ASUS ROG has been pushing deeper into gaming audio, and its latest product is aimed at users who have outgrown the tiny monitor speakers that make a $2,000 gaming rig sound like a clock radio with a graphics card.
The new ASUS ROG Gjallar Gaming Soundbar is a compact 2.1.2-channel Dolby Atmos desktop soundbar with a wireless subwoofer, HDMI 2.1 eARC, 4K/120Hz passthrough, USB-C, optical, AUX, Bluetooth 5.3, built-in beamforming microphones, RGB lighting, and a separate audio control hub.
That is not a casual checklist. That is ASUS trying to take a serious swing at Razer, Creative, and OXS in a category that has been waiting for someone to connect the PC desk, console setup, and small-room home theater without requiring 14 cables and a degree in rather advanced self-loathing.
The name comes from Gjallarhorn, the mythological horn from Norse mythology, and ASUS says Gjallar is pronounced “ga-lar.” Thankfully, you do not have to pronounce it correctly to use it, although someone in the comments will absolutely correct you anyway. Our friends at Schiit Audio would like a word.
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ASUS ROG Gjallar: A Real Dolby Atmos Gaming Soundbar
The ROG Gjallar uses a 2.1.2-channel configuration with four 50 mm full-range drivers, two 27 mm tweeters, up-firing height channels, and a 6.5-inch wireless subwoofer. ASUS lists the frequency response at 50 Hz to 20 kHz, which means the subwoofer is doing important work here, especially for explosions, engine noise, and cinematic effects.
The soundbar itself measures 607 x 92 x 82 mm (23.9 x 3.6 x 3.2 inches) and weighs 2.4 kg (5.3 pounds), while the wireless subwoofer measures 125 x 315 x 356 mm (4.9 x 12.4 x 14.0 inches) and weighs 5.7 kg (12.6 pounds).
That driver layout matters because most so-called gaming speakers are either glorified desktop toys with RGB lighting or headset alternatives pretending to be home theater products. The Gjallar is trying to occupy a more useful middle ground: compact enough to live under a monitor, but with enough hardware to handle games, movies, music, and console use without immediately reaching for headphones.
HDMI 2.1 Is the Big Deal
The most important feature may not be Dolby Atmos. It is HDMI 2.1.
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The ROG Gjallar includes HDMI IN and HDMI OUT/eARC, and ASUS says it supports up to 4K@120Hz video passthrough. That gives the soundbar real relevance for PS5, Xbox Series X, gaming PCs, Blu-ray players, and streaming devices. HDMI OUT/eARC can connect to a TV’s HDMI eARC/ARC port, while HDMI IN can receive audio and video from external sources. That is a major advantage over many desktop gaming soundbars that remain locked into USB, Bluetooth, or basic analog connectivity.
The Razer Leviathan V2 Pro remains the obvious competitor because it offers head-tracking AI, adaptive beamforming, THX Spatial Audio, and a dedicated subwoofer. It is a clever product and still one of the most interesting PC soundbars available. But the Razer is more PC-focused, with USB, Bluetooth 5.0, and a 3.5 mm headset jack, while ASUS is clearly going after gamers who want a more flexible audio hub for PC, console, and TV/display use.
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Control Hub, Microphones and RGB Because Of Course
The ROG Gjallar also includes a separate audio control hub with an LCD display. Users can adjust volume, EQ, playback, input selection, microphone settings, and RGB lighting. The control hub also houses the built-in Acoustic Echo Cancellation microphones, which are designed to filter out game audio, teammate voices, PC fan noise, and system hum for clearer voice pickup.
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That could be useful for gamers who do not want to wear a headset all night, although we would want to test how well those microphones handle a real desk environment. “AI beamforming” sounds wonderful in a press release; a mechanical keyboard, loud GPU fans, and mom yelling from upstairs that your dinner is ready might have something to say how that works in reality.
Gear Link support allows users to adjust EQ, lighting, microphone settings, and other features through a web-based PC tool or mobile app. ASUS also includes Aura RGB lighting with up to 16.8 million colors and four preset effects, because apparently no gaming product is allowed to leave the factory without a light show worthy of a small electronic nightclub in Zurich.
The Competition
The ROG Gjallar enters a small but increasingly relevant category. The Razer Leviathan V2 Pro is still the headline rival, especially for PC gamers who want head-tracking beamforming and THX Spatial Audio. Creative’s Sound Blaster Katana SE and Katana V2/V2X remain important alternatives, particularly for gamers who want strong desktop audio without moving into full home theater territory. The OXS Thunder Pro 5.1.2 is another direct competitor because it also supports Dolby Atmos and 4K/120Hz passthrough, although it is positioned as a more elaborate 5.1.2 desktop gaming sound system.
The SteelSeries Arena 9 ($679.99) is another product worth mentioning, but it is not really the same thing. It is a 5.1 desktop speaker system with a 6.5-inch subwoofer and wireless rear speakers, which gives it a different footprint and setup requirement. Great if you want actual surround speakers around your desk. Less great if your workspace already looks like Best Buy exploded during inventory week.
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Traditional soundbars from Samsung, LG, Sonos, Bose, Sony, and JBL are also part of the broader conversation, but the Gjallar is not really trying to replace a flagship living room system. It is aimed at gamers who want something more capable than basic desktop speakers, more open than headphones, and more flexible than a USB-only gaming bar.
ASUS ROG Gjallar Gaming Soundbar Specs:
Price: TBA
Speaker Configuration: 2.1.2-channel Dolby Atmos gaming soundbar with wireless subwoofer
Drivers:
4 x 50 mm full-range drivers
2 x 27 mm tweeters
1 x 165 mm / 6.5-inch wireless subwoofer driver
Subwoofer Power: 65 watts
Frequency Response: 50 Hz to 20 kHz
Wireless Subwoofer Connection: 5 GHz
Connectivity:
HDMI 2.1 input
HDMI 2.1 output with eARC
USB-C
Optical digital input
3.5 mm AUX input
Bluetooth 5.3
2 x USB-A hub ports
Video Passthrough: Up to 4K/120Hz via HDMI 2.1
Microphones: Built-in beamforming microphones with Acoustic Echo Cancellation
Microphone Frequency Response: 100 Hz to 10 kHz
Microphone Sensitivity: -37 ± 3 dB
Control Hub: Included audio control hub with LCD display
Control Hub Functions: Volume, EQ, playback, input selection, microphone settings, and RGB lighting
Software: Gear Link and Gear Link Mobile
Lighting: ASUS Aura RGB with up to 16.8 million colors and four preset effects
Supported Platforms: Windows PC, Mac, PS5, PS4, Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch, mobile devices, and Bluetooth devices
Soundbar Dimensions: 607 x 92 x 82 mm / 23.9 x 3.6 x 3.2 inches
Subwoofer Dimensions: 125 x 315 x 356 mm / 4.9 x 12.4 x 14.0 inches
Control Hub Dimensions: 90 x 82 x 37 mm / 3.5 x 3.2 x 1.5 inches
Soundbar Weight: 2.4 kg / 5.3 lbs
Subwoofer Weight: 5.7 kg / 12.6 lbs
Control Hub Weight: 0.191 kg / 0.42 lbs
Included Accessories:
2 AC cables
Power adapter
USB cable
Pair of soundbar feet
Quick start guide
Warranty booklet
The Bottom Line
The ASUS ROG Gjallar Gaming Soundbar is not just another RGB speaker bar for people who think “immersive audio” means bass and blinking lights. The combination of 2.1.2 Dolby Atmos, HDMI 2.1 eARC, 4K/120Hz passthrough, a 6.5-inch wireless subwoofer, built-in beamforming microphones, USB-C, optical, AUX, Bluetooth 5.3, and a proper control hub makes it one of the more complete desktop gaming soundbars announced so far.
It is best suited for PC and console gamers who want a cleaner, more cinematic setup without wearing a headset every night. It is not a replacement for a serious AVR-based speaker system or a full-sized Dolby Atmos soundbar with rear channels, but for a desk, bedroom, dorm, or compact gaming room, ASUS may have something worth watching.
Pricing & Availability
ASUS has not listed confirmed U.S. pricing at the time of writing. That matters because the ROG Gjallar’s success will depend heavily on where it lands. The Razer Leviathan V2 Pro starts at $499.99, while the OXS Thunder Pro launched at $599, which gives ASUS a fairly obvious price window if it wants to be taken seriously.
The end of the biggest World Cup ever is almost here. Following 100 matches, there are just four teams left and two more games to play.
The tournament has been hosted by three countries: Mexico, Canada, and the US. All of those host countries are now out of the running. The final teams are France, Spain, England, and Argentina. Those teams will play two more games: one to determine who gets third place, and a final match to decide the winner and the runner-up.
Going into this year’s World Cup, FIFA anticipated that it would be the most watched tournament in the organization’s history. As the tournament moved into the quarterfinals earlier this month, FIFA noted that more than more than 6.2 million people had attended matches in person, “while millions more follow the action across digital platforms, broadcast, and fan experiences in host cities and around the world.”
You can find the full schedule, which defaults to your local time zone, on the FIFA website.
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Here’s how to watch the final games.
Final
The World Cup final game will be Spain vs. Argentina at 3 pm EDT on Sunday, July 19, in the New York/New Jersey Stadium.
The game will also feature the first-ever Super Bowl–style halftime show in World Cup history, with performances from Justin Bieber, Madonna, Shakira, BTS, and Gustavo Dudamel. As the name implies, that will likely land right in the middle of the broadcast, so aim to watch somewhere around 4 pm EDT on July 19.
Third Place Playoff
Third place is decided by a match between the two losing teams of the semifinal matches. France and England will face off for the bronze title at 5 pm EDT on Saturday, July 18, in the Miami Stadium in Miami, Florida.
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Where to Stream
If you have satellite TV or cable service, you can watch the final kickoffs live on TV via Fox Sports in the US. The games are also available on the FoxOne streaming service for $20 per month.
FIFA has partnered with YouTube as its “preferred partner” for streaming the games. You’ll need YouTube TV’s sports plan, which is currently $55 per month. Other paid options include Fubo ($46 per month) and Hulu’s live sports option ($90 per month).
This World Cup has been huge, competition-wise, as it is the first to include 48 teams in the tournament instead of the 32 for past World Cups. Given the increased number of teams, the structure for how the competition played out was different from past World Cups. Countries were first sorted into groups (labeled with letters A–L) and played out games in the First Stage within those groups.
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Winners of those matches went on to duke it out in the stage called the Round of 32, then got whittled down in a Round of 16. After that, the winners moved on to the quarterfinals, which wrapped up last weekend. The semifinals concluded with Argentina beating England on Wednesday, July 15,
Smoke from devastatingwildfires in Canada is blanketing a large swath of the Midwest and Northeast this week, causing cities across the region to issue air quality warnings.
The extreme levels of smoke mean that even able-bodied adults would be wise to take some precautions to protect their health. The increasing severity of wildfires across the continent—driven in part by climate change—means that even places where blazes aren’t burning will still suffer the impact.
More than 100 fires are burning out of control across Canada as of Wednesday, with hundreds more being monitored or battled. The smoke has drifted south and east, turning skies hazy from Minnesota to New York. Particularly dramatic images have emerged from Toronto, where commuters went to work on Wednesday morning under orange skies. The region is also dealing with a heat wave, with temperatures well above 90 degrees Fahrenheit in many areas and an even higher heat index.
On Wednesday evening, the air quality index in New York City topped out at 180, putting the city’s air squarely in the “unhealthy” category as defined by the US Environmental Protection Agency. Other places were even worse off, with Duluth, Minnesota, seeing its AQI top out above 500. (Anything over 301 is labeled “hazardous” and considered unsafe for everyone.) Smoky conditions are expected to worsen in parts of the Northeast US on Thursday, including New York.
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The wildfire smoke blanketing the area contains microscopic particles of matter known as PM2.5s—shorthand for particles that are smaller than 2.5 micrometers, or 30 times smaller than the width of a human hair.
Exposure to PM2.5s can trigger or worsen a number of medical conditions, especially in vulnerable populations. Nicholas Nassikas, a pulmonologist and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, says that he would tell his patients with preexisting conditions, like asthma or lung disease, to limit their time outside. Children “have a faster breathing rate—they just breathe more,” says Nassikas, while the elderly, who often have compounding conditions and may live in less well ventilated homes and senior centers, are also at risk.
Jennifer Stowell, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Health, says that even healthy adults may want to take precautions on days when the air quality index goes over 100: “At the very least, it is important to limit your time outdoors to reduce your overall exposure.” she says. If you have to be outside for long periods, she recommends wearing an N95 mask. Stowell, who is currently in Boston, where the AQI hit 110 on Wednesday, says she wasn’t planning on attending outdoors events until the evening.
Dan Westervelt, an associate professor of climate physics at Columbia University, is similarly cautious. “I’m going to make sure my kids are staying indoors today,” he says. “I won’t be doing any physical exertion, like running, today or tomorrow.”
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Climate change is driving up temperatures. That’s making wildfire season longer and creating hotter, drier conditions that lead to more explosive fires. A study published last year estimated that wildfire smoke already causes 40,000 deaths per year in the US, and could more than double to 70,000 deaths per year by 2050 if warming continues. As bad-air-quality days from wildfire smoke get more common, the research on prolonged exposure to that smoke is still developing. A similar blast of smoke from Canadian wildfires hit the Northeast in 2023.
“Exposure to high levels of air pollution over the course of a lifetime or a long period of time is demonstrated numerous times in research to lead to premature mortality,” says Westervelt. “You can chop off some months of your life expectancy if you are living in conditions where you’re very frequently exposed to high levels of air pollution.”
The headphone company Skullcandy has a reputation for lackluster audio quality. For the past year or so, it’s been on a mission to improve that reputation.
Its efforts started with a Bose partnership in 2025 and the release of the Skullcandy Method 360 ANC, a $130 pair of wireless earbuds that have surprisingly decent audio quality and noise cancellation for the money.
Next on the upgrade list are Skullcandy’s notorious Crusher headphones. These wireless cans have been around for more than a decade, and they are notable for letting users crank up the bass vibrations using a physical thumb wheel on the ear cup. Roll that wheel all the way, and the Crushers rumble and vibrate against your skull, thanks to a special driver design.
The company announced a new pair, the Crusher 1080 ANC, during an event in New York City on Wednesday evening. They’re on sale now.
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The headphones emulate the feel of a thumping subwoofer—as if you’re in the front row of a concert—while usually sacrificing the mids and highs. But that’s what Skullcandy wants to correct with the new headphones, once again by heavily relying on Bose’s audio expertise.
The new Crusher headphones are the next step in Skullcandy’s brand-reinvention efforts.
Courtesy of Skullcandy
Skullcandy likes to tout that its first product was born on a ski chairlift in 2003 near its headquarters in Park City, Utah. Ever since, the company has specifically catered to the board sports community.
“From snowboarders for snowboarders,” Brian Garofalow, Skullcandy CEO, tells WIRED. Even though private equity firm Mill Road Capital now owns the company, Skullcandy is still seen more as a lifestyle brand than an audio company with serious audiophile chops.
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“We’ve been really, really great at community building and nurturing and helping push cultures forward—not the greatest at the engineering part of innovation with products,” Garofalow says. “So we’ve really been honing our chops in the last few years.”
Garofalow says it has been an engineering challenge to pair the company’s proprietary Crusher bass-boosting technology with noise canceling. He says the team worked with Bose’s engineers to decouple Crusher from the rest of the acoustic tuning profile so that the low end sits on its own. Theoretically, this means that when you crank up the bass effect with the dial, the “mids and highs are still way, way sharp, versus in the past, when they tended to get muddy,” Garofalow says.
The Sound by Bose program adds three other improvements to Skullcandy’s new Crusher headphones: Bose’s noise-canceling chops, which will supposedly work well even if you have the bass cranked to 11; Bose’s spatial audio profile for a surround-sound-like feel; and a six-microphone array for call quality that Bose has come to be known for.
Major publishers Hachette, Cengage, Elsevier, and author Scott Turow have sued Google, accusing it of using millions of copyrighted books to train Gemini without permission or payment, in “one of the most prolific infringements of copyrighted materials in history.” The Guardian reports: The publishers argue that Google repurposed books that had been supplied for limited services such as Google Books, Google Play Books and Google Scholar. Those services allowed Google to use the works in specific ways — for example, to display searchable snippets or sell ebooks — but not, the lawsuit claims, to copy them for training commercial AI products. “Desperate to maintain its online dominance, Google abandoned its early motto of ‘Don’t be evil’ and engaged in one of the most prolific infringements of copyrighted materials in history,” the suit states (PDF).
According to the complaint, the tech company made copies of copyrighted books to train Gemini without permission or payment, despite internal discussions acknowledging the legal risks. The filing claims Google flagged internally that it could face “$10Bs-$100Bs in potential fines” for using texts provided by publishers for Google Play Books. The publishers say Google’s actions are harming authors and the wider publishing industry, arguing that AI-generated content could negatively impact book sales.
It notes that, for example, Gemini could generate “a 100-page murder mystery set in a quiet seaside town filled with secrets, that substitutes for an original copyrighted murder mystery on which Gemini trained” in 20 minutes for 39 cents. “No publisher or author can compete with that.” The lawsuit names a number of specific books that the publishers allege were among the copyrighted works used without permission, including NK Jemisin’s The Fifth Season, and Lemony Snicket’s Who Could That Be at This Hour?
Apple has introduced 36-month carrier financing for cellular iPads purchased directly from the Apple Store. The option is available through AT&T and Verizon to existing customers who add a new line of service.
Until now, the main financing option offered directly by Apple was Apple Card Monthly Installments, which divides the cost of an iPad across 12 months. The new carrier plans stretch those payments across three years and cover the standard iPad, iPad mini, iPad Air, and iPad Pro.
The higher prices are easier to swallow
The new option arrives only weeks after Apple raised prices across its iPad lineup, and the sticker shock appears to have become significant enough for the company to offer buyers another way to pay. A cellular 11-inch iPad Pro now starts at $1,399. Apple Card financing works out to $116.58 per month for one year, while AT&T or Verizon financing reduces the hardware payment to roughly $39 per month for three years (via 9to5Mac).
iPad Pro
The installment will appear on the customer’s carrier bill alongside the cost of cellular service. Buyers get the iPad without paying the full amount upfront, Apple completes the sale, and the carrier gains a new line from an existing subscriber. There is one important catch. Anyone who cancels the line or switches carriers before the iPad is paid off will need to clear the remaining device balance. Once the balance is settled and the carrier’s other requirements are met, the iPad can be unlocked.
Why iPads have become more expensive
Apple has linked its recent price increases to the rising cost of RAM and storage. AI companies are buying huge quantities of memory for data centers, leaving less supply available for consumer electronics. Prices are unlikely to return to normal soon. Until memory costs ease, Apple may lean more heavily on carrier financing for future products that include cellular connectivity.
Retail foundation leader Dave Treadwell takes over as senior leader and 19-year vet Dave Brown departs for pastures unknown
Dave Brown, a 19-year veteran of AWS and member of its S-team leadership cabal, is leaving Amazon for parts undisclosed.
It’s hard to overstate Dave’s impact on AWS; the few times I’ve met him, it was very clear that there was nothing I could trot out in the realm of “arcane EC2 trivia” that he didn’t go orders of magnitude deeper on with zero forewarning.
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This is a titanic loss for AWS, because that’s roughly how deep Dave routinely dove. He’ll be handing the reins over to fellow S-team member Dave Treadwell, currently the head of Amazon Retail’s “eCommerce Foundation” (itself an upscale term for “bargain basement”).
Brown probably isn’t going to be a direct competitor (though he’s definitionally going to some Amazon competitor short of his next move being “philanthropy”), unless the two-week notice period is simply a bunch of Amazonian goons beating the tar out of him in a dark room around the clock until August.
But the interesting part to me is that suddenly Dave Treadwell has an enviable job.
Think about it for a second: Amazon retail was, for a time, the largest AWS customer — and certainly one of the most complicated. If I think I have beef about AWS-isms, there’s no doubt that “Tread,” as he’s apparently called, has mountains to my molehill of complaints.
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So if I can slip into his role for a second, here would be my to-do list if I were coming from an Amazon Retail background and suddenly had EC2 bequeathed to me to run:
GPU capacity acquisition: Special people get special allocation rules, balanced between Capacity Blocks, war-clicking past InsufficientInstanceCapacity screens, and having to know a guy. Amazon has an entire internal project to solve this for its own teams. If I’m Tread, take a page from retail and smash Spot Fleet dynamics into a proper capacity marketplace. “Only 2 p6-b300.48xlarge left in stock. Ships from and sold by GPUZ4LOLZ (91% positive feedback).”
Savings plans / Reserved Instances archaeology: These sometimes-but-often-not overlapping discount vehicles were clearly designed by folks who never had to explain them to a CFO with anger management issues. Treadwell has a golden opportunity here to roll out dynamic raw pricing: on-demand rates that themselves fluctuate hourly like a third-party listing on discontinued and incompatible printer ink, replacing traditional commitment vehicles with a “Subscribe & Save 5%” toggle on vCPUs.
Instance type proliferation: As of this writing, there are 1,354 EC2 instance types available in us-east-1 alone, and the console picker assumes that you already know the correct answer. Riiiight. There’s a solution here! “Customers who launched m7i.large also launched …” combined with sponsored placement by EC2 sub-departments means the top result is now suddenly the instance family that AWS overbought. Is this the best instance for the customer? Who gives a rat’s ass; it’s what’s best for Amazon, a north star that Amazon Retail has been chasing for years.
SageMaker is someone’s empire-building project: There are over 35 SageMaker products, or features, or whatever the distinction is supposed to be at AWS. Tread should leave this alone, and introduce the amazing source of truth that is Customer Reviews. “1 star. Not as described. Arrived as Jupyter notebook; what the hell do I do with it?” They can repurpose their fake review detection to take down fraudulent reviews from other SageMaker sub-teams.
Quota request supplication: You know the drill; beg, plead, and wait for the privilege to give AWS more money. The fix here is almost too easy; y’know who doesn’t have to wait for quota increases? That’s right: Amazon Prime members.
That’s the easy punch list if it were me. But I’m me, and Tread is not. I’m sure he’s got planned more treats with far greater nuance and customer hostility; we’ll know for sure that he’s settled in when the EC2 section of our AWS bills starts including ads – and when Josh Pigford’s excellent Knockoff extension starts working in the EC2 console. ®
Campers across the country yearn for their next trip out into the wilds just beyond the edges of their tidy communities. Entering into the forest or pitching a tent on a beach for an overnight stay brings about a powerful, almost magical atmosphere. Even if fleeting, these are moments of adventure, great relaxation, and bonding with those closest to you. Camping requires some gear to make the most of the trip, though. There are plenty of camping-specific brands out there to consider, as well as some valuable options from your favorite power tool brands, like Makita’s Outdoor Adventure lineup. Harbor Freight is yet another name to add to this list of solid sources for quality camping essentials.
Harbor Freight’s store shelves are loaded with stuff that could make you upcoming camping trip a little easier. The store is known for its tools, workspace storage options, and automotive equipment, but plenty of camping gear is also prominently featured in its catalog. These great options are featured at reasonable prices, with high praise in the form of collective buyer ratings, and plenty of functionality where you need it the most.
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Thunderbolt Solar 7 Watt Solar Panel Kit
The Thunderbolt Solar 7 Watt Solar Panel Kit is listed at a clearance price of $30, making it a solid bargain for a small power support system to keep your phone and other similar devices charged. It’s one of six solar panel options currently offered by the brand, providing just a glimpse of the wider Thunderbolt Solar catalog. But it could be incredibly useful when space is of the essence. This model is a 13.4-inch square that weighs just over 2.5 pounds. This makes it relatively easy to stuff into a duffel bag or hiking rucksack to carry along with you in an effort to maintain GPS devices, communication tools, and more. The kit also features a set of adapters for use in a range of configurations, including with the classic car cigarette lighter outlet.
The panel can be used for road trips, as well. It can maintain 12V batteries on RV’s and other similar recreational vehicles like boats or ATVs. While away from reliable plug-in power, carrying a piece of equipment like this helps maintain your batteries and their connection to the outside world, even when you’re planning a lengthy or particularly remote voyage out into the wilderness.
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Bauer 20V Compact Radio with Bluetooth
Camping in silence can be a valuable way to connect with loved ones and the nature that surrounds you, but the value of that quiet only extends so far. When sitting around in the evening or even during a hike through wilderness, portable music devices can help lift spirits and get the fun started. There are lots of options to support streaming or other audio playback functions, but one that can pull double duty is the $40 Bauer 20V Compact Radio with Bluetooth. It’s a heavy duty jobsite radio that weighs only 1.5 pounds and features squat overall dimensions. The tool is easy to throw in a camping pack after you’ve finished working on jobs around the house, and using it in its “native” context.
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The radio offers AM and FM station tuning as well as the ability to stream from your device. It operates with an integrated Bluetooth function that allows you to stream from up to 40 feet away and it also utilizes an auxiliary jack to connect mobile media devices that still feature this element. When paired with a relatively small 3.0Ah Bauer battery it delivers up to 30 hours of continuous playback and also includes added features like a digital clock and a USB power outlet that allows you to charge phones and other devices while on the go.
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Foldable Camping Table
Harbor Freight’s Foldable Camping Table comes in either blue or green and folds down into two pieces. It also comes with a portable carrying case for easy travel and storage. Harbor Freight carries a few different outdoor lifestyle products in this same vein, but this particular gadget features an interesting pop-up action that can be assembled or packed down and ready to cart away in just seconds. It features a 30-inch diameter canvas tabletop with four built in cup holders. There’s a lower shelf built into the unit, and the whole ordeal is set on a rugged steel frame for durability in even challenging outdoor conditions.
The table is priced at $25, making it an inexpensive option to add a bit of home comfort to your next outdoor pursuit. It weighs 5.3 pounds and its polyester build makes offers water resistance, which si always nice. Surprisingly, perhaps, the canvas table has the ability to support up to 50 pounds on its top, giving it the ability to operate in a wide range of use cases while you’re out on an adventure.
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Gordon 20-in-1 Multi-Tool
Most campers will bring along a small knife, machete, or axe, but something offering a little broader configurability is sometimes the better option, given all the little tasks that can pop up around the campsite. The Gordon 20-in-1 Multi-Tool is an inexpensive everyday carry solution that features 20 different tools built into its slim frame. It compares directly to a $130 Leatherman model but retails for just $40. In fact, this model is among some that we’ve highlighted in the past as a multi-tool that can outshine Leatherman in both price and feature inclusions.
The multi-tool is built from stainless steel in both its frame and blades, offering good durability even in harsh conditions like backwoods camping. The tool features one handed blade deployment to make engaging the tool while performing other tasks easier. It also features integrated locking elements to keep each of the individual tools secured when not in use for a safer overall experience. Naturally, the multi-tool has been rated highly by hundreds of buyers, and it’s easy to see why. It weighs less than 1 pound and delivers coverage across a kaleidoscope of potential usage needs. It includes scissors, a diamond coated file, multiple cutting blades, and of course a pliers head with multi-area gripping capability and a cutting edge.
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10×50 Wide-Angle Binoculars
Harbor Freight’s 10×50 Wide-Angle Binoculars are another option that compares favorably to alternative brands in price and functionality, delivering a wide angle view with 10-by-50 magnification power that offers a range of view of 1,000 yards for just $20. The binoculars come with foldable rubber eye cups and an adjustable focus to make the wide angle panoramic view crystal clear at whatever distance you’re seeking to explore.
The binoculars also come with a case and a neck strap (as well as lens caps and a cleaning cloth), and the product is made with a rubber coated aluminum frame to provide a lightweight build and good durability metrics that can support a drop or other mishaps that may frequently occur while on a hike. Binoculars are a basic piece of gear that hikers and campers will want to bring into their kit. But plenty of options on the market easily run up into the triple digits in price. These are an inexpensive and highly rated viewing option to amplify your adventures without breaking the bank.
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Braun 2,000 Lumen Rechargeable Waterproof LED Lantern/Battery Bank
The Braun 2,000 Lumen Rechargeable Waterproof LED Lantern/Battery Bank’s dual-purpose mandate supports a broad set of camping needs. Weighing just over 1.5 pounds, the tool offers 110 square feet of illumination range when deployed with its soft shade cover to project light in a target direction alongside three brightness modes and the ability to produce 360-degree total coverage. In total, the lantern offers five individual, core functionalities. It features a red light for visibility without disturbing others around the campsite, a spotlight on the bottom of the tool, an SOS mode and an 8,000 mAh battery bank that’s more than capable of charging up phones and other electronic devices via USB cord.
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The tool is listed for $48 and features all the hallmarks of an excellent outdoor illumination unit that buyers may be seeking for their next adventure. It’s waterproof with an IPX7 rating and features a floating construction that allows it to linger on the surface if it ends up dunked in a river or lake. There’s a storage compartment built into the tool too, and it offers a folding handle alongside a mounting hook for even more versatility on the go or while setting up your campsite for the evening.
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Bauer 20V Zero to 160 PSI Inflator
A small inflator can be a big help to those looking bring some of the comforts of home along when they decide to rough it. You don’t necessarily have to sleep on the hard ground while camping, and having the ability to quickly blow up small air mattresses to place inside your tent makes a world of difference during the layout process. The Bauer 20V Zero to 160 PSI Inflator is available for $30 at its regular price or $20 until the end of July for Inside Track Club members. The tool itself weighs 1.73 pounds and features a 19-inch hose with a minuscule overall body size. It delivers a maximum pressure of 160 PSI, more than enough to inflate everything from tires on a car to air mattresses and sports balls to support the leisure activities you’re seeking.
The tool features a pressure gauge that’s intuitive and easy to read, alongside an ergonomic pistol grip handle that offers plenty of comfort and control over the tool’s high pressure output for fast inflation. It includes onboard storage for nozzle and needle accessories so that you can keep all of your inflation gear in one place. The tool is also built with included strap slots to allow the unit to be attached to a bag or belt for easy carrying as you hike to your destination or pack up your gear to change locations or head home.
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2-in-1 Rechargeable Camping Lantern and Bug Zapper
The 2-in-1 Rechargeable Camping Lantern and Bug Zapper can be a real lifesaver when camping in the summer. Any time you spend a night in the wilderness you’ll need at least some form of lighting to find your way around after the Sun sets. But during certain seasons it’s also critically important to protect yourself against mosquitoes and other bugs that flock to arms and legs. Getting chewed up the local wildlife is a surefire way to put a damper on your camping trip, so many people bring bug spray, mosquito-beating gadgets, and other support elements to help minimize this risk. This tool adds yet another line of defense, featuring an integrated bug zapper that will keep nuisance insects away from you.
The gizmo is priced at $15 and offers 20-plus hours of runtime while recharging via a micro-USB cable. This means that if you’ve brought along a battery pack to keep your gear powered up it’s entirely possible to recharge this tool during the day and continue using it for multiple nights in a row without issue. The light features three brightness settings up to 200 lumens at its peak and it features a built in stand as well as a hook to let it hang from the top of your tent or some other piece of gear in your setup.
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Icon 800 Lumen Magnetic Handheld Foldable Work Light
The Icon 800 Lumen Magnetic Handheld Foldable Work Light is a great option for mechanics looking for something to help illuminate tight spaces and other areas under the hood, but it could be equally valuable for people heading away into the darkness of the nighttime wilderness. The tool is very small, so it’ll fit in a pocket easily. It features an 800-lumen maximum output, with a bar light that can shine plenty of brightness throughout your camping area. The light is priced at $40 and has been rated by over 3,800 buyers, lending it plenty of credence as a quality choice. It even comes in four colorways — a black option and three more vibrant choices.
The tool can be used as a handheld work light, but its magnetic base can also stick onto ferrous metals that you may have available. This might not be as useful on a camping trip as it would be in a workshop, but the added functionality will let you stick it to certain components that may be in your pack for some extra support when the moment calls for hands-free lighting. The slim build allows it to be primarily useful as a handheld tool, but you might be surprised at how often the ability to stick the light to something can come up even when outside and away from your typical shop equipment.
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Methodology
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Each of these products have been rated by at least 300 Harbor Freight buyers. All feature average ratings at or above 4.3 stars alongside favorable prices that bring together good camping equipment with cost effective sentiments to make the outdoor pursuit more approachable for any kind of enthusiast.
A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Wednesday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Strands hints and answers for Wednesday, July 15 (game #864).
Strands is the NYT’s latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it’s great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.
Want more word-based fun? Then check out my NYT Connections today and Quordle today pages for hints and answers for those games, and Marc’s Wordle today page for the original viral word game.
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SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Strands today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
Latest Videos From
NYT Strands today (game #865) – hint #1 – today’s theme
What is the theme of today’s NYT Strands?
• Today’s NYT Strands theme is… Rerouting…
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NYT Strands today (game #865) – hint #2 – clue words
Play any of these words to unlock the in-game hints system.
NOISE
CHANCE
VERSE
TRUANT
GIVE
SKATE
NYT Strands today (game #865) – hint #3 – spangram letters
How many letters are in today’s spangram?
• Spangram has 12 letters
NYT Strands today (game #865) – hint #4 – spangram position
What are two sides of the board that today’s spangram touches?
• First side: left, 4th row
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• Last side: left, 8th row
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.
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NYT Strands today (game #865) – the answers
(Image credit: New York Times)
The answers to today’s Strands, game #865, are…
TACK
ZIGZAG
TURN
VEER
DEVIATE
PIVOT
SWERVE
SPANGRAM: CHANGECOURSE
My rating: Hard
My score: 1 hint
Rerouting… is a word I used to see a lot when I used a sat nav in my car, so this is exactly the theme I was expecting — but I still struggled over it.
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It’s not until you play Strands that you realize how many different ways there are to say the same thing, in this case a change of direction.
I took a hint to get going, but TACK didn’t help much. Then, I connected the two Zs for ZIGZAG and finally got motoring.
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Yesterday’s NYT Strands answers (Wednesday, July 15, game #864)
QUIXOTIC
IDEALISTIC
ROMANTIC
IMPRACTICAL
SPANGRAM: PIEINTHESKY
What is NYT Strands?
Strands is the NYT’s not-so-new-any-more word game, following Wordle and Connections. It’s now a fully fledged member of the NYT’s games stable that has been running for a year and which can be played on the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
I’ve got a full guide to how to play NYT Strands, complete with tips for solving it, so check that out if you’re struggling to beat it each day.
A new Quordle puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Wednesday’s puzzle instead then click here: Quordle hints and answers for Wednesday, July 15 (game #1633).
Quordle was one of the original Wordle alternatives and is still going strong now more than 1,500 games later. It offers a genuine challenge, though, so read on if you need some Quordle hints today — or scroll down further for the answers.
Enjoy playing word games? You can also check out my NYT Connections today and NYT Strands today pages for hints and answers for those puzzles, while Marc’s Wordle today column covers the original viral word game.
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SPOILER WARNING: Information about Quordle today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
Latest Videos From
Quordle today (game #1634) — hint #1 — Vowels
How many different vowels are in Quordle today?
• The number of different vowels in Quordle today is 4*.
* Note that by vowel we mean the five standard vowels (A, E, I, O, U), not Y (which is sometimes counted as a vowel too).
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Quordle today (game #1634) — hint #2 — repeated letters
Do any of today’s Quordle answers contain repeated letters?
• The number of Quordle answers containing a repeated letter today is 2.
Quordle today (game #1634) — hint #3 — uncommon letters
Do the letters Q, Z, X or J appear in Quordle today?
• No. None of Q, Z, X or J appear among today’s Quordle answers.
One-two punch offers a glimpse of how low-precision AI can complement high-precision simulations
How AI will change the way scientific computing is done remains an open question. One relies on ultra-precise double-precision mathematics, while the other is perfectly happy working with 4 bits.
On the surface, the two are diametrically opposed, two extremes of a spectrum we call high-performance computing (HPC) — and yes, whether you like it or not, AI is HPC.
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However, the latest AI offering from Cadence Design Systems, one of the biggest names in industrial HPC, offers a glimpse of how high- and low-precision compute could not just coexist, but work together to solve bigger and more complex problems faster and with fewer resources.
Announced on Wednesday, Cadence’s AuraStack is an agentic AI system built to assist electrical engineers to design and test printed circuit boards (PCBs), or conduct advanced packaging design and testing — two tasks that have historically relied on highly precise simulations.
AI is definitely a big piece of what Cadence has built; however the company isn’t replacing these tools with hallucination-prone AI models. Instead, AuraStack is a bit like Anthropic’s Claude Code or OpenAI’s Codex, but rather than writing, compiling, debugging, and running C or Rust in a sandbox, Cadence’s latest agent is designed to orchestrate its existing test and simulation suites.
“AI is amplifying the value of our engineering products and technologies,” Michael Jackson, CVP of Cadence’s system design and analysis division, told The Register.
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In other words, the AI model — we’re told AuraStack integrates with a wide range of open and proprietary models — functions as a natural language interface capable of planning and orchestrating complex multi-step circuit design and testing workflows that run at higher precision using CPUs, GPUs, and other accelerators.
“For example, if I’m going to check and fix the IR reliability, I need to identify the power management components. I need to create a simulation-ready power tree, and then I need to do the simulation, and then I need to provide feedback to the designer,” Jackson said.
Cadence’s existing product stack already automates many of these processes. The problem, Jackson explains, is that a PCB or package design often requires completing thousands of tasks throughout its development. “Sixty-five percent of an engineer’s day is spent navigating and dealing with a lot of these tasks,” he said.
By orchestrating that scutwork, Jackson claims that AuraStack can deliver a 15x boost to productivity by letting the designer focus on design and engineering decisions rather than the individual tasks.
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These gains are enough that several large players in the electronics space, including Nvidia, have already signed up for the service.
Cadence isn’t just melding AI with HPC for chip design or advanced packaging. The engineering software provider has built similar agents for digital and analog chip design.
The idea of using low precision compute to run AI models that orchestrate more precise single- and double-precision physics simulations isn’t new. Nvidia is one of the biggest champions of this approach, which makes sense seeing as its GPUs aren’t limited to training and running AI models, even if that’s what most folks are buying them for these days.
Earlier this year, we explored how researchers at the Department of Energy’s Sandia National Laboratories used AI agents to develop and test new hypotheses. They described the system as a self-driving lab. However, those tests, while similar in concept to what Cadence is doing with AuraStack, didn’t use LLMs and instead used more mature architectures like variational auto-encoders.
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But given the success of code assistants, it’s not hard to imagine agent harnesses similar to AuraStack being used to automate lab equipment, perform simulations, and then iterate on the results, enabling scientists to continue their research even after they’ve nodded off for the night. ®
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