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Best 4K TV 2026: Our favourite 4K TVs to buy right now

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TCL 98C7K and Sony Bravia 8

There are plenty of 4K TVs available to buy these days, but the ones we’ve hand-selected here truly stand out as the best of the best.

If you want to do real justice to 4K HDR, then buying a cheap TV won’t really offer the benefits you’re after. Instead you’ll need to buy one of the best 4K TVs on our list, which have all been selected for different budgets.

We’ve aimed to include at least one model from each major manufacturer. Every TV has been tested and reviewed by our expert team.

They’re assessed by how easy they are to assemble, how long it takes, how easy they are to use, the level of feature support they have in comparison to toher models. They are, of course, all put through their paces when it comes to picture and sound testing.

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The 4K TVs on our list are all £1,000 or above. If you’re looking for something a bit cheaper, we’d recommend taking a look at our best cheap TV list. If you’re looking for other options, our comprehensive best TV list will give you the answers.

Best 4K TV at a glance

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How we test

Every TV we review is put through the same set of tests to gauge its picture performance, usability, and smart features.

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Tests are carried out over several days and are done by eye but supported with technical measurements. Testing by eye involves an expert watching a wide range of material to understand and determine a TV’s performance in fields such as brightness, contrast, motion processing, colour handling and screen uniformity.

We’ll consider the design of the TV in terms of build quality, study the spec sheets and see if the TV’s connections are up to spec, as well as playing video and audio content to ensure that the set handles playback as it claims. We also take note whether a product’s compatible formats and features are in line with industry trends or not to gauge whether it’s relevant for you.

Comparison to other related and similarly priced products is also important, to see if it’s missing any vital features and whether it impresses as a whole. After all this, we’ll come to a judgement on how the TV performs as a whole.

LG OLED55G5

Best LG 4K TV

Trusted Score

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Pros

  • Superbly bright and colourful image

  • Outstanding upscaling

  • Easy to use interface

  • Top tier gaming spec

  • Five years of OS updates

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Cons

  • Sound quality is merely fine

  • Would be nice to have the new remote

The LG OLED55G5 (G5) is simply an outstanding 4K TV. Not only does it boast a vibrant and colourful picture, but its upscaling and processing capabilities are up there with the best. Plus, and unlike some other OLED panels, the LG G5 is impressively bright too.

If you opt for the 48-, 55- or 65-inch models then you can choose between the wall-mounted option or a version that comes with a stand. However, anything over 77-inch will only support wall-mounting, so keep that in mind.

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The LG interface is easy to use and can be controlled either via the included remote or through LG’s ThinQ smartphone app. There’s no lag and the amount of content doesn’t overwhelm like the Fire TV. However there’s no Freeview Play support and, instead, you’ll see LG Channels.

Gamers will appreciate ALLM which we tested had an input lag at 13ms in Standard and 9.3ms in Boost modes. In addition, the G5 can hit up to 165Hz in PC games, has VRR compatibility in AMD FreeSync Premium and includes the LG Game Optimizer for deeper customisation in game.

Sporting a Primary RGB Tandem panel, where the G5 really impresses is with its brightness, and can hit a peak of 4000 nits. That’s seriously impressive for an OLED TV.

We should note that although there’s no unsightly green tint on display here, which is an issue we’ve seen with other LG TVs, we have concluded that it can’t quite match a Mini LED panel. However, that’s not an issue with just the G5 as not many OLEDs can match a Mini LED’s performance.

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Another area where the G5 excels is with upscaling, as 1080p content could be mistaken for a true 4K image.

Generally sound quality is decent enough, with dialogue especially sounding clear and natural. However, lower frequencies bring out some buzzing and it can sometimes lack the energy of other TVs. With this in mind, it might be a good idea to invest in one of the best soundbars.

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Philips 65OLED+910

Best Philips 4K TV

Trusted Score

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Pros

  • Bright, colourful and detailed picture

  • Excellent sound for a TV

  • Wide HDR support

  • Ambilight

  • Aggressive price

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Cons

  • Missing iPlayer

  • Motion processing can be heavy-handed

  • Where’s IMAX Enhanced?

The Philips 65OLED+910 is a terrific OLED TV from the brand, with a bright and detailed picture, an affordable price tag and one of the best built-in sound systems we’ve tested.

The sound system is courtesy of Bowers & Wilkins, and sits at the bottom of the OLED910. It’s wrapped in a fabric that gives the TV a warm, lifestyle feel which is a nice touch too. However, most importantly, the sound is powerful with a spacious soundstage and clear dialogue. We don’t even think you need a soundbar with this one.

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Otherwise, the OLED910 is fitted with the same RGB Tandem screen used in the LG G5 and supports HDR10, HLG, HDR10+ Adaptive and Dolby Vision. While there’s no IMAX Enhanced support, there’s also Dolby Vision x Filmmaker Mode that combines the two.

Annoyingly, out of the box the OLED910 has Auto Film Picture Style enabled which makes motion seem more stuttery. You’ll have to dive into the settings to turn this off, but once you do the difference is unmistakable.

While the TV isn’t as bright as the likes of the LG G5 or Samsung S95F, where the Philips excels is with its contrast and level of detail. Even the divisive Crystal Clear picture mode looks excellent, although some films don’t seem to quite suit it as well as others.

Upscaling is solid too, although there are options that do a better job as refining details.

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Finally, the OLED910 runs on Google TV which, although is easy enough to use, does have a few apps missing – mainly BBC iPlayer. You can stream iPlayer via Google Cast but a built-in solution would be better.

Samsung QE65QN90F

Best Samsung 4K TV

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Trusted Score

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Pros

  • Matte Glare-Free screen

  • Incredibly bright HDR performance

  • Advanced gaming support

Cons

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  • Slight bloom and dimming delay

  • No Dolby Vision support

  • Sound system lacks bass

The arrival of the Samsung QN90F marks a big change in Samsung’s approach to its TV in that its OLEDs are as important if not more so than its LCD TVs.

It has an RRP of £2499 / $2499, which doesn’t make it the most affordable at launch and a little over the price point we have in mind for this list. But if you’re willing to wait, the price will eventually come in the months ahead.

Peak brightness is a scorching 2500 nits on 10% window, making this a suitable TV for those in need of a bright TV or watch in a room with lots of ambient light. There’s a big step up in AI processing from the QN90D’s 20 neural networks to the QN90F’s 128.

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This extra AI horsepower helps to upscale non-4K images in a clean, crisp, and natural way thanks to its ability to tell the difference between detail and noise.

With 4K HDR content, the TV pumps out some rich and vibrant colours, although our reviewer did find that its pictures can look overly vibrant at times. Regardless, the processing produces supreme levels of detail and sharpness. Local dimming is effective though we did note some blooming around bright objects.

The sound system is on the impressive side for a flatscreen TV. It offers power, clarity and space, confidently planting sounds across the screen and beyond its frame. Bass remains limited but that’s to be expected.

For gaming, all four HDMI inputs support 4K/144Hz with 165Hz available for PC gamers. There’s HDMI VRR as well as AMD FreeSync Premium Pro. We measured input lag to 9.2ms, which is lightning fast and the best on the market.

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The latest Tizen smart interface is better than previous ones offering a more polished, content-first approach. It’s quick to load and there’s customisation on the table in the form of re-ordering apps.

TCL 65C8K

Best TCL TV

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Trusted Score

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Pros

  • Spectacularly bright, colourful images

  • Excellent local dimming system

  • Great price for what’s on offer

Cons

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  • Only two HDMI inputs deliver full gaming features

  • Audio system sometimes loses focus

  • No support for Freely or Freeview Play

TCL has made a name for itself in offering high-spec TVs at lower prices, and the 65C8K is the perfect solution for those who want maximum value at affordable prices (for a 65-inch 4K TV).

The 65C8K has a huge levels of brightness at its disposal, and this leads into a colour performance that’s both vibrant and natural looking to the eye. And despite the near 4000 nits of brightness that this TV can summon, it does a very good job at producing solid black levels when it needs to.

Compared to Fire TV OS which tends to prioritise Prime Video content, Google TV does a good job of gathering content from all of your available subscriptions in one place. If you know exactly what you want to get to then you can use Google Assistant voice control to ask for it.

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Gamers will benefit from ow input lag (13.1ms), VRR support and refresh rates up to 165Hz to offer smooth, fast gameplay, especially if you’re a PC fan.

When it comes to the default sound profile of most TVs, we usually recommend that consumers pick up a soundbar, but this isn’t immediately the case with the TCL 65C8K.

With speakers that have had input from Bang & Olufsen, there’s an impressive degree of clarity and detail, although we would have liked a bit more power to the bass levels.

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Panasonic TV-65Z90B

Best Panasonic 4K TV

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Pros

  • Impressive picture quality

  • Excellent sound for a TV

  • Speedy gaming performance

  • Fast Fire TV interface

  • Quick to assemble

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Cons

  • Freely is strangely laggy

  • Lack of DTS audio is a shame

  • Slight black crush out of the box

If you’re the type of person who likes to keep a minimal, clutter-free entertainment unit in their living room then you’ll probably want to consider the Panasonic TV-65Z90B as your next upgrade. Panasonic’s stunning set is one of the best TVs we’ve reviewed in terms of offering a complete, all-in-one experience across visual and audio quality, not to mention gaming chops and smart features.

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Starting with the image quality, there’s nothing about Panasonic’s offering that’ll leave you wanting. The OLED panel brings true-to-earth colours to life, with a brightness that draws you in and a contrast that only heightens the darker elements of a scene through deep, true blacks. What’s even more impressive for a modern TV is that the sound quality is right up there with some of the best we’ve tested.

Typically as TVs have continued to slim down, the potency of built-in speakers has diminished in tandem, but the TV-65Z90B packs quite a punch on the audio front, right from the get-go. There’s a tangible weight to the bass that really helps to bring forth the expression of explosions and punches, but more importantly it’s the dialogue that comes across with outstanding clarity, so you won’t be struggling to hear what’s being said.

Keeping in tandem with the idea of having an all-in-one device without the need for accessories, the Panasonic TV-65Z90B utilises Amazon’s Fire TV operating system by default, providing users with quick access to all of the major streaming services, either via the remote which includes a wealth of dedicated streaming service buttons, or the Alexa voice assistant.

If you do have a console nearby however then you’re in for an absolute treat. With a 144Hz refresh rate alongside next to no input lag, you can kick back and enjoy a whirlwind of a gaming experience that brings more fast-paced titles to life. The Game Control Board also lets you toggle various visual and audio modes that are designed to make the most out of certain genres.

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Hisense 65U8Q

Best Hisense TV

Trusted Score

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Pros

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  • Bright, colourful HDR pictures

  • Solid sound system

  • Accessible smart interface

  • Impressive local dimming

  • Well built

Cons

  • Price has gone up

  • Average viewing angles

  • Audio ducking with AI mode

  • Default local dimming setting too bright

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We concluded that the Hisense 65U8Q is the best Hisense TV we’ve ever reviewed here, thanks to its picture quality, impressive brightness and a solid sound system that outranks the LG G5.

Available in three sizes (55-, 65- and 75-inches), the U8Q is quite a hefty TV and weighs a whopping 29.2kg and has a depth of 45mm. It’s certainly not the slimmest, but that shouldn’t be too much of an issue for many.

The U8Q runs on Hisense’s VIDAA interface in the UK which is a simple operating system and includes all the apps you’d expect from a smart TV. It’s not the most polished OS, but it’s easy enough to use.

All HDR formats are covered here, and the processing is performed by Hisense’s Hi-View Engine Pro which can optimise picture and sound in real-time.

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Although some blooming is noticeable, the U8Q is easily as bright as a Mini LED TV, and recorded 857 nits on 100% HDR window – that’s the brightest full screen output we’ve seen. In addition, the black level and bright highlights offer a Samsung-esque performance too.

When it comes to audio, while it doesn’t quite have the same punch and force as the Philips 65OLED809, there’s enough power that you don’t often get with a TV. While we’d still recommend pairing it with one of the best soundbars, it’s still a better overall performer than LG and Samsung TVs.

Gamers are covered here too, with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro VRR, 165Hz refresh rate for PC gamers, or 120Hz for console users, and ALLM which automatically puts the TV into its lowest latency – which we measured at 13.5ms.

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Sony Bravia 8

Best Sony 4K TV

Trusted Score

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Pros

  • Expressive and natural picture quality

  • Engaging Google TV smarts

  • Convenient design

  • Dolby and DTS support

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Cons

  • Less bright than the competition

  • Sounds tamer than previous models

The Sony Bravia 8 replaces the Sony A80L, but you could more or less say it’s the same TV.

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There are a few differences in terms of picture quality, with the Bravia 8 OLED reaching higher levels of peak brightness in some modes (Professional, Vivid) but less in others (Cinema Standard).

There are slight improvements over the A80L with a richer, bolder HDR performance that looks lovely when paired with colourful films and TV series. Motion processing is again excellent, smooth and with very few issues noted, while contrast is strong for an OLED TV although we did notice some crushing (loss) of detail with its black levels.

We’d love for Sony to push the brightness out more for this OLED, but for those who want a brighter HDR performance, the Bravia 8 II is set for launch in June 2025.

We’d recommend the Bravia 8 as one of the best Sony TVs for PS5 owners. It includes Auto Genre Picture mode that automatically switches the TV in and out of its game-ready state so the A80L isn’t stuck in game mode all the time; along with Auto HDR Tone Mapping enhances the HDR performance for best brightness and contrast.

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Dolby Vision Gaming is supported and the TV does also include 4K/120Hz and variable refresh rates (VRR) across two HDMI 2.1 inputs (one of which is shared with the eARC port). We measured input lag at 12.7ms, which is as good as the LG C4.

The sound quality is fine though not as dynamic or as loud as the A80L.

We’d recommend you consider adding a soundbar or sound system, and Sony has plenty including its Bravia Theatre Bar 8 and the Theatre Sound System 6 to choose from.

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TCL 98C7K

Best large 4K TV

Trusted Score

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Pros

  • Bright, colourful pictures at an epic size

  • Excellent backlight control

  • Great value for what’s on offer

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Cons

  • Sporadic backlight fluctuations

  • More bass would be nice

  • Unhelpful foot placement

At a jaw-dropping 98-inches, the TCL 98C7K is not a TV that’s designed for everyone. However, if you have the space and want to truly immerse yourself in a massive screen, all for a surprisingly reasonable price tag, then the TCL 98C7K is an easy recommendation.

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Although it’s such a mighty screen, there’s very little supporting bodywork around it, with a narrow frame and such slim feet that they become almost invisible when viewing the TV head-on. Speaking of the feet, keep in mind that they’re annoyingly set quite far apart from one another, so you’ll need a hefty piece of furniture to place it on top of.

The 98C7K runs on Google TV which is a decent enough interface, and includes all the apps and even the main UK terrestrial broadcaster catch-up services you’d expect. Not all Google TVs offer that.

While Google TV can be overwhelming to use at times, it’s easy to get your head around and usefully supports Google’s voice assistant too.

With the above in mind, let’s jump to the star of the show: the panel. The Mini LED lighting system is divided into 2048 separate local dimming zones – enough to provide even a screen this big with promisingly localised light control. Considering it can hit almost a peak of 3000 nits, this is a necessary addition.

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The panel also supports wider viewing angles than most LCD TVs while TCL’s AiPQ Pro processor is on hand to keep things running smoothly.

Overall, the 98C7K’s picture quality is seriously a vision for such an affordable yet mighty TV. In its Standard preset, which is the one you’re likely to use the most, images are bright and vibrant, with the screen covering more than 97% of the DCI-P3 colour spectrum and near 80% of the BT2020 spectrum too.

A key feature of the 98C7K is its Bang & Olufsen-assisted sound system which delivers a refined, clean and detailed tone. It’s not the best at handling bass, especially when compared to the dedicated subwoofers previously used in premium TCL TVs, but it certainly does the job.

Although it has an RRP of £2399, which feels reasonable given the size and performance, it’s not impossible to pick up the TCL 98C7K with a decent price cut too. With that in mind, if you want a mighty screen, this is a hard option to beat.

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Sky Glass Gen 2

Best Sky TV

Trusted Score

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Pros

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  • Brighter, more colourful picture over Gen 1 Glass

  • Less blooming

  • Spacious audio performance

  • Sky OS

Cons

  • Still lacks detail and sharpness

  • Bass feels flat

  • Iffy upscaling in places

  • Add-ons add up in price

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It should be noted that the Gen 2 version of Sky Glass is an improvement over the Gen 1 version, but that doesn’t make it a TV designed to satisfy everyone.

If you’re a home cinema enthusiast, a gamer or even just a casual TV watcher, there are better TVs on this list. But if you have a family, or are someone who is not interested in the complications of the TV buying experience. Sky Glass 2 is practically ideal for you.

Firstly, the installation is handled by the courier team that delivers the TV to you. If you want it on a pedestal or hauled onto your wall, they’ll carry that out and take the packaging away so you don’t have to worry about it. The TV itself is the same dimensions as before, so it’s a chunky effort, but it’s lighter, so if you ever feel the need to move it, it won’t be such a difficult task.

Sky OS doesn’t feature every entertainment app on this earth, but it does feature the popular ones whether it’s the UK catch-up apps, Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video, Apple TV+ and an assortment of others.

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And what it does as good as any other TV interface is that it does not treat them any differently from one another. All Sky wants is for you to tuck into whatever it is that you enjoy.

The rails of content are there to help you plunder what you like more easily, with Sky OS getting to know what you like over time and personalising those recommendations further.

The Playlist section acts as a way to keep track of what you want to watch, and you can create different personalised playlists for everyone in your household. The interface is quick, and the voice control has become more accurate and responsive over time.

The picture quality is much improved over the original model. It’s brighter without as much blooming, better with colours and handles the darker parts of the picture better than it did before. It’s not the sharpest or most detailed image though, and the upscaling is patchy, with stripey colours noticeable with HD programming.

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The built-in Dolby Atmos sound system is described as offering more power over the Gen 1 version, but to our ears it doesn’t sound too much different. It’s a spacious and tall sound, but like the picture quality, it’s not the clearest or most detailed performance. But considering the competition it’s up against, it’s a better effort at TV sound than most.

For those who want their TV, sound and content all wrapped into one convenient package, Sky Glass Gen 2 will be a compelling option, especially if you’re not fussed about getting the highest quality image and sound. It does come at a premium once all the subscriptions are tallied up, but Sky does have a cheaper option with its Glass Air TV.

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Test Data

  LG OLED55G5 Philips 65OLED+910 Samsung QE65QN90F TCL 65C8K Panasonic TV-65Z90B Hisense 65U8Q Sony Bravia 8 TCL 98C7K Sky Glass Gen 2
Contrast ratio Infinity
Input lag (ms) 13 ms 12.6 ms 9.2 ms 13.1 ms 12.7 ms 12.7 ms 13.1 ms 65.3 ms
Peak brightness (nits) 5% 1021 nits 2592 nits 4100 nits 1258 nits 463 nits 2940 nits 765 nits
Peak brightness (nits) 2% 1004 nits 1589 nits 2200 nits 1269 nits 1598 nits 462 nits 2000 nits 586 nits
Peak brightness (nits) 10% 1021 nits 2552 nits 1159 nits 430 nits 910 nits
Peak brightness (nits) 100% 293 nits 885 nits 790 nits 245 nits 857 nits 121 nits 850 nits 897 nits
Set up TV (timed) 421 Seconds 85 Seconds 360 Seconds 68 Seconds 277 Seconds 69 Seconds 840 Seconds

Full Specs

  LG OLED55G5 Review Philips 65OLED+910 Review Samsung QE65QN90F Review TCL 65C8K Review Panasonic TV-65Z90B Review Hisense 65U8Q Review Sony Bravia 8 Review TCL 98C7K Review Sky Glass Gen 2 Review
UK RRP £2399 £1799 £2599 £1299 £2499 £2199 £2199 £2399 £1199
USA RRP $2499 $2499 $1699 $2199
CA RRP CA$1999
AUD RRP AU$3499 AU$2495
Manufacturer LG Philips Samsung TCL Panasonic Hisense Sony TCL Sky
Screen Size 54.6 inches 64.5 inches 64.5 mm 64.5 inches 64.5 inches 64.5 inches 54.6 inches 97.5 inches 64.5 inches
Size (Dimensions) 1222 x 263 x 742 MM x x INCHES x x INCHES 1435 x 368 x 861 MM 1444 x 348 x 910 MM 1448 x 290 x 914 MM 1223 x 248 x 786 MM 2180 x 420 x 1285 MM 1447.8 x 329 x 911.1 MM
Size (Dimensions without stand) 703 x 1222 x 27.2 MM x x INCHES x x MM 824 x 1435 x 51 MM 892 x 1444 x 58 MM 838 x 1448 x 45 MM 706 x 1223 x 37 MM 1247 x 2180 x 64 MM 903.3 x 1447.8 x 47.7 MM
Weight 22.1 KG 24.2 KG 21.1 KG 30 KG 29.2 KG 18 KG 54.6 KG 30.3 KG
ASIN B0F9PFNQJJ B0F7WFH1HL B0CZTZTQXJ
Operating System webOS 25 Google TV Tizen Google TV Fire TV OS VIDAA Google TV Google TV Sky OS
Release Date 2025 2025 2025 2025 2025 2025 2024 2025 2025
Model Number OLED+910/12 QE65QN90FATXXU K55XR80
Resolution 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160 3840 x 2160
HDR Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Types of HDR HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision HDR10, HDR10+, Dolby Vision, HLG HDR10, HLG, HDR10+ Adaptive HDR10, HLG, HDR10+ Adaptive, Dolby Vision HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ Adaptive HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+ Adaptive HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision, Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+, HDR10+ Adaptive HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision
Refresh Rate TVs 48 – 165 Hz 48 – 144 Hz 48 – 165 Hz 48 – 144 Hz 48 – 144 Hz 48 – 165 Hz 40 – 120 Hz 48 – 144 Hz 50 – 60 Hz
Ports Four HDMI 2.1, three USB, ethernet, optical digital out, CI+, two RF tuners Four HDMI, digital audio output, two USB ports, Ethernet, Terrestrial/satellite Four HDMI inputs (two with full HDMI 2.1 features), 1 x USB 3.0, Ethernet, RF input, optical digital audio output Four HDMI, digital audio out, three USB ports, Ethernet, two satellite, RF terrestrial, headphone/subwoofer out Four HDMI 2.1, three USB, ethernet, optical digital out, CI+, two RF tuners Four HDMI, digital audio out, two USB ports, Ethernet, two satellite, RF terrestrial Four HDMIs (two with full HDMI 2.1 features), USB 3.0, Ethernet, RF input, optical digital audio output Three HDMI, terestrial antennae, two USB-C, Ethernet
HDMI (2.1) eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR, QMS, QFT VRR, ALLM, eARC, 4K/144Hz eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR, SBTM eARC, ALLM, VRR, HFR eARC, ALLM
Audio (Power output) 60 W 80 W 60 W 85 W 60 W 70 W 50 W 60 W 250 W
Connectivity Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.3, AirPlay 2, Google Cast Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.2, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, Matter, Control4 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Google Cast, AirPlay 2 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.3, AirPlay 2, Mirroring Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.3, AirPlay 2 Wi-Fi, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, Bluetooth 5.3 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.4, Miracast Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.2, AirPlay 2
Colours Black Grey, Silver, Blue
Display Technology OLED OLED Mini LED Mini LED OLED Mini LED, VA, QLED OLED Mini LED LED
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What’s the best 4K TV for gaming?

The LG OLED65C4 supports every gaming feature going, with ALLM, VRR, 4K/120Hz HFR, AMD FreeSync Premium, Nvidia G-Sync and Google Stadia.

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The post Best 4K TV 2026: Our favourite 4K TVs to buy right now appeared first on Trusted Reviews.

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Amazon payments to Bezos’ Blue Origin reach $1.8B as shareholders cite conflicts of interest

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Jeff Bezos
Jeff Bezos, the billionaire founder of Amazon and Blue Origin, shows off a mockup of the New Shepard suborbital space capsule during a 2017 conference in Colorado. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)

Amazon paid about $1.8 billion last year to Blue Origin, the space company owned by its founder and board chair Jeff Bezos — nearly triple the amount the year before — as the tech giant prepared to ramp up deployment of its own low-Earth orbit satellite constellation. 

The increase comes as shareholders weigh a proposal calling for a mandatory independent board chair, citing Bezos’ business interests outside Amazon as potential conflicts of interest. 

Bezos stepped down as Amazon’s CEO in 2021 but remains executive chairman.

According to the filing, the company paid approximately $2.2 billion total under satellite launch agreements during the past fiscal year, with an estimated $1.8 billion going to Blue Origin. The prior year’s proxy showed Blue Origin receiving about $578 million out of $1.7 billion total. 

Amazon is building a constellation of 3,236 low-Earth orbit satellites under the Amazon Leo program, formerly known as Project Kuiper, to beam broadband internet to consumers and businesses. The company has deployed 243 satellites so far and has asked the FCC for a two-year extension on a July deadline to launch roughly half of the fleet. 

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The company this week also announced a $10.8 billion deal this week to acquire Globalstar, a satellite operator that has used SpaceX as its primary launch provider. 

Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket made its debut flight in January 2025 but has not yet reached the launch cadence needed for the rollout. In addition to Blue Origin, Amazon has launch agreements in place with United Launch Alliance and Arianespace, and has also tapped Blue Origin rival SpaceX’s Falcon 9 for some launches, as Reuters reported this week

Bezos is also co-founder and co-CEO of AI startup Project Prometheus, a venture focused on applying AI to manufacturing and engineering across a variety of commercial sectors. 

The shareholder proposal calling for a mandatory independent chair, submitted by the AFL-CIO Reserve Fund, points to Bezos’ expanding role outside Amazon as cause for concern. 

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“As a technology company, Project Prometheus could be a potential competitor or a business partner with our Company, raising potential conflicts of interest,” the proposal states, also citing Amazon’s multibillion-dollar launch agreements with Blue Origin as a potential conflict.

It notes that Amazon also has done business with the Bezos-owned Washington Post.

Amazon’s board recommends voting against the proposal, arguing that its lead independent director structure provides sufficient oversight. The role is currently held by Jamie Gorelick, a former U.S. Deputy Attorney General. The company’s annual meeting is set for May 20. 

The Blue Origin contracts have drawn scrutiny before. A shareholder lawsuit filed in 2023 alleged Amazon’s board spent less than 40 minutes approving the launch agreements without considering SpaceX as an alternative. Delaware’s Court of Chancery dismissed the case, and the state Supreme Court affirmed that ruling in November 2025.

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NYT Connections hints and answers for Saturday, April 18 (game #1042)

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Looking for a different day?

A new NYT Connections 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 Friday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Connections hints and answers for Friday, April 17 (game #1041).

Good morning! Let’s play Connections, the NYT’s clever word game that challenges you to group answers in various categories. It can be tough, so read on if you need Connections hints.

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US-sanctioned currency exchange says $15 million heist done by “unfriendly states”

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Grinex, a US-sanctioned cryptocurrency exchange registered in Kyrgyzstan, said it’s halting operations after experiencing a $13 million heist carried out by “western special services” hackers.

Researchers from TRM, which has confirmed the theft, put the value of stolen assets at $15 million after discovering roughly 70 drained addresses, about 16 more than Grinex reported. Neither TRM nor fellow blockchain research firm Elliptic has said how the attackers slipped past Grinex’s defenses. Grinex said it has been under almost constant attack attempts since incorporating 16 months ago. The latest attacks, it said, targeted Russian users of the exchange.

Damaging “Russia’s financial sovereignty”

“The digital footprints and nature of the attack indicate an unprecedented level of resources and technology available exclusively to the structures of unfriendly states,” Grinex said. “According to preliminary data, the attack was coordinated with the aim of causing direct damage to Russia’s financial sovereignty.”

“Due to the attack, the Grinex exchange is forced to suspend operations,” Grinex continued. “All available information has been transferred to law enforcement agencies. An application has been submitted to the location of the infrastructure to initiate a criminal case.”

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TRM said that TokenSpot, a second Kyrgyzstan-based exchange, was also breached. Two of the exchange’s addresses sent funds to the same consolidation address used by the affected Grinex-linked wallets. What’s more, both exchanges became inoperable on Wednesday, suggesting they were hit by the same attacker.

TRM said TokenSpot was a front for Grinex, which the US Treasury Department sanctioned last year. The department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said that Grinex, in turn, was a rebrand of Garantex, an exchange it had sanctioned in 2022. The department said then that Ganantex had “directly facilitated notorious ransomware actors and other cybercriminals by processing over $100 million in transactions linked to illicit activities since 2019.” Last year’s sanctions against Grinex came a few months after TRM said that the exchange was likely a front for Ganantex.

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A Chinese AI just solved a decade-old math problem in 80 hours with zero human help and proved it

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  • The dual agent AI system autonomously solved Anderson’s conjecture from 2014
  • Rethlas explores problem-solving strategies like a human mathematician would
  • Archon transforms potential proofs into projects for the Lean 4 verifier

A research team led by Peking University developed a dual-agent AI system capable of solving advanced mathematical problems while also verifying its own results.

The system resolved a conjecture proposed in 2014 by Dan Anderson, completing the process within 80 hours of runtime.

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How Threat Actors Vet Stolen Credit Card Shops

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Credit Cards

The underground market for stolen credit card data has long operated as a volatile and highly deceptive ecosystem, where even experienced actors routinely fall victim to scams, exit schemes, and compromised services.

In recent years, this environment has become even more unstable, driven by increased law enforcement pressure, internal distrust among criminals, and the rapid turnover of marketplaces. As a result, threat actors are increasingly forced to adopt more structured approaches to identifying reliable suppliers and minimizing risk within their own illicit operations.

A guide found on an underground forum by Flare analysts sheds light on how threat actors themselves navigate the volatile world of credit card (CC) marketplaces.

The document, titled “The Underground Guide to Legit CC Shops: Cutting Through the Bullshit”—provides a structured look at how actors attempt to reduce risk in an ecosystem plagued by scams, law enforcement infiltration, and short‑lived operations.

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Analysis of the guide reveals more than just practical advice. It outlines a methodology for vetting carding shops, operational security practices, and sourcing strategies, effectively documenting how today’s fraud actors think about trust, reliability, and survivability.

While parts of the guide appear to promote specific services, suggesting a possible vested interest from its author, it still offers a valuable glimpse into the inner workings of the carding economy, and the evolving standards actors use to operate within it.

From Opportunistic Fraud to Supplier Vetting Discipline

One of the most striking aspects of the guide is how it reframes carding from opportunistic fraud into a process‑driven discipline. Rather than focusing on how to use stolen cards, the document emphasizes how to evaluate suppliers.

This shift reflects a broader evolution within underground markets, where the primary risk is no longer just operational failure, but being defrauded by other criminals or interacting with compromised infrastructure.

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Screenshot from one of the recommended shops in the guide, named
Screenshot from one of the recommended shops in the guide, named “CardingHub”

The author repeatedly stresses that legitimacy is not defined by branding or visibility, but by survivability. In other words, a “real” shop is one that continues operating over time despite law enforcement operations, scams, and internal instability.

This aligns with observed trends in underground economies, where the lifespan of marketplaces has become increasingly unpredictable, forcing actors to adopt continuous verification practices.

The guide makes it clear that what separates a “legitimate” shop from the rest isn’t branding or uptime, it’s the quality of the stolen data it delivers. References to “fresh bins” (BIN = Bank Identifiable Number) and low decline rates point directly to the sources behind the data, whether from infostealer infections, phishing campaigns, or point-of-sale breaches. In this ecosystem, reputation isn’t built on promises but on consistently providing cards that actually work.

Shops that fail to maintain reliable data sources are quickly exposed, while those with steady access to fresh compromises rise to the top.

Carding actors are adopting disciplined workflows to source and test stolen financial data.

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Flare continuously monitors underground forums and marketplaces, giving your team early visibility into exposed credentials, compromised cards, and emerging fraud infrastructure.

Keep up with threat actors for free

Building Trust in a Trustless Market

Transparency is another recurring theme. The guide highlights the importance of clear pricing models, real‑time inventory, and functional support systems, including ticketing and escrow services. These characteristics closely mirror legitimate e‑commerce platforms, underscoring how leading carding shops have adopted business practices designed to build user confidence and reduce friction.

Equally important is the role of community validation. The guide dismisses on‑site testimonials as unreliable, instead directing users toward discussions in closed or invite‑only forums. This reflects a broader fragmentation of the underground landscape, where trust is increasingly tied to controlled environments and long‑standing reputations.

Actors are encouraged to look for sustained discussion threads and historical presence, rather than isolated positive feedback.

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The document also reveals a strong awareness of adversarial pressures. The emphasis on security‑first infrastructure, such as mirror domains, DDoS protection, and the absence of tracking mechanisms, suggests that operators are actively defending against both law enforcement monitoring and competing criminal groups.

In effect, these marketplaces function not only as distribution platforms, but as hardened environments designed to ensure operational continuity.

Screenshot from one of the recommended shops in the guide, named
Screenshot from one of the recommended shops in the guide, named “CardingHub”

The Technical Checklist 

Beyond high‑level principles, the guide introduces a step‑by‑step vetting protocol that provides insight into how threat actors conduct due diligence. Technical checks such as domain age, WHOIS privacy, and SSL configuration are presented as baseline requirements.

While these checks are relatively simple, they demonstrate an effort to apply structured analysis to what has historically been a trust‑based decision process.

The guide also highlights the importance of identifying mirror infrastructure and backup access points, noting that established operations rarely rely on a single domain. This reflects a practical understanding of the instability of underground services, where takedowns and disruptions are common. The presence of multiple access points is framed as an indicator of operational maturity and resilience.

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Social intelligence gathering plays an equally significant role. Rather than relying on direct interactions with vendors, users are encouraged to analyze forum discussions, track vendor histories, and identify patterns of behavior over time.

Particular attention is given to detecting coordinated endorsement campaigns, such as multiple positive reviews originating from newly created accounts, a tactic frequently associated with scams.

Operational Security 

Another critical component of the guide is its focus on operational security. The recommendations provided, while framed in the context of carding, closely mirror practices observed across a wide range of cybercriminal activities. Users are advised to avoid direct connections, utilize proxy services aligned with target geographies, and compartmentalize their environments through dedicated systems or virtual machines.

The discussion of cryptocurrency usage is particularly notable. The guide strongly discourages direct transactions from regulated platforms, instead advocating for intermediary wallets and privacy‑focused assets such as Monero. This reflects a growing awareness among threat actors of blockchain analysis capabilities and the risks associated with traceable financial flows.

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Taken together, these OPSEC recommendations highlight an important shift: actors are no longer relying solely on tools to evade detection, but are adopting layered strategies designed to reduce exposure across the entire operational chain. This level of discipline suggests that even mid‑tier actors are increasingly adopting practices once associated with more advanced threat groups.

Scale vs. Exclusivity

The guide further categorizes carding shops into distinct operational models, including large automated platforms and smaller, curated vendor groups. This segmentation reflects the diversification of the underground economy, where different actors prioritize scale, accessibility, or quality depending on their objectives.

Automated platforms are described as highly efficient environments, often featuring integrated tools and instant purchasing capabilities. These operations resemble legitimate online marketplaces in both structure and functionality, enabling users to quickly acquire and test data at scale.

In contrast, boutique vendor groups emphasize exclusivity, higher quality, and controlled access, often relying on invitation‑based systems and long‑term relationships.

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Commercial Interests and Operational Reality

Despite its structured approach, the guide is not without bias. The inclusion of a direct endorsement for a specific platform suggests that the author may have a vested interest in promoting certain services. This is a common pattern in underground communities, where informational content is often used as a vehicle for subtle advertising or affiliate activity.

Such endorsements should be viewed with caution. However, they do not necessarily invalidate the broader insights provided by the guide. Instead, they highlight the complex interplay between information sharing and commercial interests within cybercriminal ecosystems.

From a defensive perspective, the guide offers valuable intelligence into how threat actors assess risk and make operational decisions. The emphasis on verification, community validation, and layered security reflects a level of maturity that complicates traditional disruption efforts. Rather than relying on single points of failure, actors are increasingly building redundancy and adaptability into their workflows.

Ultimately, the document serves as both a playbook and a signal. It demonstrates that the carding ecosystem became more structured, more cautious, and more resilient. For defenders, understanding these dynamics is critical to anticipating how these markets will continue to evolve, and where opportunities for disruption may still exist.

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How Flare Can Help

Flare helps organizations stay ahead of fraud by continuously monitoring underground forums and marketplaces, revealing how threat actors source, vet, and use stolen credit card data. This provides early insight into attacker behavior, including how they optimize success rates, build trust, and adapt to defenses.

By turning this intelligence into actionable insights, Flare enables security teams to detect exposures, anticipate fraud campaigns, and disrupt attacker workflows-shifting from reactive response to proactive, intelligence-driven defense.

Learn more by signing up for our free trial.

Sponsored and written by Flare.

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Are electric vehicles about to take off for good?

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London School of Economics’ Viet Nguyen-Tien and University of Birmingham’s Gavin Harper and Robert Elliott examine whether EVs have passed a tipping point for adoption.

Click here to visit The Conversation.

A version of this article was originally published by The Conversation (CC BY-ND 4.0)

When the Strait of Hormuz first closed in March and oil hit $120 a barrel, a very old question came back: is this finally the moment electric vehicles (EV) take off for good – or just another false start?

EVs have been here before. They surged after the 1973 oil embargo, collapsed when oil fell, and surged again. Each wave died when the external pressure eased.

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We think this time is different. In a new discussion paper, we argue that the economic case for electric vehicles is now improving on its own terms. This is because of what has happened to batteries, not because of the oil price. The same evidence, though, shows the transition creates new problems as serious as the ones it solves.

Why this time is different

Battery costs have fallen 93pc since 2010. That is the number that changes everything. A pack that cost more than $1,000 per kilowatt-hour in 2010 cost $108 by late 2025, driven down by a decade of learning, investment and policy support.

Research on the global battery industry finds that every time cumulative production doubles, costs fall by around 9pc. More buyers, more production, lower costs, more buyers.

Unlike the 1970s, this loop does not need an oil crisis to keep spinning. Electric cars have crossed lifetime cost parity with petrol vehicles across much of Europe; in the used-car market they now have the lowest total cost of ownership. Newer models even match petrol cars in estimated lifespan – something early EVs could not claim.

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Global sales surpassed 17m in 2024, one of the fastest technology diffusion processes in the history of transport. Norway is near-fully electrified. And Ethiopia reached around 60pc EV sales share in 2024, powered by cheap hydroelectricity – some way ahead of the US, for instance, which sits at around 8pc.

An economic platform, not just a better engine

The deeper reason this wave will not fade is not technical – it is economic. An EV is a platform. Its value grows as the network around it grows, just as smartphones became indispensable not because of the hardware but because of everything connected to it.

Every charger built makes the next EV more attractive. Every software update raises the value of every car already on the road. Every recycled battery feeds back into the supply chain that makes the next one cheaper. It’s part of the reason some other technologies like hydrogen fuel cell vehicles have struggled to get off the ground in numbers – the tech exists, but all the other elements aren’t quite there.

One study of 8,000 drivers in Shanghai found that range anxiety – the fear of running out of charge – has a real economic cost due to unnecessarily avoided trips. But that cost is falling sharply, not because batteries improved, but because charging networks expanded.

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Making real-time charger availability visible could add six to eight percentage points to market share by 2030. And because EV charging is far more flexible than other household electricity demand, drivers can shift away from peak hours remarkably easily when the price is right – turning the car into a grid asset, able to store and release electricity when needed. These are economic network effects, not engineering features.

Swapping one dependency for another

Ending oil dependence does not end geopolitical exposure. It relocates it.

In late 2025, China introduced rules requiring government approval for exports containing more than 0.1pc rare earths. The leverage that once came from control of oil flows now comes from control of processing capacity and component supply chains.

The minerals at stake – lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite and neodymium to name but a handful – carry their own geopolitical risks and, as we have written elsewhere, serious human costs in the communities that mine them. This creates a predictable cycle of social contestation that threatens to stall the transition unless the industry commits to responsible, sustainable innovation.

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The metal cobalt traditionally helped EVs travel further on the same charge. And when prices spiked, so did research into making batteries with less or even no cobalt. Today, more than half of all EV batteries sold globally are cobalt free.

Four decades of patent data show the same pattern: higher mineral prices consistently redirect research and development toward mineral-saving technologies.

Recovering lithium and cobalt from used batteries is becoming economically viable too, shifting part of the supply chain away from geopolitically exposed extraction sites. In addition, Norway and other countries are looking to exploit new critical mineral resources to diversify supplies.

The transition is real – but not risk-free

The Hormuz crisis is a reminder of what concentrated energy dependence costs. The EV transition does not need it. The learning curve keeps falling, the platform keeps compounding, the economics keep improving. That is what makes this wave different.

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What it does not do is eliminate geopolitical risk. Unlike oil, where leverage comes from energy flows, EV supply chains concentrate power at materials, processing capacity, and technological bottlenecks – supply chains that are highly concentrated and carry their own serious risks. Fuel dependence becomes mineral dependence. That dependence is highly concentrated.

Traditional carmaking regions are already absorbing concentrated job losses, and history shows such disruptions leave persistent scars even if the long-term aggregate effects are positive. Yet electric vehicle assembly is proving more labour-intensive in western countries than expected – requiring more workers on the shopfloor, not fewer, at least in the ramp-up phase. Contrast this with China, where massive automation has led to the creation of ‘dark factories’ where there are so few humans, internal lighting isn’t required.

The same regions facing losses could benefit. But the gains and losses do not fall on the same people. That is where the work remains.

The Conversation
By Dr Viet Nguyen-Tien, Dr Gavin D J Harper and Prof Robert Elliott

Viet Nguyen-Tien is an applied economist at the Centre for Economic Performance (CEP) at the London School of Economics (LSE) with an interest in economic and political issues related to technology, energy and the environment.

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Gavin Harper is a research fellow at the Birmingham Centre for Strategic Elements & Critical Materials in Birmingham Business School at the University of Birmingham focused on issues at the critical materials/energy nexus.

Robert Elliott is an applied economist at the University of Birmingham who works at the intersection of international economics, development economics, environmental and energy economics and international business.

Don’t miss out on the knowledge you need to succeed. Sign up for the Daily Brief, Silicon Republic’s digest of need-to-know sci-tech news.

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Kevin Weil and Bill Peebles exit OpenAI as company continues to shed ‘side quests’

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OpenAI is losing two of the architects of its most ambitious moonshots. Kevin Weil, who led the company’s science research initiative, and Bill Peebles, the researcher behind AI video tool Sora, both announced their departures on Friday. The exits come as OpenAI consolidates around enterprise AI and its forthcoming “superapp.”

The departures follow OpenAI’s decision to cut back on “side quests,” including customer-facing bets like Sora and OpenAI for Science. Sora, which was losing an estimated $1 million per day in compute costs, was shut down last month.

OpenAI for Science was the internal research group behind Prism, an AI-powered platform that promised to accelerate scientific discovery. It’s being absorbed into “other research teams,” according to Weil’s social media post announcing the news.

“It’s been a mind-expanding two years, from Chief Product Officer to joining the research team and starting OpenAI for Science,” Weil wrote. “Accelerating science will be one of the most stunningly positive outcomes of our push to AGI.”

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The team had a short and bumpy road after its formal announcement in October 2025. Weil deleted a tweet claiming GPT-5 had solved 10 previously unsolved Erdős mathematical problems, but that claim fell apart immediately when the mathematician who runs the website erdosproblems.com called it out.

Weil’s departure comes a day after his team released GPT-Rosalind, a new model to accelerate life sciences research and drug discovery.

In a social media post announcing his departure, Peebles credited Sora with igniting a “huge amount of investment in video across the industry,” and argued that the kind of research that produced the video tool requires space away from the company’s mainline roadmap.

“Cultivating entropy is the only way for a research lab to thrive long-term,” he wrote.

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OpenAI is also losing Srinivas Narayanan, its chief technology officer of enterprise applications, Wired reports. Narayanan reportedly announced the news internally that he was leaving to spend more time with family.

This article was updated to include the departure of Srinivas Narayanan.

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NASA built a spacecraft computer that can lose three systems mid-flight and still keep astronauts alive 250,000 miles from Earth

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  • The Orion spacecraft uses eight processors running identical instructions simultaneously
  • A fail-safe design prevents faulty computers from sending incorrect commands
  • Triple redundant memory corrects single-bit errors automatically on access

The NASA Artemis II mission relies on a computing system built to remain operational under extreme conditions and hardware faults.

Unlike the Apollo program, where onboard computers handled limited functions, the Orion spacecraft manages life support, navigation, and communication through integrated flight software.

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Sony’s New INZONE M10S II Monitor Lets Gamers Pick Between Sharp Detail and Record-Breaking Speed

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Sony INZONE M10S II Monitor Gaming Dual-Mode
Gamers seeking victory in any fast-paced game will want every frame they can get. Sony designed the INZONE M10S II with this specific purpose in mind, and they accomplished it by including two different modes. Switching between settings is simple on this 27-inch OLED panel. If you keep the resolution at 1440p, the display will run at a scorching 540 hertz. Drop the resolution to 1080p and you’ll be rewarded with an even faster refresh rate of 720 hertz.



That kind of flexibility is invaluable when you’re playing different games with varying demands on your screen. Some titles are all about the details, while others are simply about obtaining that speed, since every millisecond counts. Fortunately, the tandem OLED build of this display keeps the image quality sharp even while switching between modes. Sony also included a brilliant feature called motion blur reduction, which keeps fast-moving objects clear and prevents the screen from becoming too dim even when you’re in the thick of things.


INNOCN 27″ OLED 2K QHD 2560 x 1440p 500Hz Gaming Monitor, Gaming Console Ready, VRR, G-SYNC Compatible…
  • 【Epic QD-OLED 500Hz Monitor】 A new generation of gaming monitor is emerging, this new 27 Inch 1440p 500hz monitor adopts QD – OLED panel and…
  • 【Rare 500Hz Refresh Rate & 0.03ms】INNOCN 2780M – Ultra-fast 500Hz OLED display. The faster speed lets you respond quickly to opponents and stay a…
  • 【Powerful Connectivity】 2780M 2560 x 1440p 500hz gaming monitor delivers powerful connectivity: 2 x DP, 2 x HDMI, 1 x 3.5MM Audio Jack, wide…

The display itself is also quite forgiving in terms of placement, since the special anti-glare coating does an excellent job at maintaining visibility regardless of the lighting conditions in your room. With that level of control over reflections, your emphasis remains where it should be: on the game. For the competitive crowd, there is an extra tiny tool in the arsenal known as tournament mode. When you turn it on, the display basically shrinks to 24.5 inches, with black bars on the sides, but you still get the desired high refresh rate.

Sony INZONE M10S II Gaming Monitor Dual-Mode
Ergonomically, the setup feels perfectly natural on almost any workstation. The stand can tilt from minus five to thirty-five degrees and adjusts in height by roughly five inches to maintain your screen at the ideal angle. Plus, it swivels left and right, allowing you to have a good perspective regardless of your preferences.

Sony INZONE M10S II Gaming Monitor Dual-Mode
In terms of input, you have two HDMI 2.1 connections and one DisplayPort 2.1 connector to keep up with the latest graphics cards. Variable refresh rate support almost guarantees that you’ll never have to struggle with those annoying screen tearing bugs. As an added bonus, you get two pre-tuned picture settings for shooter games: one that gives you the familiar look of a regular display, and another that really shows off the OLED panel. Sony plans to sell the monitor for $1,099, with a release later this year.
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RSD 2026: Yusef Lateef’s Alight Upon The Lake: Live at the Jazz Showcase On Resonance Records

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A newly discovered live recording from Yusef Lateef arrives via Resonance Records for Record Store Day 2026, capturing the saxophone icon in an intimate club performance that stands out as one of the most compelling archival jazz releases of the year.

Yusef Lateef Alight Upon The Lake: Live at the Jazz Showcase captures the artist backed by a superb swinging quartet featuring Kenny Barron on piano, Bob Cunningham on bass, and Albert “Tootie” Heath on drums.

yusef-lateef-rsd-2026-lp-packaging

One of the better sounding of Resonance’ RSD new offerings, as with most of these shows from Chicago’s Jazz Showcase — a venue run by jazz enthusiast Joe Segal — the tapes used for creating this release are recorded in monaural, yet effectively document the sound of the band in the club. 

Pianist Kenny Barron stands out as a featured performer, the band playing two of his compositions including the nearly 30-minute opening track “The Untitled”– almost half of it showcases Barron’s lush, wave-like solo explorations. Likewise, his “Inside Atlantis” stretches for nearly 20 minutes.

Lateef’s playing is, not surprisingly, beautiful and inventive. Yet he also takes time to let loose such as on the lighthearted boogie-woogie show closer “Yusef’s Mood.” This has the feel of a vintage 1940s–50s Jazz at the Philharmonic blowing session, driven by the same raw energy as Illinois Jacquet and Flip Phillips, with flashes of the R&B honk and swagger you’d hear from Joe Houston and Big Jay McNeely.

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The vinyl quality is fine on this new RSD release as are the production elements as we’ve come to expect from Resonance. The 3LP set features liner notes by noted Yusef Lateef biographer Herb Boyd, plus interviews with musicians Bennie Maupin and Wayne Segal (son of the club’s found and the frontline person maintaining his father’s sizable tape archive). 

yusef-lateef-rsd-2026-cd-packaging

Whether you need to own Alight Upon The Lake: Live at the Jazz Showcase on vinyl is a personal decision versus just getting the CD version. The 3LP version will likely run you upwards of $60 (estimated) on RSD, However, the 3CD set is available for pre-order for just $29.98 at Amazon

Either way you go, this will be a fun listen for fans of Mr. Lateef’s music. 


Mark Smotroff is a deep music enthusiast / collector who has also worked in entertainment oriented marketing communications for decades supporting the likes of DTS, Sega and many others. He reviews vinyl for Analog Planet and has written for Audiophile Review, Sound+Vision, Mix, EQ, etc.  You can learn more about him at LinkedIn.

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