is a beta version of iOS 17.1, these features might be buggy and battery life may be short, and it’s best to keep that on a secondary device.

    If you’re a developer or public beta tester, here are some of the new features you can find in iOS 17.1 beta 3. Note that the beta is still ongoing, so these might not be the only new features to land on your iPhone when iOS 17.1 is released. There’s no word on the public release for iOS 17.1 just yet.

    iPhone 12 radio frequency concerns addressed

    The National Frequency Agency in France said on Sept. 12 that the iPhone 12 exceeds European-specific absorption rate limits, and it appears Apple will address those concerns with iOS 17.1.

    “iOS 17.1 includes an update for iPhone 12 for users in France to accommodate this specific test protocol that requires reduced power when off-body on a static surface,” Apple posted Tuesday. “iPhone 12 will no longer increase the allowed power when the off-body state is detected, such as while it is sitting on a table.”

    New StandBy mode settings

    An iPhone with its Standby screen active

    StandBy mode is one of my favorite new iOS features, and in iOS 17.1 beta 2, Apple gives StandBy mode more setting options. With iOS 17.1 beta 2, you have the option to turn StandBy mode off after 20 seconds, never or “Automatically.” Apple writes that if you choose Automatically, the display will turn off when your iPhone is not in use and the room is dark, like when you’re sleeping at night.

    However, I checked these settings on my iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone XR and only found these options on my iPhone 14 Pro. This makes me think the new settings will only be available on iPhones with an always-on display.

    Apple Music upgrades

    In iOS 17.1 beta 1, Apple added a new button in Apple Music that allows you to quickly Favorite songs. When a song is playing and you’re looking at its card on your iPhone, there’s a star outline near the song’s title. You can tap this star to add the song to your Favorites.

    Options for All Albums, Favorited, Title, Recently Added and Artist in Apple Music

    There’s also a new way to find all your Favorited playlists, albums and songs. To find them, go into the corresponding category in Apple Music, tap the button in the top-right corner of your screen, and tap Favorited.

    Apple Music also shows you song suggestions in iOS 17.1 beta 1. To see them, go into any of your playlists and scroll to the bottom of the playlist to see a section called Song Suggestions. These are songs that the app thinks you might like based on your musical tastes.

    AirDrop using cellular data

    With iOS 17, Apple upgraded AirDrop with NameDrop, which allows two devices to tap each other and exchange contact information — kind of like exchanging digital business cards. And in the first iOS 17.1 beta, Apple now lets you use cellular data to send and receive information over AirDrop when two iPhones are out of range of each other.

    Flashlight symbol in Live Activities

    Have you ever accidentally switched on your iPhone’s flashlight and had someone point it out to you later? Some iPhone users won’t have to worry about that anymore. In iOS 17.1 beta 1, when you turn on your flashlight, a little flashlight symbol appears in the Live Activities feed across the top of the screen of my iPhone 14 Pro. However, I couldn’t replicate this symbol on my iPhone XR, so this feature likely only works on Live Activity-enabled iPhones, like the iPhone 14 Pro and the iPhone 15 lineup.

    New ringtones are back

    Two lists of ringtones on the iPhone

    When Apple released iOS 17, it included all-new ringtones and text tones. Apple then removed those sounds with iOS 17.1 beta 1, but the ringtones and text tones appear to be back with iOS 17.1 beta 2. You can still find all the older sounds under Classic on the Ringtone and Text Tone setting pages.

    Those are some of the major new features developers and beta testers will see in the third iOS 17.1 beta. That doesn’t mean these are the only features coming to the next iOS update, or that these changes will stick when iOS 17.1 is released to the public.

    For more, check out my review of iOS 17 and CNET’s iOS 17 cheat sheet.

    17 Hidden iOS 17 Features and Settings on Your iPhone

    See all photos

  • This Prime Day Nintendo Deal Is a Great Add-on for Switch Owners

    This Prime Day Nintendo Deal Is a Great Add-on for Switch Owners

    With Amazon Prime Day underway, there are plenty of Nintendo Switch and other video game deals flooding the internet. And as awesome as the Nintendo Switch is for playing games like The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom or the upcoming Super Mario Wonder, the system is now showing its age. Compared to the PS5 and Xbox Series X, the Nintendo Switch typically runs games at 1080p or below. This leads to a less sharp image on large 4K displays with lots of jagged edges, known as aliasing.

    Luckily, there are some aftermarket products that can help mitigate this. The mClassic by Marseille is a small HDMI upscaler that bumps up the resolution of all your older systems. This means that a 720p image gets bumped up to 1080p, along with some anti-aliasing tech to smooth over edges.

    Right now, the Marseille mClassic is on sale for $80. That’s $20 off the regular retail price. It’s a lightning deal, meaning that once it’s sold out, it’s gone.

    I’ve been using the mClassic for years and have written about it in the past. While it won’t completely transform your Switch to produce PS5-level image quality, it does give it a modest visual bump. For some, the difference might be negligible. For others, especially pixel-peepers like myself, it cleans the round faces in Animal Crossing: New Horizons and sharpens the glow of Samus’ suit in Metroid Dread enough for me to notice.

    It should be noted that some TVs have internal upscalers as well. For some, the mClassic might fail to make significant difference if their TV’s upscaler is already doing the heavy lifting.

  • Adobe Retrained Its Generative AI, and I’m Impressed With the Upgrade

    Adobe Retrained Its Generative AI, and I’m Impressed With the Upgrade

    If you’re hoping artificial intelligence will get your creative juices flowing faster, Adobe on Tuesday revealed three big changes to its Firefly family of generative AI tools. The engine that powers Photoshop’s image generation is getting a big upgrade, and generative AI is coming to Adobe Illustrator designs and Adobe Express layouts.

    Firefly already let you turn text prompts into pictures on the Firefly website and in Adobe’s Photoshop image-editing software, but a second-generation AI model offers more detail and better image quality, said Alexandru Costin, Adobe’s generative AI leader. The model isn’t yet available in Photoshop, but you can expect it to arrive after some testing online.

    In my testing, I did indeed find the results and the user interface much better. Adobe trained the new AI model on twice as many images, and it offers higher resolution, better detail like skin pores, and the ability to steer generation with photography parameters like lens focal length and depth of field.

    Generative AI starts with the same basic AI methods that have been used for years: train a system to recognize patterns in real-world data. But generative AI goes a step further with the ability to create new material like text, images, speech or video based on its own understanding of those patterns. That’s revolutionized computers, lifting them out of their plodding, literal ways and giving us a taste of what a truly smart machine might be like.

    Trying Adobe’s upgraded Firefly generative AI

    Although Firefly results sometimes are unconvincing, it’s just plain fun to create fanciful and entertaining images, especially when using more forgiving art styles like paintings, cartoons and watercolors. I enjoyed typing in prompts, seeing what the AI would produce, then tweaking the prompts for more useful or outrageous results.

    The interface is improved, too. A high-level option to choose between photorealism and a more artistic illustration style is helpful, as are options for square, landscape and portrait aspect ratios. Sliders for visual intensity and style strength give you a choice of images that are dramatic, understated or something in between. You can upload a reference photo to steer the style of the output.

    An Adobe's Firefly-generated image of a ghoul wearing a heavy metal outfit mountain biking through a post-apocalyptic wasteland

    One of my standard prompts to test AI, a parachuting elephant, produced better results than the first-gen Firefly, though the technology still struggles with the parachute cords. In one image, it managed to construct a wooden frame to hold the elephant, which surprised me.

    Creating “a kindly doctor in a hospital room for a pharmaceutical ad” produced a variety of generally acceptable portraits. Firefly produced a variety of races and genders, but every one of them had the obligatory scrubs and stethoscope.

    The images Firefly created of a spikey electric guitar were satisfyingly dangerous looking if not always endowed with the correct number of frets, pickups and strings.

    My testing also showed there’s still a lot of work to be done. In images of the stereotypical hacker hunched over a keyboard, they sometimes wore their hoodies backwards. My quest for a photorealistic red crab waving its claws in the air went unfulfilled, with distorted claws, extra eyes and other problems. Firefly did a passable job generating a groundhog, but Adobe’s training data evidently doesn’t include enough picas — a more unusual rodent found in the high mountains.

    A quartet of images of doctors generated by Adobe's AI

    And another test I like to run, an image of an angry crocodile leaping out of a stormy ocean with lightning striking all around, still struggles with a plausible arrangement of teeth. My “ghoul in a heavy metal outfit rides a mountain bike through a post-apocalyptic wasteland” prompt showed that it’s really hard to fit the geometry of a humanoid character to the mechanics of a bike. “A high-tech communications network spans the globe with data surging through the wires” produced a tangled mess.

    But you can refine prompts to get better results. and the art style often produces more convincing subjects than photo style. Some art styles, like doodle drawing, are more forgiving than others. I particularly liked the watercolor option. But perfect Firefly is not.

    Firefly comes to Adobe Illustrator

    Adobe Illustrator, which designers use to create vector graphics like logos and diagrams, now gets Firefly text prompt abilities for the first time. As with Photoshop, the software will turn a text prompt into a quartet of illustration candidates you can choose from and refine with further editing. The illustrations are fully editable.

    Demonstration images of Adobe Illustrator made by Firefly's generative AI abilities showing two cans with desert scenes

    And the Adobe Express app for building creations like flyers and social media videos gets a text prompt field of its own that you can use to build templates. For example, if you type in “pirate themed birthday party announcement for children,” it’ll spit out some layout options with custom art and fonts. It’s in beta testing for now.

    Read more: Here’s What I Learned Testing Photoshop’s New Generative AI Tool

    Generative AI’s creativity can be a problem if you’re looking for factually accurate information for your lawsuit, travel itinerary or high school essay. But it can be a boon for creative uses, and Adobe is counting on Firefly to overhaul what’s possible with its tools and help those who might lack expertise to spread their wings.

    Sneak previews of AI-powered projects

    AI showed up on Wednesday, too, the second day of its Max conference, when Adobe showed several of its traditional “sneaks” — previews of technology under development it expects to ship eventually.

    Ahead of Max, Adobe showed off Project Stardust, a new photo editing system that analyzes a scene, separating it into elements so people can tap on subjects to select, move, delete, resize or modify them. It even notices shadows and alters them accordingly. That kind of AI-powered ability could ease the notoriously difficult process of changing only the part of a photo you want to change.

    “Stardust is a new editing engine that we hope will revolutionize photo editing for potentially millions of people,” said Stardust leader Mark Nichoson.

    A parachuting elephant generated with Adobe Firefly's more whimsical doodle style

    Here are some of Adobe’s other AI-powered sneaks:

    Project Fast Fill brings generative AI to video, letting editors delete people from the background of one video frame and then extend that change to the entire video clip. It can also track a designated area so a change can follow subjects. Adobe showed one example adding a necktie to a walking person’s outfit and another with a new foam pattern on the sloshing surface of a cup of latte.

    Project Poseable lets people convert a 2D photo of a person into a 3D model in that same posture — sitting, lying down or in a fighting stance, for example. You can then reposition the limbs and joints of that skeletal model into a preferred pose, then with a text prompt build a new character style, like ogre or nurse. Adobe thinks it’ll be good for storyboards, though for now it can’t maintain a consistent character from one creation to the next.

    And Project Draw & Delight turns a crude sketch accompanied by a text label into a cartoon. You can add extra material with new sketches and prompts, and it’ll modify the existing design, preserving the character you’ve already chosen.

    Firefly generates 3 billion images so far

    In a few months of testing, Adobe customers have embraced AI rapidly, generating more than 3 billion creations so far, Costin said.

    “Normally, features in Photoshop get a single percent utilization rate. Generative Fill [a Firefly Photoshop ability] got 10x that percentage in the first month,” Costin said. “Customers love this tech.”

    An Adobe Firefly generative AI version of an uncomfortably spiky guitar

    Adobe’s bean counters also likely love it. Adobe subscription plans let you use Firefly many times per month, but in November, Adobe is raising Creative Cloud prices by about 9% to 10%.

    The generation takes place on Adobe’s cloud computing infrastructure and costs real money, especially given the high price tag of Nvidia processors that handle most generative AI work these days. Those big AI models typically don’t fit in the memory of an ordinary laptop, but the industry is working on that problem at the same time companies like AMD, Intel and Apple are adding new acceleration abilities to their processors.

    Other AI abilities emerging at Adobe Max:

    • Adobe also is using AI to help you use AI. In Photoshop, it’ll suggest completions to your text prompts to try to produce better results. This could help people who are short on experience in the latest field of computer science, prompt engineering. “If you don’t know what to write, we’re autogenerating prompts not only to statistically write a sentence but to try … to generate images that look beautiful,” Costin said.
    • In Lightroom, a new AI-based lens blur effect will artificially blur backgrounds, simulating the bokeh that higher-end lenses can produce naturally to isolate subjects from the rest of a scene.
    • Businesses can customize how Firefly works by uploading their own assets to steer the Firefly generation process in the right direction.

    Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to help create some stories. For more, see this post.

  • Discover Amazing Anti-Prime Day Deals at Target, Walmart and Other Stores

    Discover Amazing Anti-Prime Day Deals at Target, Walmart and Other Stores

    Amazon may be offering some fantastic deals for its October Prime Day, but don’t forget that other retailers are also stepping up their game and offering their own sales. It’s good news if you prefer not to invest in Prime or if you have memberships at other major stores that offer significant discounts. If you’re looking for deals, you can check out Walmart, Target and Best Buy, and scroll through our favorite picks below.

    Best alternative tech deals

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  • 60+ October Prime Day Deals You Can Still Score for $25 or Less

    Amazon’s Prime Big Deal Days sale kicked off yesterday with huge discounts on big-ticket items like TVs and laptops. But there are also tons of budget-friendly deals on tech items, home goods, everyday essentials and more that you can buy for just $25 or less. You don’t need to go around looking for them on Amazon’s website. We’ve rounded up some of the very best under-$25 deals available to help you make the most of these affordable offers.

    We’ll continue adding to the list below as the deals continue to roll in, so keep checking back for more bargain buys. And if you’re looking for something even cheaper, head to our roundup of the best October Prime Day deals under $10. Our guide to the best October Prime Day deals under $50 is also up and running for those with a little extra room in the budget.

    October Prime Day deals under $25 on tech

    October Prime Day deals under $25 on everyday essentials

    October Prime Day deals under $25 on home and garden

    October Prime Day deals under $25 on health and fitness

    October Prime Day deals under $25 on beauty

  • Save on Computer Monitors From Dell, LG and Others

    Save on Computer Monitors From Dell, LG and Others

    Finding the best monitor for you and your desk setup is important. If you’re spending hours at your desk, you’ll need a monitor that’s easy on your eyes and has ergonomic features. If you’re gaming then you’ll want a display that can keep up with the action. Right now, Dell, LG and others are all offering great deals and steals on some of their most popular monitors, so if you’re in the market for something new, now is a great time to buy.

    Looking for more discounts? CNET has the best deals from Dell, LG, Best Buy and many others, along with promo code offers — all updated and verified daily.

    Welcome to CNET Coupons, the first stop before you shop, featuring a multitude of deals and discounts from top online retailers. Simply head over to our coupon page and type in your favorite store or brands to find all the deals available for the week.

  • Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 Review: Big, Fast Display For Video Creators and Gamers

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 Review: Big, Fast Display For Video Creators and Gamers

    The Dell Inspiron 16 Plus remains just out of OLED range. I reviewed the previous version earlier this year and bemoaned the fact that it didn’t provide an OLED or any other display options to upgrade. It’s otherwise a competent content-creation laptop, with a powerful CPU and Nvidia GeForce RTX graphics. And content creators are the very people who would benefit the most from the superior contrast and colors you get from an OLED display.

    As with previous versions, Dell offers a lone display option for the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630. Despite featuring fewer pixels than the previous model’s panel, the new display is an improvement. While it dropped a notch in resolution from 3K to 2.5K, the refresh rate has doubled to 120Hz. That’s an important number for anyone thinking about putting its discrete graphics muscle toward gaming. Video creators will also appreciate the smoother motion of the 120Hz panel.

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 on a desk in an office

    Inside, the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 received the requisite upgrades to a 13th-gen Intel Core i7 CPU and Nvidia RTX 40-series graphics. The system offers capable application and graphics performance but is only worthy of consideration when Dell’s revolving discounts land on it. I don’t like this configuration at its full price of $1,650, but at a sale price of $1,300, I’m less grouchy about missing out on a better display.

    Configuration as tested

    Price as reviewed $1,300
    Display size/resolution 16-inch 2,560×1,600 IPS LCD
    CPU 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-13700H
    Memory 16GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM
    Graphics 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060
    Storage 1TB NVMe SSD
    Networking Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax), Bluetooth
    Operating system Windows 11 Home

    Dell offers a dizzying array of configurations for the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630. Pricing starts at $1,200 for a system with a Core i7-13620H processor, 16GB of RAM, integrated Intel graphics and a 1TB SSD. At the time of this writing, however, the base model has a Core i7-13700H CPU and is only $800 with a massive $500 discount. Our test model is $350 off, which brings its price down to $1,300 and features the Core i7-13700H chip and RTX 4060 graphics, which is the highest GPU offered. All models feature the same display, a 16-inch LCD with a 2,560×1,600-pixel resolution that’s rated for 300 nits of brightness. The Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 starts at 899 in the UK and AU$1,999 in Australia.

    With its 13th-gen Core i7 H-series CPU and RTX 4060 graphics, our Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 test system had a strong showing in lab testing. It was clearly a step or two ahead of the previous Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 based on a 12th-gen Core i7 H-series chip and RTX 3050 Ti graphics on both our application and 3D graphics tests. Its scores were also competitive with other large-screen, content-creation laptops. It took a step back, however, in battery life. The previous 7620 model lasted over an hour longer on our battery drain test, despite having the same six-cell, 86-watt-hour battery. I attribute the shorter runtime to the faster 120Hz display, which consumes more battery resources than a 60Hz panel.

    Under heavy load, our test system did get warm to the touch but never reached a point where it was uncomfortably hot or led to performance degradation. It also operated in near silence, its cooling fans spinning at a whisper.

    Now in silver

    Dell made a cosmetic shift with the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630, and not for the better to my eyes. Gone is the lovely, subtle green chassis of the previous model. In its place is a pedestrian brushed-silver enclosure. It looks no different in the sea of silver laptops available, although the keys are a muted gray instead of the traditional black. On the whole, there is nothing captivating about the design.

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 turned around to show the silver lid behind the display

    The Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 is also a tad heavier than its predecessor. It weighs 4.8 pounds, which is a few ounces more than the 4.6-pound Inspiron 16 Plus 7620. In the middle of the last two Inspiron 16 Pluses is the 16-inch MacBook Pro at 4.7 pounds. At nearly 5 pounds, these large-screen laptops are better choices for lugging around the house than for daily treks to a coffee shop or the office. Not all large-screen laptops are poor choices in terms of portability. The 16-inch Acer Swift Edge weighs just 2.6 pounds, and the 17-inch LG Gram 17 weighs only 3.2 pounds.

    The Plus model means you are getting an all-aluminum chassis. With “non-Plus” Inspirons, you are dealing with plastic shells or a mix of plastic and metal, where the body is made of plastic with perhaps an aluminum lid. With the large expanse that the keyboard deck covers, some flex in the middle beneath the keyboard detracts from the typing experience.

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 keyboard and touchpad

    The keys felt springy with shallow travel; I was immediately comfortable typing on the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630, partly because of the lively keys and also because Dell omits a number pad. The keyboard is centered below the display instead of shifted left to accommodate a numpad, so the keys are right where you expect them to be. And there are no shortened keys that might have you hitting the wrong one for days or weeks before your fingers adjust to the placement and size.

    The touchpad design has been tweaked, but it still has too firm a click response. The previous model had an invisible border at the top of the touchpad, but the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630’s has the traditional framing of four borders — one on each side. Given the wide wrist rest below the display, I feel the touchpad could be bigger. A 16-inch, 16:10 display is a large swathe across which to move a cursor with an undersized touchpad.

    Swifter display

    The 16-inch, 16:10 provides a large canvas on which to work or be entertained. Its 2.5K resolution (2,560×1,600 pixels) is down from the previous model’s 3K resolution (3,072×1,920 pixels). Still, the 2.5K resolution suffices for the 16-inch panel; text looks crisp and deeply black as opposed to the fuzzy, gray letters you can get on a 16-inch FHD panel.

    While this year’s model forces you to sacrifice in the area of screen resolution, it makes up for it in refresh rate, doubling the standard 60Hz rate to 120Hz for smoother motion for videos and games. You can also enable a dynamic refresh rate to run a smoother 120Hz when needed and 60Hz at other times to conserve battery resources.

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 viewed from straight on to see its 16-inch display

    The higher refresh rate is the only positive for content creators. Otherwise, the display is decidedly average. It’s rated for a ho-hum 300 nits and lacks HDR support. I measured the display’s brightness with a lux meter, and it tested at a peak brightness of 380 nits. But the display’s overall performance is still disappointing.

    The webcam hits on two items I like to see: a 1080p resolution and a physical privacy shutter. It produced a crisp, properly exposed image with accurate colors and skin tones. It lacks IR capability for facial recognition logins, but a fingerprint sensor is built into the power button for easy and secure logins.

    Dell outfits the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 with four speakers producing fuller sound than the typical stereo set. The low end is lacking, but there’s enough oomph for the sound to fill a small room. For watching shows and movies and YouTube they were fine — dialogue was clear, and sound effects were natural. The lack of bass response, however, limits music playback.

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 ports and vents

    With a large vent on either side, the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 looks a bit like a gaming laptop. In front of these large vents are three ports. On the left side, you’ll find a USB-C Thunderbolt 4, a USB-A and an HDMI port. On the right is a second USB-A port alongside a combo audio jack and microSD card slot. I’d like to trade one of the USB-A ports for a second USB-C port, but since the lone Thunderbolt 4 port isn’t needed for charging — the laptop uses a barrel connector — I’m more accepting of having only a single Thunderbolt 4 connection. That said, I have no need for a second USB-A port.

    One note on the microSD card slot: it’s only on the RTX 4060-based configuration. Oddly, the other models with integrated graphics or lower-end RTX graphics feature a full-sized SD card slot.

    Listen, I don’t expect to get both a strong midrange RTX GPU and a large OLED display for our test system’s $1,650 price, but I’d argue getting both items for, say, $2,000 is a better value than getting one or the other for $1,650. And what’s frustrating is that Dell offers RTX graphics with the Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 but no OLED option and then also has the Inspiron 16 two-in-one that offers an OLED option but no RTX graphics. I want to be able to smoosh the two together and come away with a 16-inch content-creation laptop that would rival the Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra, our current pick for content creators in need of a large-screen Windows laptop.

    Geekbench 5 (multicore)

    Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) 15,009Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 12,639Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra 12,558Dell XPS 17 9730 12,355Lenovo Legion Pro 5 12,340Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 11,875Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 9,471
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Cinebench R23 (multicore)

    Lenovo Legion Pro 5 18,067Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 17,167Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra 15,965Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 15,045Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) 14,803Dell XPS 17 9730 13,948Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 11,223
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    3DMark Wild Life Extreme Unlimited

    Lenovo Legion Pro 5 23,711Dell XPS 17 9730 17,740Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 17,717Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 15,620Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) 12,989Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra 12,853Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 10,965
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Guardians of the Galaxy (High @ 1920 x 1080)

    Lenovo Legion Pro 5 157Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 144Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra 131Dell XPS 17 9730 122Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 111Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 64
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Shadow of the Tomb Raider (Highest @ 1920 x 1080)

    Lenovo Legion Pro 5 178Dell XPS 17 9730 121Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 109Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra 105Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 83Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 60
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Online streaming battery drain test

    Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) 1,474Dell XPS 17 9730 714Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 677Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra 634Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 608Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 478Lenovo Legion Pro 5 227
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    System configurations

    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7630 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-13700H; 16GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 graphics; 1TB SSD
    Dell Inspiron 16 Plus 7620 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-12700H; 16GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050Ti graphics; 512GB SSD
    Dell XPS 17 9730 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-13700H; 32GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 16GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics; 1TB SSD
    Lenovo Legion Pro 5 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 3.6GHz AMD Ryzen 7 7745HX with Radeon Graphics; 16GB DDR5 5,600MHz; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics; 1TB SSD
    Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio 2 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.9GHz Intel Core i7-13700H; 64GB DDR5 5,200MHz RAM; 8GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 graphics; 1TB SSD
    Samsung Galaxy Book 3 Ultra Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-13700H 16GB DDR5 6,000MHz RAM; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 4050 graphics; 1TB SSD
    Apple MacBook Pro (16-inch, 2023) Apple MacOS Ventura 13.2; Apple M2 Pro (12 CPU cores, 19 GPU cores); 32GB LPDDR5 RAM; 1TB SSD

  • October Amazon Prime Day 2023: Sign Up for Prime and Save Big on Today’s Deals

    October Amazon Prime Day 2023: Sign Up for Prime and Save Big on Today’s Deals

    Amazon’s Prime Big Deal Days sale, essentially an October Prime Day event, started Tuesday and ends Wednesday. It arrives just in time to kick-start your holiday shopping. These events usually bring some of the online retailer’s best prices of the year, and right now you can take advantage of all of the best deals.

    If you’re looking to save big ahead of the holidays, now might be a good time to take the plunge on a Prime membership, which you’ll need to get these deals. A standard Prime membership will run you $139 a year, or $15 a month. If you’re a student, you can get a Prime membership for $69 a year, or $8 a month, and if you qualify for government assistance programs the monthly subscription price drops to $7.

    You won’t just get free shipping with your Prime membership. With your subscription you’ll also receive access to Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Music Prime, discounts at Whole Foods and on Amazon Alexa products, and even more perks.

    Prime Days usually mean big deals on tech (think phones, tablets and smartwatches) and home products (like air fryers and espresso machines). So, if you think a Prime membership is right for you, read on and we’ll walk you through how to sign up. If you’re still on the fence, no worries: You can sign up for a 30-day free trial.

    For more, Amazon’s layaway program could be an ace up your sleeve for big-ticket items.

    How to sign up for Amazon Prime

    To take advantage of Prime Day deals, you’ll want to be a Prime member. To sign up, all you’ll need to do is:

    1. Navigate to www.amazon.com/amazonprime.

    2. Tap the rectangular orange box that says Start Your 30-Day Trial.

    3. If you already have an Amazon account, sign in. If you don’t have an Amazon account, tap Create Account. You will be prompted to enter your name, email address and password. Amazon will require you to verify your email address with a one-time password.

    4. Select your payment method — which can be a credit card, debit card, gift card or whatever other payment method you choose — and add that information. Then click Continue.

    And that’s it. You’re now officially a Prime subscriber.

    How to cancel your Prime membership

    If you decide a Prime membership is no longer right for you, or if you want to end your free trial, it’s pretty easy to cancel.

    1. Sign into your Amazon account, and tap the Account & Lists dropdown menu.

    2. Then select Prime Membership in the Your Account column.

    3. Next, under the Manage membership heading, tap Update, cancel and more.

    4. Then, simply select End Membership.

    If you don’t want to follow these steps, you can also go to this support page and jump directly to the End Membership button. Either way, after selecting End Membership you will no longer be subscribed to Amazon Prime.

  • Best October Prime Day Apple Deals Available Today

    The first day of Amazon’s October Prime Day has come to an end, but the deals on Apple products are still available. If you’re not sure what you’re after, we’ve done all the hunting so that you don’t have to. Check out our list below to save on some of Apple’s biggest and best releases. Prime Day is one of the best days to shop for Apple accessories and devices.

    Whether it’s a new Apple Watch Ultra 2 or a more affordable Apple Watch Series 8 that you’re in the market for, we’ve found the best prices around. And not just on wearables, either. There are plenty of AirPods deals available, not to mention iPhone accessories and more.

    These deals are going to come and go as the October Prime Day event continues on so keep checking back and we’ll make sure you won’t miss out on the best Apple Prime Day deals around.

    Best October Prime Day Mac deals

    More Prime deals on Macs

    Best October Prime Day Apple Watch deals

    More Prime Deals on Apple Watches

    Best October Prime Day iPad deals

    More Prime Deals on iPads

    Best October Prime Day AirPods deals

    More Prime Day Deals on AirPods

    Best October Prime Day accessory deals

    More Prime Deals on accessories