Author: Admin

  • Save Big on Contact Lenses From Warby Parker, ContactsDirect and More

    Glasses are great but sometimes, they’re not ideal. On those days when you want to get a little fancy or if you’d just prefer to ditch the spectacles, contacts are usually a convenient option. And right now, you can stock up on as many boxes as you need at a discounted rate. Several top-tier brands are currently offering sales and discounts on prescription lenses — including Warby Parker, EZContacts and ContactsDirect, all of which are on our list of best online contacts vendors. So, what are you waiting for?

    Looking for more discounts? CNET has the best promo code offers from Warby Parker, EZ Contacts, ContactsDirect, and more. All deals are 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.

  • Qualcomm’s ‘Holy Grail’: Generative AI Is Coming to Phones Soon

    Generative AI like ChatGPT and Midjourney have dazzled imaginations and disrupted industries, but their debut has mostly been limited to browser windows on desktop computers. Next year, you’ll be able to make use of generative AI on the go once premium phones launch with Qualcomm’s top-tier chips inside.

    Phones have used AI for years to touch up photos and improve autocorrect, but generative AI tools could bring the next level of enhancements to the mobile experience. Qualcomm is building generative AI into its next generation of premium chips, which are set to debut at its annual Qualcomm Summit in Hawaii in late October.

    Summit attendees will get to experience firsthand what generative AI will bring to phones, but Qualcomm senior vice president of product management Ziad Asghar described to CNET why users should get excited for on-device AI. For one, having access to a user’s data — driving patterns, restaurant searches, photos and more — all in one place will make solutions generated by AI in your phone much more customized and helpful than general responses from cloud-based generative AI.

    “I think that’s going to be the holy grail,” Asghar said. “That’s the true promise that makes us really excited about where this technology can go.”

    There are other advantages to having generative AI on-device. Most importantly, queries and personal data searched are kept private and not relayed through a distant server. Using local AI is also faster than waiting for cloud computation, and it can work while traveling on airplanes or in other areas that lack cell service.

    But an on-device solution also makes business and efficiency sense. As machine learning models have gotten more complex (from hundreds of thousands of parameters to billions, Asghar said), it’s more expensive to run servers answering queries, as Qualcomm explained in a white paper published last month. Back in April, OpenAI was estimated to spend around $700,000 per day getting ChatGPT to answer prompts, and that cost prediction was based on the older GPT-3 model, not the newer GPT-4 that is more complex and likely to be costlier to maintain at scale. Instead of needing an entire server farm, Qualcomm’s solution is to have a device’s existing silicon brain do all the thinking needed — at no extra cost.

    “Running AI on your phone is effectively free — you paid for the computing power up front,” Techsponential analyst Avi Greengart told CNET over email.

    Greengart saw Qualcomm’s on-device generative AI in action when the chipmaker had it on display at Mobile World Congress in February, using a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2-powered Android phone to run the image generating software Stable Diffusion. Despite being an early demo, he found it “tremendously exciting.”

    Qualcomm Museum exhibits

    What on-device generative AI provides users

    Qualcomm has ideas for what people could do with phone-based generative AI, improving everything from productivity tasks to watching entertainment to creating content.

    As the Stable Diffusion demo showcased, on-device generative AI could allow people to tweak images on command, like asking it to change the background to put you in front of the Venice canals, Asghar said. Or they could have it generate a completely new image — but that’s just the beginning, as text and visual large learning models could work in succession to flow from an idea to a ready output.

    Using multiple models, Asghar said, a user could have their speech translated by automatic speech recognition into text that is then fed into an image generator. Take that a step further and have your phone render a person’s face, which uses generative AI to make realistic mouth movements and text-to-speech to speak back to you, and boom, you’ve got a generative AI-powered virtual assistant you can have full conversations with.

    This specific example could be powered in part by third-party AI, like Facebook parent company Meta’s recently launched large language model Llama 2 in partnership with Microsoft as well as Qualcomm.

    “[Llama 2] will allow customers, partners and developers to build use cases, such as intelligent virtual assistants, productivity applications, content creation tools, entertainment and more,” Qualcomm said in a press release at the time. “These new on-device AI experiences, powered by Snapdragon, can work in areas with no connectivity or even in airplane mode.”

    Inside Qualcomm HQ’s Appointment-Only Museum Filled With Retro Phones

    See all photos

    Qualcomm won’t limit these features to phones. At its upcoming summit, the company plans to announce generative AI solutions for PC and auto too. That personal assistant could help you with your to-do lists, schedule meetings and shoot off emails. If you’re stuck outside the office and need to give a presentation, Asghar said, the AI could generate a new background so it doesn’t look like you’re sitting in your car and bring up a slide deck (or even help present it).

    “For those of us who grew up watching Knight Rider, well, KITT is now going to be real,” Asghar said, referring to the TV show’s iconic smart car.

    Regardless of the platform, the core generative AI solution will exist on-device. It could help with office busywork, like automatically generating notes from a call and creating a five-slide deck summarizing its key points (“This is like Clippy, but on steroids, right?” Asghar said). Or it could fabricate digital worlds from scratch in AR and VR.

    Beyond fantasy worlds, generative AI could help blind people navigate the real world. Asghar described a situation where image-to-3D-image-to-text-to-speech model handoffs could use the phone’s camera to recognize when a user is at an intersection and inform them when to stop, as well as how many cars are coming from which directions.

    On the education front — perhaps using a webcam or a phone’s camera — generative AI could gauge how well students are absorbing a teaching lesson, perhaps by tracking their expressions and body language. And then the generative AI could tailor the material to each student’s strengths and weaknesses, Asghar theorized.

    These are all Qualcomm’s predictions, but third parties will have to decide how best to harness the technology to improve their own products and services. For phones, generative AI could have a real impact once it’s integrated with mobile apps for more customized gaming experiences, social media and content creation, Techsponential’s Greengart said.

    It’s hard to tell what that means for users until app makers have generative AI tech on hand to tinker and integrate into their apps. It’s easier to extrapolate what it could do based on how AI helps people right now. Roger Entner, analyst for Recon Analytics, predicts that generative AI will help fix flaws in suboptimal photos, generate filters for social media, and refine autocorrect — problems that exist right now.

    “Generative AI here creates a quality of use improvement that soon we will take for granted,” Entner told CNET over email.

    Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 Mobile Platform processors

    Generative AI is coming to premium phones first

    Current generative AI solutions rely on big server farms to answer queries at scale, but Qualcomm is confident that its on-device silicon can handle single-user needs. In Asghar’s labs, the company’s chips handled AI models with 7 billion parameters (aspects that evaluate data and change the tone or accuracy of its output), which is far below the 175 billion parameters of OpenAI’s GPT-3 model that powers ChatGPT, but should suit mobile searches.

    “We will actually be able to show that running on the device at the [Hawaii] summit,” Asghar said.

    The demo device will likely pack Qualcomm’s next top-tier chip, presumably the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 that will end up in next year’s premium Android phones. The demo device running Stable Diffusion at MWC 2023 used the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 announced at last year’s Snapdragon Summit in Hawaii.

    In an era of phones barely lasting through the day before needing to recharge, there’s also concern over whether summoning the generative AI genie throughout the day will drain your battery even faster. We’ll have to wait for real-world tests to see how phones implement and optimize the technology, but Asghar pointed out that the MWC 2023 demo was running queries for attendees all day and didn’t exhaust the battery or even warm to the touch. He believes Qualcomm’s silicon is uniquely capable, with generative AI running mostly on a Snapdragon chipset’s Hexagon processor and neural processing unit, with “very good power consumption.”

    “I think there is going to be concern for those who do not have dedicated pieces of hardware to do this processing,” Asghar said.

    Asghar believes that next year’s premium Android phones powered with Qualcomm’s silicon will be able to use generative AI. But it will take some time for that to trickle down to cheaper phones. Much like how on current phones AI assistance for cleaning up images, audio and video is best at the top of the lineup and gets less effective for cheaper phones, generative AI capabilities will be lesser (but still present) the further down you go in Qualcomm’s chip catalog.

    “Maybe you can do a 10-plus billion parameter model in the premium, and the tier below that might be lesser than that, if you’re below that then it might be lesser than that,” Asghar said. “So it will be a graceful degradation of those experiences, but they will extend into the other products as well.”

    As with 5G, Qualcomm may be first to a new technology with generative AI, but it won’t be the last. Apple has quietly been improving its on-device AI, with senior vice president of software Craig Federighi noting in a post-Worldwide Developers Conference chat that they swapped in a more powerful transformer language model to improve autocorrect. Apple has even reportedly been testing its own “Apple GPT” chatbot internally. The tech giant is said to be developing its own framework to create large language models in order to compete in the AI space, which has heated up since OpenAI released ChatGPT to the public late in 2022.

    Apple’s AI could enter the race against Google’s Bard AI and Microsoft’s Bing AI, both of which have had limited releases this year for public testing. Those follow the more traditional “intelligent chatbot” model of generative AI enhancing software, but it’s possible they’ll arrive on phones through apps or be accessed through a web browser. Both Google and Microsoft are already integrating generative AI into their productivity platforms, so users will likely see their efforts first in mobile versions of Google Docs or Microsoft Office.

    But for most phone owners, Qualcomm’s chip-based generative AI could be the first impactful use of a new technology. We’ll have to wait for the Snapdragon Summit to see how much our mobile experience may be changing as soon as next year.

  • Save $111 on This Ride-On Kids’ Electric Toyota Tacoma SUV and Make Their Day Today

    With the holidays coming up, it’s never too early to start shopping for gifts, especially if you’ve got kids. So now could be a good time to treat your little one to a Toyota Tacoma ride-on electric SUV with Walmart offering one for just $189.

    That price represents a $111 saving on the previous $300 asking price and you can even take advantage of free shipping as well. There’s only one color available, but thankfully it’s the best one. Walmart also offers a full 90-day return program so you can rest easy there, too.

    This Tacoma is suitable for kids between 3 and 6 years old, so long as they’re shorter than 48 inches and weigh less than 62 pounds. You don’t need to be worried about them driving off into the sunset either — this particular Tacoma comes with a handy remote control so that you can always take the wheel if you need to. (If only real Tacomas came with one of those.) Plus, it has a max speed of 2.2 mph, so you should be able to catch up.

    All kids love little electric cars and this one is particularly well equipped. The package comes with everything you need to get started and it includes storage in the back, a horn, mirrors, LED lights, an FM radio and an MP3 player so your kid can rock out while cruising the yard.

    If you’re looking for something a little more sporty, this awesome pink Lamborghini Aventador (top speed: 3 mph) is just $135, a savings of $65 right now. It even has scissor doors.

    These little EVs really could be the holiday gifts you’ve been waiting for, but be quick — Walmart hasn’t said when the deal will end and the lack of color options makes us wonder if stocks will be limited. Keep that in mind if you’re planning a purchase.

  • ‘Little Mermaid’ Remake Streaming on Disney Plus: Release Date and Time

    If you’ve waited to make Disney’s live-action Little Mermaid remake a part of your world, you’ll soon be able to catch the underwater tale on Disney Plus.

    This year’s The Little Mermaid reimagines the classic 1989 animated version and stars singer and actress Halle Bailey as Ariel; Javier Bardem as Ari’s perpetually stressed dad, King Triton; Jonah Hauer-King as dashing earth-dweller Prince Eric; and Melissa McCarthy as the scheming sea witch, Ursula.

    Also present for the fantasy and romance are Sebastian, Scuttle and Flounder, voiced by Daveed Diggs, Awkwafina and Jacob Tremblay. Lin-Manuel Miranda wrote lyrics for the movie’s soundtrack.

    The Little Mermaid made its theatrical premiere in May and will drift onto Disney Plus in September. Here’s more on exactly when you can watch the movie, plus how a VPN can add to your streaming experience.

    How to watch The Little Mermaid on Disney Plus

    You can watch the new version of The Little Mermaid starting Sept. 6 at 12:01 a.m. PT (3:01 a.m. ET). It’ll be available at that time in every country Disney Plus is available in, except for France and Turkey, which will get access to the movie at a later date, according to Disney.

    Disney Plus’ ad-based plan costs $8 per month and allows for streaming on up to four screens at once. The service’s ad-free plan that includes downloads costs $11 per month. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 recently became available on the platform.

    If you want to watch Halle Bailey in The Little Mermaid right now, you can buy the movie for $20 from places like Amazon and Vudu.

    How to watch The Little Mermaid from anywhere with a VPN

    Perhaps you’re traveling abroad and want to stream Disney Plus while away from home. With a VPN, you’re able to virtually change your location on your phone, tablet or laptop to get access to the movie from anywhere in the world. There are other good reasons to use a VPN for streaming too.

    A VPN is the best way to encrypt your traffic and stop your ISP from throttling your speeds. Using a VPN is also a great idea if you’re traveling and find yourself connected to a Wi-Fi network and want to add an extra layer of privacy for your devices and logins. Streaming TV can be a bit smoother with a reliable, quality VPN that’s passed our tests and security standards.

    You can use a VPN to stream content legally as long as VPNs are allowed in your country and you have a valid subscription to the streaming service you’re using. The US and Canada are among the countries where VPNs are legal, but we advise against streaming or downloading content on illegal torrent sites. We recommend ExpressVPN, but you may opt for another provider from our best list, such as Surfshark or NordVPN.

    Follow the VPN provider’s instructions for installation and choose a country where The Little Mermaid will be streaming on Disney Plus. Before you open the streaming app, make sure you’re connected to your VPN using your selected region. If you want to stream The Little Mermaid on more than one device, it’s possible you’ll need to configure each one to ensure you’re signed in. Go to settings and check your network connections to verify you’re logged in and connected to your VPN account. Now you’re ready to open Disney Plus to stream.

    If you run into issues with streaming, first make sure your VPN is up and running on its encrypted IP address. Double-check that you’ve followed installation instructions correctly and you’ve picked the right geographical area for viewing. If you still encounter connection problems, you may need to reboot your device. Close all apps and windows, restart your device and connect to your VPN first. Note that some streaming services have restrictions on VPN access.

  • iPhone 15 Pro Lineup Rumored to Include Gray and Blue Colors

    A new iPhone 15 rumor suggests the two premium phones, the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, will come in a pair of new signature colors: gray and blue.

    In addition to traditional black and silver, in most years, Apple changes out the more unique colors for its phones. Last year’s iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max came in gold and purple hues; this year’s premium handsets will come in “Titan Gray” and a dark blue, unnamed sources told 9to5Mac.

    The rumor also suggested that the higher-end phones will be offered in titanium (like the Apple Watch Ultra) instead of stainless steel.

    This follows another leak earlier this week suggesting what colors Apple’s cheaper iPhones could come in. An Apple leaker who goes by @URedditor on X (formerly Twitter) posted (formerly tweeted) that this year’s baseline iPhone 15 will come in a range of colors: pink (in a rose gold or blush gold hue), green, blue, yellow, black and possibly even orange. The leaker noted that “we should see at least some of these,” suggesting that several may not make the final list.

    Last year’s iPhone 14 came in five different colors at launch — midnight (black), starlight (silver), pastel purple, light blue and a special red hue for Project Red — with yellow arriving back in March this year.

    Apple hasn’t publicly announced when its iPhone event will be, but since its fall showcase typically lands in the middle or end of September, we’re likely only weeks away from all the products about to be revealed by the tech giant. A new range of iPhones will top the event, but we also expect the Apple Watch Series 9 and possibly new models in other product families, like iPads or AirPods.

  • iPhone 15 Camera Rumors: The Biggest Sensors Ever in an iPhone

    The iPhone 15 may be just weeks away, and we’ve already seen a host of exciting rumors about Apple’s next phone. From solid-state buttons to USB-C charging, the iPhone 15 series may get a wealth of upgrades. But I’m a professional photographer, so it’s the phones’ camera skills I most care about.

    The iPhone 14 Pro is already one of the most sophisticated camera phones money can buy, with a triple camera setup capable of taking shots you might easily mistake for photos taken on a pro-level camera.

    So what camera upgrades can we expect on the iPhone 15 series? Here’s what the rumors suggest. Keep in mind that all rumors should be taken with a pinch of salt, and we won’t know the details for certain until Apple reveals its next iPhones, presumably in September.

    New image sensors on the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus

    With the base iPhone 14 and 14 Plus, Apple didn’t really change the camera setup all that much compared to the iPhone 13 range. But a report from industry analyst Jeff Pu (via MacRumors) states that the sensors on the iPhone 15 base models will get a big upgrade. New 48-megapixel sensors will replace the 12-megapixel sensors seen on the standard iPhone 14, allowing for improved image quality and better digital zoom. Apple’s Pro models are the only iPhones that currently have 48-megapixel sensors.

    apple-iphone-14-pro-cnet-promo-3

    The report also says the phones will use a stacked CMOS sensor technology that can capture more light than previous designs. The more light captured by a sensor, the better images it can produce. It’s interesting to see Apple putting so much new tech inside its base models, rather than forcing keen photographers to opt solely for the Pro models.

    And while these sensors are expected to be physically larger than the base iPhone 14 models, they reportedly won’t be as large as the image sensors found in the iPhone 14 Pro.

    iPhone 15 Ultra could get a longer zoom

    Apple is also rumored to release an even more expensive version of the iPhone potentially called the iPhone 15 Ultra. Rumors from known Twitter tipster Tech_Reve suggests that this phone would feature a periscope zoom offering optical zoom levels up to 5 or 6x. That would be a huge step up over the 3x optical zoom currently available on the iPhone 14 Pro, and it could help Apple compete with rivals Samsung and Google.

    The Google Pixel 7 Pro features a 5x optical zoom lens, making it one of my favorite cameras found on a phone. Meanwhile, the Galaxy S23 Ultra packs a 10x optical zoom that allows for amazing quality close-up shots. I’d love to see Apple push the boundaries of zoom on its phones.

    an Android phone and an iPhone both flash

    The rumors also suggest that this zoom lens may even offer continuous zoom, enabling you to shift smoothly between regular and full zoom views, rather than choosing between 1x or 3x. These systems are rare on phones (the Sony Xperia 1 IV is one of the only phones that uses it) since they require extremely delicate, technical components.

    iPhone 15 Ultra might have the largest image sensor ever in an iPhone

    Meanwhile, prolific leakster IceUniverse predicts that the iPhone 15 Ultra (or Pro Max) will use a Sony IMX903 image sensor, which is reportedly 1/1.14 inches in size. That would make it the largest image sensor ever seen in an iPhone.

    The bigger a sensor is, the more light it can take in. And remember, more light means better-looking photos. Even the top-of-the-line iPhone 14 Pro’s camera sensor is only 1/1.28 inches, so if true, this sensor would be a big step up.

    iPhone 14 Plus

    What else to expect from the iPhone 15

    We won’t know if an iPhone Ultra truly exists until Apple announces its 2023 iPhone lineup. But otherwise, the iPhone 15 family is expected to get several upgrades. Such changes may include USB-C charging instead of Lightning (thanks largely to new laws in Europe), a new processor (likely to be called the A17 Bionic) and potentially updated titanium chassis.

    Apple is expected to announce its new iPhones in early to mid-September. Apple typically puts its products on sale within the following couple of weeks, but some rumors suggest the company is already facing delays. The Pro Max model may be delayed until October, as reports suggest Sony is struggling to meet demand for its camera sensors, according to an analyst speaking to 9to5Mac.

    As a photographer, I’m excited about the potential for the big camera sensor and the longer optical zoom. They’re both features I’ve had on my iPhone wish list for some time, but they’re also rumored features for the iPhone Ultra. And the Ultra may not even be unveiled this year and could instead be held back for a 2024 release, meaning I’ll have to wait longer for the iPhone camera I really want. Either way, I’ll be interested to see how Apple keeps photographers like me happy this September.

  • Asus ROG G15 2022 Review: A Solid Gaming Laptop for Less Than $1,000

    When thinking about buying a budget anything, the big question you need to ask is, “Where did they cut corners?”; followed by “Do I care which corners are lying on the floor?” A lot of models will cut memory down to 8GB; that’s not a tradeoff you really want to make. Other common manufacturer concessions are the screen, build quality and RGB lighting (for gaming laptops). In the case of the Asus ROG Strix G15, the chosen slashes are on the screen and webcam. For the latter, you’d probably be better off buying a standalone over any Asus would have offered at this laptop’s price, anyway. The screen’s pretty meh, though.

    Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022)

    Price as reviewed $1,000
    Display 15.6-inch 1,920 x 1,080 144Hz IPS
    CPU 3.2GHz AMD Ryzen 7 6800HS
    Memory 16GB DDR5-4800
    Graphics 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050
    Storage 512GB SSD
    Ports 2 x USB-C (1 x DP 1.4, PD) , 2 x USB-A 3.2, 1 x HDMI 2.0b, 1 x audio combo
    Networking Realtek Gaming 2.5GbE Ethernet, MediaTek Wi-Fi 6E MT7922, Bluetooth 5.3
    Operating system Microsoft Windows 11 Home 22H2
    Weight 4.6 lbs./2.1kg

    Those compromises allow Asus to barely squeeze the G15 under the $1,000 mark. Like many of its competitors, the line starts with a 512GB SSD and Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 (a last-generation entry-level graphics chip), in addition to a solid AMD Ryzen 7 6800HS processor and 16GB RAM. It’s not light at almost 5 pounds, but it’s relatively thin.

    If you do want to step up from this, it’s a relatively big step — up to around $1,200 for a better screen and more storage. Whether that’s worth another $200 is between you and your budget gods.

    The ROG Strix G15 open and angled to your right, with the RGB illumination on the keyboard and underglow, default ROG wallpaper on a pine green surface against a faded brick wall

    I hesitate to call the screen bad because, in the most basic sense, it does the job. It’s surprisingly bright (measured at 333 nits) and displays a picture. Somehow it’s got around 1,600:1 contrast (as tested), despite generally appearing washed out.

    But the color gamut is about 66% sRGB as tested, which is sad in 2023, and people have noticed if customer reviews are to be believed. In addition to having color uniformity issues, notably having a green cast on the left side, my evaluation unit had noticeable bleed from the edge lighting and visible brightness uniformity issues. (All measurements are performed using the most recent version of Portrait Display’s Calman Ultimate software using a Calibrite Display Plus HL. Read more about our monitor testing methodology.) This is not a system to buy for your creativity-on-a-budget needs.

    It specs as 144Hz refresh rate, but it doesn’t seem to have a pixel refresh speed to match — there’s a lot of motion blur. Whether or not that’s an issue for you depends on what games you like to play and how much you tend to notice. Of course, if you plan to connect an external monitor to the laptop, those problems may be moot, and the built-in screen should be fine for general productivity-type work.

    The rear connectors, two USB-C, one HDMI and one Ethernet

    The design is pretty nice, both aesthetically and functionally, and feels pretty well constructed despite having a lot of plastic. It uses a power brick — no USB-C charging, but that’s pretty typical for the money — but the connector is in the back where it won’t get in your way. Most of the connectors are on the back, with two USB-A on the left side: friendly for left-handers connecting a mouse or keyboard, but less great for righties.

    There’s per-key RGB lighting for the keyboard and underglow, and the keyboard isn’t bad. You’d never mistake it for a mechanical and the keys are a little flat and slippery, but it otherwise feels OK, and has different keycaps specifically for WASD.

    Asus squeezes as much performance out of the Ryzen CPU and RTX 3050 as it can; Asus usually does manage above-average performance with its gaming laptops. But you won’t be able to play some AAA games, or some games well, because the 3050 is relatively low power and only has 4GB of VRAM (which can bottleneck operations that use it, such as retrieving textures). Still, it can be pretty nimble for fast but lightweight 2D games, like Hades and Fortnite.

    And while it tested as having an above-average (for this class) seven-hour battery life, unplugged performance drops precipitously at those battery-saving settings: CPU performance dropped by almost half, which makes everything feel more sluggish.

    The Asus ROG Strix G15’s a pretty good choice if that’s your budget cutoff, and definitely a better buy than cheaper models with lesser graphics and 8GB RAM. But if you’re pickier you may not be able to get everything you want for that money.

    Performance

    Geekbench 5 (single core)

    Dell G16 7620 1,739Dell G15 5520 1,695Acer Nitro 5 (AN515-58) 1,627Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022) 1,524HP Victus 15 (2023) 1,484Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3 1,426
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Cinebench R23 (multicore)

    Dell G16 7620 17,942Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022) 14,096Dell G15 5520 13,694Acer Nitro 5 (AN515-58) 13,583Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3 10,192HP Victus 15 (2023) 9,718
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    3DMark Time Spy

    Dell G16 7620 9,326Acer Nitro 5 (AN515-58) 7,828Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3 5,607Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022) 5,566Dell G15 5520 5,520HP Victus 15 (2023) 3,654
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Guardians of the Galaxy (High @1920 x 1080)

    Dell G16 7620 123Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022) 103Dell G15 5520 84Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3 76Acer Nitro 5 (AN515-58) 71HP Victus 15 (2023) 61
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    Online video streaming battery drain test

    Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3 488Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022) 438HP Victus 15 (2023) 377Dell G15 5520 307Dell G16 7620 287Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58 277
    Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

    System configurations

    Acer Nitro 5 AN515-58 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-12500H; 16GB DDR4 3,200MHz RAM; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060; 512GB SSD
    Asus ROG Strix G15 (G513RC, 2022) Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 3.3GHz AMD Ryzen 7 6800HS; 16GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050; 512GB SSD
    Dell G15 5520 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-12500H; 8GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050; 256GB SSD
    Dell G16 7620 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-127000H; 16GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 6GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060; 512GB SSD
    HP Victus 15 (2023) Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 2GHz Intel Core i5-12450H; 8GB DDR4 3,200MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 1650; 512GB SSD
    Lenovo IdeaPad Gaming 3 Microsoft Windows 11 Home; 3.3GHz AMD Ryzen 5 6600H; 8GB DDR5 4,800MHz RAM; 4GB Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050; 256GB SSD

  • Don’t Get Caught Up in Apple Watch X Hype Before Series 9

    It can be hard for Apple Watch Series owners to know when is the right time to invest in an upgraded model. Year after year, Apple makes small improvements to the Series lineup — and older models hold up very well throughout the years.

    But as Apple is expected to reveal the Apple Watch Series 9 in just a few weeks, the second-guessing and concerns about buyer’s remorse are amped up with lots of buzz around what Apple might be working on for 2024 and the 10th anniversary of its wrist wearable: The Apple Watch X.

    The headliner feature of the X (pronounced “ten”) could be a form of blood pressure monitoring, as reported by Bloomberg. But it may not release as a tool that could replace a traditional measurement from a cuff — or could it?

    In this week’s episode of One More Thing, embedded above, I highlight the rumors and reported features coming to both the Series 9 and Series X watches — and why you don’t have to have stress if you want to upgrade now.

    The Series 9 is reported by Bloomberg to have an improved processor that could help boost battery life, and there’s buzz that a new pink color could be in the mix. (Apple is reportedly working on a blood glucose monitor for a future Apple Watch, but it’s not expected to be ready yet.)

    As for the buzz on Series X, the report mentions potential design tweaks: thinner casing, new microLED display for the screen and bands that could attach differently, possibly with magnets. It also is expected to have a sensor for pressure monitoring. It’s a feature Bloomberg reported Apple was working on for years now, and it’s been challenging to test. To get a sense of the current development of wrist-worn blood pressure monitoring, we can look to how other companies are tackling the tech.

    Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 5 can track blood pressure outside the US, but you need to calibrate it with an actual blood pressure monitor cuff first.

    The Omron HeartGuide, released in 2018, is a smartwatch that achieves a real measurement with an inflating cuff that pressurizes over the wrist. It received FDA clearance but costs a steep $500. CNET’s Scott Stein reviewed the Omron HeartGuide and found it to give measurements that matched up with the readings from his doctor. He said blood pressure monitoring could be the next big frontier for wearable tech, “but in its current form, it won’t be for everyone yet.”

    So can it be done without a cuff? Maybe. Valencell introduced a clip-on finger-based blood pressure measurement device at CES 2023. It looks a lot light a portable pulse oximetry device, and Stein demoed it at CES by using his middle figure for a blood pressure spot check on the show floor.

    The tech is still pretty tricky to get right, so it’s hard to say to what degree this tech could show up in a 2024 Apple Watch. I wouldn’t hold your breath for something that can replace a doctor visit from an Apple Watch. But when you tell me the Series 9 could include a better processor to squeeze out more battery life? Now that’s a feature people can get excited about now.

    But since nothing is official, we’ll have to wait to see what Apple actually unveils next month. Apple hasn’t given any clues yet, but it’s widely expected we’ll see the Series 9 the same day Apple reveals the iPhone 15 — and pundits are pointing to Sept. 12 as the day that could happen.

    Apple Watch Ultra Elevates Smartwatches to New Heights

    See all photos

  • DuckDuckGo: What to Know About Google Search’s Privacy-Focused Rival

    Online trackers can be annoying. You search for a product or click an advertisement once, and then ads seem to follow you to the ends of the internet, even across devices. Sometimes, you just want a little privacy in your browsing. Enter DuckDuckGo, a browser and search engine that pledges to keep your search activity anonymous and not track you online.

    There are other private browsers, such as Brave and the Mullvad Browser, that block other people from monitoring your online activity. But DuckDuckGo sees itself as a direct competitor to Google Search, complete with a mobile app and extensions for Chrome, Firefox, Safari and other browsers, as well as for Windows and Mac browsers in public beta.

    After major incidents like the Cambridge Analytica scandal, people have become more aware of how much personal information is available to tech companies and advertisers — and are opting out of being tracked when they can. While it doesn’t track users, DuckDuckGo’s app was downloaded more than 50 million times between July 2020 and June 2021 — more than all other years combined since its 2008 launch.

    Here’s what you need to know about DuckDuckGo and how it tries to keep your searches more secure.

    What is DuckDuckGo?

    DuckDuckGo is a search engine that’s available as both a mobile browser app and a desktop extension, each aimed at allowing you to browse the internet without companies gobbling up your personal data. It promises to keep your searches private, anonymous and offers built-in tracker blocking, so the sites you visit have a harder time collecting information about you.

    Read more: Best VPNs of 2023

    How does DuckDuckGo work?

    For starters, DuckDuckGo does not track searches made through its browser extension or mobile app. Other browsers, including Chrome, allow you to use private or incognito windows that don’t track your search history, but their default windows do. (That’s the basis of every “embarrassing search history” joke.) Instead of making you navigate to a different version of its app, DuckDuckGo never tracks your search history.

    Searches made through DuckDuckGo also automatically connect you to the encrypted versions of websites wherever possible, making it harder for anyone else to see what you’re looking at online. This is another scenario where both options (encrypted and unencrypted) exist on other search engines, but the default isn’t always the privacy-friendly option. DuckDuckGo saves you the extra steps of manually navigating to encrypted connections.

    DuckDuckGo was criticized in May 2022 when researchers discovered some Microsoft tracking scripts while using DuckDuckGo’s browsers. The presence of Microsoft trackers seemed to fly in the face of the search engine’s privacy promise, and DuckDuckGo’s founder and CEO clarified on Reddit that the company was “currently contractually restricted by Microsoft” from stopping Microsoft scripts from completely loading. This is because the company uses Microsoft’s Bing to power its search results. The company followed up in August, however, by announcing that it would further restrict Microsoft trackers in its browsers.

    However, DuckDuckGo remains ahead of other popular privacy options when it comes to blocking tracking data, and the company has clarified its app store descriptions to better clarify limitations in its privacy protections. DuckDuckGo had also previously disclosed its partnership with Microsoft, and its CEO said in the Reddit post that the company is working to get that restriction changed.

    DuckDuckGo also actively blocks external trackers from following you around online. For a more detailed explanation of DuckDuckGo’s privacy features, check out DuckDuckGo’s blog.

    DuckDuckGo search page

    How is DuckDuckGo different from Google Search? What about Incognito mode and private browsing?

    DuckDuckGo essentially takes the opposite approach compared to other big tech companies like Google and Facebook, which have traditionally made money by targeting ads based on your browsing history and personal data. While Google has said it’s going to stop this practice, the platform still collects a ton of data about you, including your location and search activity — yes, even in incognito mode.

    Incognito mode simply deletes information related to your browsing session from your computer: your history, cookies and any info you’ve entered into fields. Notably, it only does that after you end your session by closing out all your tabs. So if you leave your incognito tabs open for hours or days at a time, that information will still build up. And no matter what, Google can save your searches — and companies, internet service providers and governments can still track you across the internet, even when you’re using incognito mode.

    DuckDuckGo is different because it doesn’t store your browsing data at all, and it blocks trackers while you’re browsing.

    A blocked tracking notification on DuckDuckGo

    If it isn’t targeting ads, how does DuckDuckGo make money?

    DuckDuckGo still makes money from advertising — it just doesn’t use targeted ads. The search engine shows you ads based on the keywords you search for, which aren’t connected to your personal data like your browsing or purchase history. Essentially, you’ll only see ads for whatever you’re currently searching for, not the weird product your friend sent you a link to last week that you now can’t get away from.

    How can I use DuckDuckGo?

    On mobile devices, simply open your app store and search for “DuckDuckGo.” You’ll be able to download the DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser app and use it the same way you’d use Chrome or Safari. At the bottom center of your app, you’ll see a fire icon, which you can press at any time to close all your tabs and clear all personal data.

    On desktop, go to duckduckgo.com, where you’ll see a button to add DuckDuckGo to your browser. On Chrome, you’ll be directed to the Chrome webstore page to download the extension for free. On Safari, you’ll be instructed on how to set DuckDuckGo as your default search engine or to manually activate a search using DuckDuckGo.

    For more about online privacy, check out the five reasons to ditch Google for DuckDuckGo, what to know about DuckDuckGo’s free AI feature DuckAssist and how DuckDuckGo’s app tracking protection beta is available to Android users.

  • Best Gaming TV: Low Input Lag and High Picture Quality

    If you are in the market looking for a gaming TV, our best TVs for 2023 list is more than enough because most modern TVs are already perfectly suited for video games and offer excellent color, contrast, brightness and resolution. However, HDMI 2.1 is important for advanced gaming features that can improve your experience, such as 120Hz and variable refresh rates. These gaming TVs are especially nice if you’ve managed to get your hands on a next-gen console like the Xbox Series X or PlayStation 5. There are also some TVs that come with a preset gaming mode, which reduces input lag and keeps your image crisp.

    How quickly you react while gaming depends on a feedback loop between your brain, your fingers, the game controller and the action you see on the TV screen. Delay at any point will diminish your performance and the thrilling immediacy of the playing experience. It takes mere milliseconds for a video signal to travel from your console through the HDMI input on your TV to display on the screen, but too many milliseconds can be noticeable to your brain — and they can be downright deadly to your in-game character. Those milliseconds of delay are known as input lag.

    Two TVs displaying the same video game side by side.

    Select TVs’ input lag with game mode on and off (milliseconds)

    TV Model On (4K HDR) Off (4K HDR) On (1080p) Off (1080p)
    LG OLED65C2 9.87 81.10 9.93 72.80
    Amazon Fire TV 4-Series 10.03 119.23 34.80 102.20
    Samsung QN55Q60B 10.10 68.63 10.00 87.80
    TCL 50S455 10.13 49.90 10.23 33.27
    Samsung QN65QN90B 10.50 74.30 10.73 95.00
    Vizio V550M 10.43 67.70 10.63 51.57
    Hisense 50A6H 10.53 119.27 10.80 43.23
    TCL 65R655 10.90 11.40 11.27 11.37
    Sony KD55X80K 11.67 132.63 11.93 132.77
    Vizio M65QXM-K03 15.10 127.37 15.33 60.10
    Hisense 65U8H 15.43 108.73 15.33 108.73
    Sony KD-65X95K 18.13 144.53 18.03 161.20

    The top 5 gaming TVs

    The following TVs, featured at the top of the page, deliver either the lowest lag I’ve measured among the TVs I’ve reviewed, the best picture quality for the money or a combination of both. Unless otherwise noted, prices shown below are for the 65-inch sizes.

    What else you need to know about input lag

    How to turn on game mode. In most cases, viewing in game mode isn’t automatic so you’ll have to turn it on manually, and sometimes the gaming monitor setting can be difficult to find. Many use a picture mode called “Game” while some, like Samsung and Vizio, let you apply game mode to any setting.

    Samsung Q9 TV

    Game mode makes a difference, except when it doesn’t. As you can see in the table above, many TVs cut lag substantially when you turn on game mode, but plenty don’t. In general, expensive TVs with elaborate video processing get more of a benefit when you engage game mode.

    Most TVs’ game modes are good enough for most gamers. No matter how twitchy you are, it’s going to be tough to tell the difference between 13 and 30 milliseconds of input lag. Many gamers won’t even be able to discern between having game mode on and off — it all depends on the game and your sensitivity to lag.

    Turning game mode on can hurt image quality (a little). TV makers’ menus often refer to reduced picture quality. Reduced picture quality is generally the result of turning off that video processing. In my experience, however, the differences in image quality are really subtle with console gaming, and worth the trade-off if you want to minimize lag for a great gaming experience.

    4K HDR gaming lag is different from 1080p. The display resolution you play at has an impact, and since new consoles prominently feature 4K HDR output for games, I started testing for 4K HDR lag in 2018. In general, the numbers are similar to the lag with standard 1080p resolution, but as you can see from the chart above, there are exceptions.

    Testing is an inexact science. I use a Leo Bodnar lag tester. Here’s how it works, and how I use it. You might see different lag test results from different review outlets, which may use Bodnar or another method.

    What’s the best TV for gaming, period?

    As I mentioned at the top, the best TV for gaming is one that has the best picture quality for viewing everything else, too. Games benefit from deep black levels, bright highlights and uniform screens just as much as movies and TV shows do.

    Yes, there are other factors, but they don’t apply to most gamers. If you play the same game constantly on your smart LED TV and never put anything else on the screen, and that game as a bright static element that stays in the same place on the screen (like a HUD or other status display), you might be at risk for OLED burn-in. But most gamers don’t have to worry about OLED burn-in.

    If the TV input where your console is connected is shared with other devices and you don’t want to remember to re-engage game mode all the time, an auto game-mode feature might be useful. And some cutting-edge PS5, Xbox Series X and PC gamers might appreciate 4K/120Hz input and variable refresh rate.

    Most gamers, however, will find that the best TV for gaming is the best TV, period.