With a mammoth 11kg drum, low running costs and impressive performance, the Indesit BWE 111496X WV UK is a great choice for larger households.
The machine is controlled via the dial on its front, with all its available cycles listed on the front drawer too. Alongside standard cycles, such as Eco 40-60 and Cottons, you’ll find Indesit’s special modes for duvets, fast washes and steam modes.
There’s also the Push and Go button, which can be found on other Indesit appliances, and allows you to start a 30°C cycle by pressing and holding it down. Whether this is really useful is debatable, as we’d argue it’s easier to just select your own cycle.
For each wash you have the option to adjust the temperature and spin speeds, plus there’s a button that allows you to select a stain type, upon which the cycle will then adjust to specifically target that kind of mess.
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Although this sounds like a clever idea in theory, this stain setting is only compatible with the White cycle, yet the only way to know that is through process of elimination as the manual doesn’t mention this.
Aside from these quirks, the Indesit BWE 111496X WV UK is otherwise easy and intuitive to use.
To begin our tests, we ran the Eco 40-60 cycle which costs an inexpensive 29p to run. Here we found washing performance to be good, although tough stains did struggle to come out. However when we moved to the 20°C wash, not only did running costs drop to just 14p but stain removal was excellent too.
Although the aforementioned White wash at 60°C, with the stain setting enabled, cost a pricier 59p, it’s worth noting that we found it excellent for removing deep, engrained stains with ease.
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There’s even a dedicated Ariel Pod setting, which runs at 30°C and costs 35p. Although using pods is convenient, we found stain removal to be a mixed bag, so we wouldn’t recommend opting for this cycle.
Although slightly fiddly to use at first, if you need a large washing machine that performs well and doesn’t have high running costs then the Indesit BWE 111496X WV UK is a fantastic choice for most households.
Forrester’s research measures several countries’ ability to develop, operate and secure critical technologies independently of foreign governments’ influence.
Forrester has published the findings of its new ‘Global Sovereignty Forecast, 2025 to 2030’ report, which takes a look at how AI and technology sovereignty is likely to evolve across 14 major global economies between now and 2030.
The study measured countries’ ability to develop, operate and secure critical technologies independently of foreign governments’ influence.
What was discovered is that despite significant investment in sovereign AI, chip manufacturing, cloud infrastructure and national technology capabilities, it is projected that global tech sovereignty will advance slowly over the next few years, with China and the US maintaining a lead position.
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The average tech sovereignty score across all 14 countries assessed – which were Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Spain, the UK and the US – predicts only a minimal rise from 39pc in 2025 to 40pc in 2030.
Each country was analysed across nine dimensions of technology sovereignty: government AI investment; cloud sovereignty; technology workforce availability; AI model development; data centre capacity relative to technology spending; data centre autonomy; semiconductor production; software creation; and rare earths processing.
With China and the US recording the highest overall tech sovereignty scores at 82pc and 79pc respectively, the report suggests that tech sovereignty will remain concentrated among a small number of geopolitical and economic powers. If other regions are serious about closing capability gaps and reducing tech dependencies, they will need to commit to strategic partnerships and alliances.
Key highlights
Perhaps unsurprisingly given the recent worldwide focus, across all technology dimensions, semiconductor manufacturing was found to have the strongest projected improvement. The US’s and South Korea’s chip production scores are set to increase from 45pc in 2025 to 79pc in 2030. Meanwhile, Japan is expected to jump from 36pc to 53pc, China from 40pc to 51pc and India from 0pc to 13pc.
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However, the report also noted that even amid the improvements, semiconductors and software will remain among the most significant sovereignty challenges due to concentrated chip supply chains and a handful of dominant software providers.
Sovereignty was also divided in terms of which country in North America you belong to. While the US is forecast to remain a global leader, Canada is expected to improve modestly, going from 33pc to 34pc. Mexico will continue to remain the lowest among the 14 countries assessed at 20pc, highlighting the region’s uneven distribution of technology power.
It was also noted that Europe’s largest economies are likely to remain overly dependent on resources from foreign technology providers. Sovereignty scores in Germany and Spain will only rise by two percentage points from 34pc in 2025 to 36pc in 2030, France will rise from 33pc to 35pc, the UK from 30pc to 32pc and Italy from 27pc to 29pc.
“Despite these improvements, Europe’s lower scores reflect significant dependencies on chips, cloud, software and data centre capacity,” said the report.
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Commenting on the report, Dario Maisto, a principal analyst at Forrester said: “Ongoing geopolitical volatility, AI competition and semiconductor supply chain risks have put tech sovereignty firmly in the spotlight.
“Today, tech sovereignty is concentrated in the hands of a few global leaders, creating an uneven competitive advantage for some countries. To compete in the AI era, nations must understand their strategic dependencies and build durable partnerships that safeguard their data, infrastructure and long-term autonomy.”
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Apple stock ended trading on Friday as the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, overtaking Nvidia for the first time since April 2025 after a sustained recovery for the iPhone maker met a sharp selloff in chip stocks.
Apple shares closed at $333.74, leaving the company with a market capitalization of approximately $4.88 CAP trillion. Nvidia ended down about 3.5% on the day, with a value of about $4.86 trillion.
The distinction is largely symbolic, and a lead this narrow could disappear during the next trading session, if not in after-hours trading over the weekend. Still, Apple’s return to the top caps a striking reversal from the tariff, China, and artificial intelligence concerns that weighed on its shares the last time it held the position.
Apple took a difficult route back to the top
Apple entered the spring of 2025 facing doubts about whether its first Apple Intelligence rollout could drive meaningful upgrades. The company confirmed on March 7 that its more personalized Siri features were taking longer than expected.
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Tariff fears added a more immediate financial threat. Apple shares lost about 15% during the first half of 2025 as investors considered the company’s reliance on Asian manufacturing.
At the time, Tim Cook warned that tariffs could add about $900 million in costs during the June quarter. It ultimately paid $800 million, but has filed for a refund of those, which Apple says will be used to expand US manufacturing.
Nvidia moved in the opposite direction. Surging demand for AI processors carried the chipmaker back to the top of the market in June 2025, past $4 trillion the following month, and briefly beyond $5 trillion in October.
Apple’s underlying business nevertheless began producing results that were difficult for Wall Street to dismiss. Revenue rose 10% to $94 billion during the June 2025 quarter, followed by an 8% increase to $102.5 billion during the September quarter.
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Strong early demand for the iPhone 17 helped Apple reach a $4 trillion valuation in October. Services continued producing record revenue and substantially higher margins than the company’s hardware divisions.
Apple shares lost about 15% during the first half of 2025
Momentum accelerated during fiscal 2026. Apple reported an all-time record of $143.8 billion for the holiday period, up 16%, followed by a March-quarter record of $111.2 billion, up 17%.
The March quarter set records for total revenue, iPhone revenue, earnings per share, and Services. Greater China returned to strong growth despite earlier concerns over local competition and delayed Apple Intelligence features.
Wall Street changed how it views Apple’s AI strategy
Apple previewed Siri AI at WWDC in June, demonstrating the personal context, onscreen awareness, app control, and conversational features promised in 2024. The technology is due with the fall operating-system updates and is already available to beta testers.
The launch reinforced Apple’s strategy of adding AI to products and services without matching the massive infrastructure spending of Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta. As investors question those returns, Apple can leave much of the model and data-center expense to partners while distributing AI features across more than two billion active devices.
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The March quarter set records for total revenue, iPhone revenue, earnings per share, and Services
Apple is also nearing its first CEO transition since 2011. Tim Cook will become executive chairman on September 1, with hardware engineering chief John Ternus succeeding him, but the planned handoff has done little to slow the stock’s rise.
Nvidia’s decline helped Apple finish the job
Apple didn’t retake the top position because of a single announcement or earnings report. Its valuation recovered over more than a year, while Nvidia’s decline on Friday erased enough market value to allow Apple to move ahead.
Nvidia’s role in the AI industry hasn’t diminished. Its processors remain central to the data-center expansion that pushed the company past Apple, and even a modest rebound could reverse their positions again.
Apple’s return instead suggests Wall Street no longer sees massive AI spending as the only credible path to growth.
After spending much of 2025 as the industry’s most conspicuous AI laggard, record iPhone sales, Services growth, a China recovery, and a tangible Siri roadmap have made Apple’s restraint look more like strategy than failure.
Agility Robotics is opening a 60,000-square-foot facility to train its humanoid robots in Fremont, California, just up the highway from the factory where Tesla is expected to start manufacturing its Optimus robots this year.
Tesla has increasingly bet on Optimus. Elon Musk recently said he expects it to be “the biggest product ever” once it’s “useful outside of Tesla sometime next year.”
While Agility doesn’t have Tesla’s capital, it does have a robot, Digit, that is already useful in the real world. The robot is already generating revenue, carrying totes and bins in manufacturing and warehouse settings for customers like Amazon, GXO, Schaeffler, and Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada. The company says it has secured $300 million in contract orders for its robots.
“It’s great to have [Tesla] in the same area as us, because really, for a long time Agility was out there alone, and it’s good to have others in the humanoid space,” CEO Peggy Johnson told TechCrunch. “We have commercialized. We now know what it takes to walk into these facilities and meet their safety bars, their regulatory bars, compliance, plug into their IT infrastructure, plug into their warehouse management system.”
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Agility hasn’t disclosed how many Digits that it has built or deployed, but outside observers estimate that dozens have worked in pilot or revenue-generating deployments. The company has said, for example, that Digits have moved 100,000 totes at a GXO logistics facility.
Johnson is currently leading Agility through a reverse-merger that is expected to make it the first pure-play humanoid robot company on the public markets later this year. Founded in 2015 by a group of researchers who developed new techniques that allow robots to safely walk on two legs, Agility is trying to capitalize on its lead over a newer generation of AI-inspired robotic startups like Figure, 1X, the Bot Company, or Sunday Robotics.
While the arrival of transformer-based neural networks that helped give rise to LLMs also promises major advancements in robotic behavior, Agility is taking a practical approach to autonomy.
“When you think about self-driving cars, you know, as a non-humanoid example, you really don’t want the anti-lock brake controller under AI control,” Agility co-founder and chairman Damion Shelton told TechCrunch. “The analog with humanoids is all the safety stuff needs to go through a path that’s not generative AI, right? You don’t want to get creative with your safety stack.”
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What AI does do, however, is deliver on the promise of scale.
“One of the first times [Bruce Leak, the Quicktime inventor who serves on Agility’s board] asked us how we were going to go about coding applications for the robot, we didn’t really have a good answer,” Shelton said. “The number of things you can imagine a robot doing is far larger than the number of engineers who can program robots. And generative AI answers that question definitively.”
The new facility is designed to accelerate the company’s robotic deployments. Johnson says more than 30 customers are in talks with the company about deploying Digit, and the new facility will be where the six-foot-tall robot learns new skills in environments similar to those it will experience in the field.
Unlike many of the newer entrants to the humanoid space, Agility isn’t planning to offer in-home humanoid robots anytime soon. It’s a view that jibes with that of most independent robotics experts, who believe today’s most powerful robots aren’t safe enough for consumer use. Digit operates in a human-free space right now, but the version 5, expected to be unveiled this fall, will have the ability to sense humans and won’t need to be kept in a robot-only zone.
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Co-founder and chief robot officer Jonathan Hurst said there is plenty of work to keep Agility busy in manufacturing and logistics alone.
“Let’s start with the bins and the totes, and then let’s do the picking and the kitting,” Hurst told TechCrunch. “And then let’s like start working on cardboard, which is really hard, and loading and unloading tractor trailers and things like that. Okay, now we’re at 100 million robots, you know? A trillion-dollar company.”
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Microsoft will end OneDrive synchronization support next month for older versions of Windows 10, leaving users without client updates, fixes, or technical assistance.
According to a post on the company’s Message Center, OneDrive sync app updates will continue on Windows 10 22H2 until October 10, 2028, but will stop for earlier versions from August 15, 2026.
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No support means no more updates, fixes, or security patches, although the service itself won’t suddenly stop working. However, users running into problems cannot expect Microsoft to fix them.
The move should not come as a surprise. Support for Windows 10 21H2, the last official release before the final 22H2, ended on June 13, 2023. The message mentions Windows 10 22H1, although this was never officially released by Microsoft – the company switched to an annual release cadence after 21H2.
According to Microsoft, “this change aligns OneDrive support with the Windows lifecycle policy and helps Microsoft focus ongoing investments on supported operating systems.”
Microsoft 365 file synchronization services will also be affected, although, again, nothing will necessarily stop working immediately. Microsoft stated: “Existing installations may continue to function, but future functionality is not guaranteed.”
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Users still clinging to Windows 10 versions before 22H2 will have to use the web interface to access OneDrive, which is a good deal less convenient than desktop synchronization. Alternatively, there’s always the upgrade to Windows 11 that Microsoft would dearly like users to make, although OneDrive synchronization on Windows 10 22H2 should be fine until 2028.
There are plenty of alternatives for cloud synchronization. For organizations looking for something a little more sovereign, there are always options like Nextcloud, which told The Register that its synchronization software would work on Windows 10 1809 or later. As with Microsoft, Windows 11 is the recommendation. However, unlike Microsoft, Linux is also an option. ®
The Acer Swift Go 14 AI (2026) is a fantastic Windows laptop with brilliant battery life, a charming and stylish look, a fantastic port selection and solid Panther Lake power. It’s also more affordable than some of its key rivals, although it makes some small sacrifices on its OLED screen.
The Swift Go 14 AI (2026) features a mid-range Intel chip inside that balances performance and endurance rather well.
14-inch 1920×1200 60Hz OLED screen
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It also has a serviceable OLED screen for productivity workloads with reasonable resolution and responsiveness.
65Whr battery
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The Swift Go 14 AI (2026) also has surprisingly lengthy endurance from a more modest-sized battery inside.
More stylish than its predecessor
Fantastic port selection
Excellent endurance
Squirrel Widget
Introduction
The Acer Swift Go 14 AI (2026) might just be one of the most compelling laptops I’ve seen so far in 2026.
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Against last year’s Acer Swift Go 14 AI, it’s been redesigned with a different chassis, includes one of Intel’s new Panther Lake processors, a 14-inch OLED screen and excellent battery life. For £1299/$1299 for the model I have with a Core Ultra 7 355 chip inside, that isn’t too bad in price considering today’s market.
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At this kind of money, though, the Swift Go 14 AI (2026) is hardly alone in its endeavours. Key rivals include the Asus Zenbook A14 (2026), the Dell XPS 14 (2026) base model, and the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x Gen 11, which are all vying for your hard-earned money if you’re in the market for a capable compact laptop in 2026.
I’ve been putting the Swift Go 14 AI (2026) through its paces for the last couple of weeks to see if it can come out on top as one of the best laptops we’ve tested.
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Design and Keyboard
Much more stylish than last year’s model
Far-reaching port selection
Excellent keyboard and trackpad
Acer has given the Swift Go 14 AI (2026) quite the spruce-up against last year’s model, ditching its rather nondescript grey chassis for a pleasant blue colour with silver accents across the lid. It gives this more affordable laptop a bit more style and class that puts it up there into a more premium price bracket in terms of looks.
It’s primarily constructed of anodised aluminium, which gives it some strength and keeps the weight to a reasonably light 1.24kg. That makes this an easily portable laptop, given the compact stature, although it isn’t quite as light as either the Zenbook A14 (2026) or even Acer’s own Swift Edge 14 AI.
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Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
Port-wise, we’ve got a pair of USB4-capable Type-C ports on the left with power delivery and display powers, plus a USB-A and full-size HDMI port on the left. The right side houses a further USB-A port, a 3.5mm headphone jack and a microSD reader. That’s fantastic for such a thin laptop, and puts dearer choices to shame.
So too does the keyboard and trackpad arrangement. The Swift Go 14 AI (2026) features a tactile and short travel on its 65 percent layout keyboard that’s a joy to type on for extended periods, while it’s also white backlit for added vividity for after-dark working.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
The trackpad is made of a material Acer calls OceanGlass, which is recycled ocean-bound plastic. It’s a smooth and slick trackpad with that surface, and has a good amount of real estate for your fingers. If you have videos or music playing, it can also open a contextual menu on the trackpad for media playback, which is neat.
In terms of sustainability, Acer incorporates 21% post-consumer recycled (PCR) plastic throughout the device, including the aforementioned OceanGlass trackpad. They also utilise 100% recyclable paper packaging, which boosts their credentials.
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Display and Sound
Solid detail, although 60Hz refresh rate is a shame
Excellent brightness, contrast and black level
Middling speakers
Acer has bundled the Swift Go 14 AI (2026) with a serviceable OLED screen – it’s a compact 14-inch 1920×1200 resolution choice that’s okay for a more affordable laptop. The 60Hz refresh rate is fine, too, although it is a shame it isn’t higher to aid general zippiness.
That being said, this is a capable screen with deep blacks and lovely contrast, as measured by my colorimeter. Here, I measured a 0.03 black level and 13610:1 contrast ratio. A 6700K colour temperature is also right where it should be.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
A peak SDR brightness of 382.3 nits makes this panel suitable for indoor and outdoor work, although it isn’t quite as vibrant as some of the competition. There is HDR support for added vibrancy in supported content, with DisplayHDR True Black 500, too.
The Swift Go 14 AI (2026)’s panel also impresses with its excellent colours. I saw perfect 100% coverage of the sRGB colour space and 99% DCI-P3 coverage, plus an excellent 95% coverage of the trickier Adobe RGB gamut. This makes this screen suitable for productivity and more colour-sensitive workloads alike.
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Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
As for the speakers, this laptop comes with downwards-firing units that are just fine for casual listening with some okay volume, although they lack the crispness and body of stronger options.
Performance
New Panther Lake chip inside
Meagre graphical performance
Fast SSD, although meagre capacity
The Swift Go 14 AI (2026) has seen a move to a run of new processor options, with my sample shipping with a mid-range Panther Lake choice from Intel – the Core Ultra 7 355.
It is technically a current-gen Intel chip, but doesn’t look to move the needle too much from last year’s Core Ultra 7 255. As with other non-X-prefixed Panther Lake chips I’ve tried in other laptops, performance has only moved a handful of percentage points in the Geekbench 6 and Cinebench R23 tests, although it remains decently strong in single- and multi-threaded workloads.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
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3D performance is reasonable, although without the beefed-up Arc B390 integrated graphics you’ll find with higher-end Panther Lake chips, you are left lacking if you want to use the Swift Go 14 AI (2026) for any prolonged creative tasks or gaming tasks.
This model comes with 16GB of RAM, providing enough headroom for multitasking and some intensive loads, plus a 512GB SSD which feels a little stingy in my book. It’s nonetheless a brisk PCIe Gen 4 drive, with measured reads and writes of 7087.70 MB/s and 5666.23 MB/s.
Software
Windows 11 installed
Lots of Acer-specific apps
Copilot+ PC functionality is also here
The Swift Go 14 AI (2026) comes running proper Windows 11, although it comes with some unnecessary apps or shortcuts, such as a taskbar one for Booking.com, oddly.
There are more Acer-specific apps than anything else, such as Acer Jumpstart, which provides a link to the brand’s website, and AcerSense, which gives you access to check your system’s vitals and change settings around, such as power modes and such.
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Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
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Elsewhere, this is also a Copilot+ PC and has enough AI power to warrant the inclusion of Microsoft’s tools. Chief among these is the addition of the Copilot assistant, which you can ask questions and to undertake tasks, if you so wish.
In addition, there is also generative AI functionality baked into the Photos and Paint apps, if you want it. The most useful set of AI tools with the Swift Go 14 AI (2026) is the Windows Studio effects for the webcam, which provides convenient means of auto framing, background blur and even making sure you maintain eye contact.
Battery Life
Lasted for 20 hours 51 minutes in the battery test
Capable of lasting for two to three working days
Acer bundled a modest 65Whr capacity cell inside the Swift Go 14 AI (2026), which is actually smaller than the 75Whr battery found in last year’s model. Nonetheless, with Intel’s efficient processor inside, I had high hopes for this laptop’s endurance, not least because of how strong the last model was. Acer quotes it to last for up to 22 hours on a charge, for reference.
In the PCMark 10 video loop battery test at the requisite 150 nits of brightness, this latest variant lasted for 20 hours and 51 minutes. That’s easily enough to get through two to three working days before it’ll need recharging, and is up there with some of the best laptops we’ve tested in terms of battery life.
When it comes to recharging, the Swift Go 14 AI (2026)’s compact 65W charger was quite fast in getting go-juice back into the laptop, taking 35 minutes to get it back to 50%, while a full charge took 75 minutes.
The Swift Go 14 AI (2026) excels on numerous fronts, with solid grunt, a fantastic port selection and brilliant battery life.
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You want a stronger screen
The OLED screen here is generally strong, but it lacks in resolution and refresh rate against some of the competition.
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Final Thoughts
The Acer Swift Go 14 AI (2026) is a fantastic Windows laptop with brilliant battery life, a charming and stylish look, a fantastic port selection and solid Panther Lake power. It’s also more affordable than some of its key rivals, although it makes some small sacrifices on its OLED screen.
This is because it’s only 60Hz and 1920×1200 resolution, although I levelled the same criticism at the Asus Zenbook A14 (2026), which costs more than Acer’s choice. Even then, the Dell XPS 14 (2026) base model doesn’t come with an OLED panel nor as beefy performance from a Core Ultra 5 processor inside.
The Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x Gen 11 is beefier with its Snapdragon X2 Elite inside, and it comes with a higher-res OLED screen, is a touch lighter and offers very similar endurance. However, it’s also a lot more expensive than the Swift Go 14 AI (2026), and Acer’s choice has a better port selection for what it’s worth.
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It seems that every time I try to level some form of criticism at the Swift Go 14 AI (2026), it throws it back in my face by being the most well-rounded choice in its price class. That’s hard to argue with, especially with the competition in mind. For more choices, check out our list of the best laptops we’ve tested.
How We Test
This Acer laptop has been put through a series of uniform checks designed to gauge key factors, including build quality, performance, screen quality and battery life. These include formal synthetic benchmarks and scripted tests, plus a series of real-world checks, such as how well it runs popular apps and extensive gaming testing.
FAQs
What processor does the Acer Swift Go 14 AI (2026) use?
The Acer Swift Go 14 AI (2026) we were sent uses an Intel Core Ultra 7 355, one of Intel’s new Panther Lake chips.
It’s no surprise that people love the Toyota Corolla. Toyota has produced this compact car since the 1960s, and it has sold over 50 million units in that time. As of this writing, Car and Driver lists it as the twelfth best-selling vehicle in the United States in 2026, and in a market dominated by SUVs and pickup trucks, it’s the only one of two compact cars to crack that top dozen. When you combine the fact that Toyota is renowned for its consistent production of incredibly reliable vehicles with the Corolla’s very reasonable starting price of $23,125 (plus a $1,295 delivery, processing, and handling fee), there’s very little reason as to why it shouldn’t be as popular as it is.
Looking at the ratings from experts and customers alike compiled by the likes of Consumer Reports and J.D. Power, they typically concur with these positive opinions. However, the Toyota Corolla isn’t the compact car on the market that gets the absolute highest of marks. We’re going to look at four different compact car models from different companies that receive better ratings than the Corolla. Sometimes, the overall scores will be higher, but in others where the overall scores are quite similar, there are models that outpace the Toyota in areas like reliability or performance. So, if you’re considering getting yourself a Toyota Corolla for your compact car needs, there’s a chance these other options better fit your particular needs.
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Honda Civic Hybrid
The one compact car that the Toyota Corolla slightly trails in 2026 sales is the Honda Civic. Only about 1,000 units sold separate the two, and fun fact, their spots in that ranking flipped in the midst of this article being written. Effectively, the two models are neck-and-neck. That equivalency is apparent in their ratings too. According to Consumer Reports, the 2026 Corolla and Civic have the exact same overall score. The Corolla slightly outpaces the Civic in reliability, while the Civic has the edge in owner satisfaction. When you get to the hybrid version of the Honda Civic though, it’s a different story.
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Out of every compact car rated by the publication, the 2026 Honda Civic Hybrid has the overall highest rating by Consumer Reports. That comes with an excellent road test score from its in-house experts and quite high owners’ satisfaction score from actual customers. The ratings determined by J.D. Power are a little trickier to parse, as it doesn’t distinguish between the traditional and hybrid models of the Civic, but it ties for first amongst compact cars, sharing an 85 out of 100 overall average with the 2026 Nissan Sentra. If the ratings correlate between the two publications, the Civic Hybrid is even higher than that 85 on its own. If not, it still gets to be number one regardless.
The starting price for a 2026 Civic Hybrid is $29,395 (plus a $1,195 destination and handling fee). That’s a bit more than your standard 2026 Corolla or one with a hybrid powertrain (starting at $24,975 plus a $1,295 delivery, processing, and handling fee), but you’re getting something people generally prefer slightly more.
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Subaru Impreza
To stay with the Japanese automakers, another compact car you see getting better scores from experts and owners than the Toyota Corolla is the 2026 Subaru Impreza. This hatchback may not be nearly as popular as the previous two mentioned vehicles, as it doesn’t even crack Car and Driver’s top 25 best-selling vehicles in 2026 so far, but that doesn’t mean people don’t like it any less.
Based on J.D. Power’s ratings, the Impreza earned an 84 out of 100 overall score, just one point behind the top-rated Honda Civic. While drivers surveyed by the publication found their driving experience on the high end of average, they did determine that the car’s quality, reliability, and resale value were all excellent. The dealership experience even managed to get a 91 rating, 15 points higher than the Corolla.
On the Consumer Reports side, the 2026 Impreza doesn’t quite reach the overall heights of the Honda Civic Hybrid among small cars, but it does outperform the Toyota Corolla on the whole. Owner satisfaction is what the publication has calculated as the Impreza’s greatest strength over the Corolla, but it also has higher ratings for its road testing and reliability as well.
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A 2026 Subaru Impreza starts at $26,595 (plus a destination and delivery fee of $1,195). That may be a few thousand dollars more than the starting price of a Toyota Corolla, but if the owners and experts are to be believed, you are not sacrificing any semblance of quality with that moderately higher price. Unlike the Corolla or the Civic, the Subaru Impreza doesn’t have a hybrid powertrain option.
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Hyundai Elantra
Moving from Japanese automakers to those from South Korea, we arrive at the 2026 Hyundai Elantra. While not quite as popular as the Toyota Corolla — only just cracking Car and Driver’s top 25 best-selling vehicles in the United States in 2026 so far at spot 24 — the overall reception to this compact car alternative exceeds it, whether we are talking about the standard gas-powered model or one with a hybrid powertrain.
The Hyundai Elantra Hybrid actually ties the top overall score of the Honda Civic Hybrid awarded by Consumer Reports among compact cars. The standard Hybrid doesn’t quite reach the top of the mountain there, but it still outpaces the Corolla, though the Toyota does have a better reliability rating from the publication. On the J.D. Power side of things, the 2026 Elantra finishes third overall among compact cars with a score of 83 out of 100, situating nicely between the Subaru Impreza and Toyota Corolla, with those surveyed labeling its quality and reliability, their driving experience, and its resale value all as great on average.
Another appealing factor with the Hyundai Elantra is that it’s actually one of the less expensive alternatives to the Corolla. With a starting price of $22,625 (plus a $1,245 freight fee) for the base SE trim, you’d be saving about $550 compared to the base Corolla. That may not seem like much in the grand scheme of car buying, but saving any money on something that is generally liked more is rarely a negative. However, the Elantra Hybrid starts at $25,450 (plus a $1,245 freight fee), which is $425 more than the base Corolla Hybrid, so savings aren’t necessarily guaranteed.
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Kia K4
For the final compact car on the list, we move over to another South Korean brand. That would be the 2026 Kia K4. This is only the second model year for this car, but it’s already established itself as something owners and experts are enjoying quite a lot, making SlashGear’s list of the best debut vehicles for its first model year. When compared to the Toyota Corolla, the gap in appreciation isn’t quite as noticeable as it is with the other vehicles on this list, but there are certainly areas where the K4 pulls ahead.
According to those surveyed by J.D. Power, the K4 ties the Subaru Impreza with an overall average score of 84 out of 100 for the second-best compact car on the market. It received great scores in every category except for dealership experience, which was determined to be fairly average. When you move over to Consumer Reports, the Kia K4 and Toyota Corolla actually earned the exact same overall score. When you look into the details though, there are important differences. Yes, the Corolla does earn a higher reliability score, but the K4 earned higher expert road test and owner satisfaction scores than the Toyota. Depending on what you value in a vehicle, you could certainly perceive the K4 as the better liked model.
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The 2026 Kia K4 is also a cheaper model than a new Corolla. It has a starting price of $22,290 (plus a $1,245 destination fee), making it the least expensive model on this list. At worst, it’s comparable to the Corolla. At best, it’s the better reviewed of the two. Either way, you’re saving money on quality.
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Methodology
Determining how a fellow compact car was better rated than the Toyota Corolla came down to a couple of different factors. Firstly, we’re looking specifically at compact cars. There are other small vehicles, such as sports cars, but these are really their own class of vehicle. Comparing them would be apples and oranges. Secondly, these are the ratings of the latest 2026 models of these vehicles.
Consumer Reports and J.D. Power are the two best sources for these kinds of ratings. With both, you get consensus opinions on these vehicles from thousands of verified owners who are honestly reflecting on their actual experiences with these cars. Consumer Reports has the added benefit of having its own in-house experts perform their own tests with these vehicles as well. While overall average scores were the most important determining factor for how a car could make this list, a car having higher ratings in specific areas — such as reliability or owner satisfaction — would also be considered if the overall scores were very close together or the same. After all of that, these four compact cars could be selected.
Researchers say a meteorite that crashed through the roof of a Hillsborough, New Jersey, home in 2024 contains unusually pristine evidence of salty fluids and organic chemistry from near the surface of a primitive asteroid. “A forensic study of the fragments revealed that they contained preserved bits from near the surface of a primitive asteroid, where it experienced concentrated salty fluids — a process not previously known from this type of protoplanet world,” said lead author and meteor astronomer Peter Jenniskens of the SETI Institute and NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley. Phys.org reports: According to paper co-author Mike Zolensky, a meteoriticist at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, analysis of the Hillsborough meteorite found fragments that were more extensively altered by water on the meteorite’s parent asteroid than is typically seen in CM2 carbonaceous chondrites. The analysis classified the specimen as a CM1/2 carbonaceous chondrite, an intermediate classification between petrographic types CM1 and CM2. […] Zolensky and colleague JangMi Han found small salt-rich CM1 fragments within the Hillsborough meteorite, suggesting they originated from a near-surface region of the parent asteroid where liquid water evaporated and concentrated salts. They are now working to identify the salt minerals for comparison with similar phases found among samples returned to Earth from asteroids Ryugu and Bennu.
The high concentration of salt in briny fluids can potentially create molecules crucial to life on Earth. Brines allow phosphate to remain in solution and can catalyze chemical reactions between organics and precipitate minerals. “Isotope studies of carbon and nitrogen suggest that primitive carbonaceous chondrites, including CM types, delivered organic matter to the early Earth,” said cosmochemist Queenie Chan of Royal Holloway University of London, England, and biogeochemist Nana Ogawa of the Biogeochemistry Research Center at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. “The Hillsborough meteorite contained 1.8% by weight of carbon and 0.07% of nitrogen, and had carbon and nitrogen isotopes typical for CM-type meteorites.”
The meteorite contained a wide variety of soluble organic compounds, and its compositional range confirms that the Hillsborough meteorite was more altered by water than most other CM-type meteorites. “A high fraction of compounds were the product of organic chemistry with minerals,” said organic mass spectrometry specialist Phil Schmitt-Kopplin of Technical University Munich. “We do not know if these magnesium organic compounds were contributed by brine chemistry or were simply left over from earlier impact shock processes.” In living organisms, organometallic compounds are found in blood and used in photosynthesis. Among the soluble organic compounds were many amino acids, similar to those found in more moderately altered CM2 chondrites.
Astrobiologist Danny Glavin of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and his team in Goddard’s Astrobiology Analytical Lab concluded that the delivery of amino acids, carboxylic acids and other soluble organic molecules by CM-type bodies may have contributed to the prebiotic organic inventory that preceded the emergence of life on Earth. Their analysis suggests the complex distribution of amino acids observed in the Hillsborough meteorite formed within the parent body, likely assisted by brine fluid chemistry.
The findings have been published in the journal Science Advances.
Databricks on Thursday announced a new round of funding that values the company at $188 billion. The round was led by Coatue.
Databricks didn’t disclose exactly how much it raised; it said the money isn’t in its hands yet and that the round will close later this summer. (Other outlets have since reported the raise is roughly $3 billion.) While it’s unusual for a company to announce before it gets the money, a VC tells TechCrunch that the deal is solid, with so many firms wanting in that the company had no reason to keep its shiny new valuation a secret.
In fact, Databricks has been on a year-and-a-half fundraising tear as it successfully transitioned its image into an AI provider and not just a yesteryear SaaS sensation. Yesteryear being back in the BC times (Before ChatGPT).
Databricks has raised so many rounds over the years that this latest one became the subject of memes about running out of letters of the alphabet. “Turning on alerts for when we get a Series AA,” one person posted.
But its image reconstruction has been legit. Founded in 2013, it initially grew to success back in the big data era, with software that enabled enterprises to store enormous amounts of data in the cloud, yet produce speedy analytics.
Because it already sat on troves of enterprise data, Databricks was then well-positioned to respond as companies started wanting AI with the same security and governance they expect from traditional enterprise software.
The company began rolling out one AI product after another, like Lakebase, its database built for AI agents, and Unity, its AI gateway, along with a “meta-harness” called Omnigent that manages multiple agents.
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Databricks also increasingly became known as one of the big examples of enterprises adopting more affordable Chinese-based open-weight models (models whose underlying code is published for anyone to use and modify) for cost control, one of the big trends of 2026. It is a particular champion of Z.ai’s GLM 5.2 as a model for coding.
Last week Databricks CEO Ali Ghodsi shared the results of some internal benchmarking done to manage his own AI costs for his 3,000 software engineers.
The company compared AI models on the actual tasks its programmers do. Not surprisingly, in the blog post revealing the results, Databricks shared that “open models, and GLM 5.2 in particular, are now able to handle even the highest level of task difficulty” in coding, and at a total lower cost than proprietary models from Anthropic and OpenAI.
But it did surprise people by finding that the choice of harness — the agentic coding tool, like Codex or Claude Code, that wraps around a model and manages its context and instructions — equally impacted costs. It found that open-source harness Pi to be one of the best at managing context surrounding each prompt, and therefore one of the lowest costs choices without sacrificing quality.
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“The lesson here isn’t that one harness is always cheaper or that native harnesses are worse,” the post declared. “Instead, model choice is only one piece of the puzzle.”
All of this has added to Databricks image as an AI company, even if it wasn’t founded as an AI lab. This, in turn, has granted it the AI-halo for raising money and leaping its valuation. As we previously reported, the AI effect is so strong these days, that even sandwich shop Jersey Mike’s mentioned AI 22 times in its S-1 documents.
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One of the most interesting BSD variants of the 2010s, NextBSD, has come back to life under new management. The Reg FOSS desk is intrigued.
Aside from the homepage, there’s a GitHub repository – but beware, this is separate from the old one, whose repo is still there although the most recent changes were seven years ago. The new project also has a project history giving credit where it’s due.
The main man behind the revival is Joe Maloney, known on GitHub as pkgdemon. In case his name rings a bell, we’ve mentioned him before: he put together the Gershwin desktop in GhostBSD. Soon after we covered Gershwin on GhostBSD, he asked the maintainers if he could take over the NextBSD project. He did have a relatively minor role in the original – you can see his list of commits.
The original NextBSD project was started by FreeBSD co-founder Jordan Hubbard in 2015 – its Wikipedia article has some of the history. The plan was to port some of the components of Apple’s Darwin OS to FreeBSD. Darwin is the Unix foundation on which macOS and Apple’s other OSes are built: it’s open source and the code can be pulled direct from GitHub. Some of the initial goals are explained in this presentation from the original team.
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The reasoning goes like this… Apple’s various operating systems, from macOS to iOS to the cut-down ones in the Apple Watch and Apple TV, are all built from a single common core, derived from NeXTstep. That was built on Mach and BSD UNIX, which were Free Software – the term “open source” didn’t exist yet. Apple’s OSes are sophisticated, highly developed, and are used in billions of customer-facing devices with next to no technical support.
Today, much of Apple’s OSes are open source. Along with the XNU kernel, which handles inter-process communication using Mach IPC, there’s its init system launchd, IOkit for handling devices and drivers, the Apple System Log facility and its logging daemon syslogd, and much more.
Although Apple shares much of the BSD-based text-mode parts of its OS, the lower-level parts – the XNU kernel and drivers – are designed and built purely for Apple hardware. When OS X was still quite new, there were various efforts to take the Darwin OS and build versions for PC hardware. OpenDarwin started in 2002, but ended in 2006. It was followed by PureDarwin, which put out releases in 2015 and 2019, and was still maintained as recently as 2024. There were others, including GNU Darwin and DarwinBSD.
Just how difficult it is to make this all work is demonstrated by the way that all these projects ultimately faltered or ended. So the NextBSD plan is to take the FreeBSD kernel, the most capable of the FOSS BSD kernels, but replace FreeBSD’s traditional and server-focused userland with the relevant parts of the publicly available Apple code.
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The rebooted NextBSD-redux is not based on a fork of the decade-old code. FreeBSD has moved on substantially in that time, and so have macOS and Darwin. This is a new project by a new developer, but it picks up the same overall plan, aims to assemble the same puzzle pieces, and shares the same intended goal.
In places, it does draw on a little of the same code, though. The NextBSD-redux README describes what’s working so far, with a lot more detail in the porting notes. Although there’s no graphical desktop yet, that’s underway as well. Naturally enough, it’s Maloney’s own Gershwin, and the current status is described in the gershwin-on-nextbsd repository.
For us, perhaps the key aspect of NextBSD – both the original version and NextBSD-redux – is that it isn’t an effort to build something completely new from scratch. It’s an effort to cherry-pick and combine elements of existing separate FOSS projects, and assemble them into a useful whole.
The inspiration it shares with Maloney’s Gershwin desktop is clear. Gershwin combines components taken from the GNUstep Project, plus the window manager from the Xfce desktop, plus other components, aiming to create a broadly Mac-like desktop environment.
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Outside of the efforts to create a FOSS PC OS based on Apple Darwin, or a Mac-like desktop environment, there have been several other efforts to create a macOS-like OS from existing FOSS parts. What’s encouraging is that many of them share code with one another.
Gershwin on GhostBSD was not the first effort to put a macOS-like desktop on a BSD OS. In 2023, we reported on helloSystem 0.8. It was the second look at this prototype OS in The Register after an earlier article in 2021. helloSystem was being put together by Simon “ProbonoPD” Peter, the creator of the AppImage cross-distro packaging format. helloSystem was based on a graphical distro of FreeBSD called FuryBSD, but unfortunately that project shut down in 2020. ProbonoPD moved over to help with Gershwin development instead.
helloSystem was not ProbonoPD’s first rodeo either. Before that, he had a Linux-based live distro based on GNUstep, called LIVEstep, and he was also one of the core team behind PureDarwin.
In the same vicinity, there is also a very ambitious project called ravynOS. As its FAQ file back in 2022 acknowledged: “We have been in fact working with helloSystem! As some people have noticed, Release 0.2.X was basically helloSystem. (That was the second PoC. The first had been built on vanilla FreeBSD and had no GUI at all.)”
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Although ravynOS may have started out as a fork of helloSystem, it was more ambitious. From its early days, it aimed for some limited degree of macOS binary compatibility, thanks to a project called Darling. These days, its architecture starts with Darwin 19.6, which corresponds to macOS 10.15 “Catalina.” The new NextBSD uses some of ravynOS’s libraries, such as the libxpc library, which came out of the original NextBSD project.
There’s one aspect of the project restart that will alienate some people, though: he is using AI. The Team section of the homepage says it’s Maloney and Anthropic’s Claude Code.
We asked him how and for what he was using it. He told The Register: “From my perspective, AI is a force multiplier here. It is my team of developers, but I am steering the entire thing. I can understand that won’t be for everyone. If others happen to like it, awesome. If others happen to contribute later, awesome. I selfishly just enjoy doing it, and want it to exist for myself. I can think of no better name for the project than NextBSD.
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“I get and understand the skepticism around AI people have, because I am not sure how much I trust AI-generated code myself, especially without review from humans. In my case, AI has always been more of an effort to accelerate my knowledge of what code does faster, versus not learning anything. With that said, I would still understand the reservations people would have in production environments.”
At the moment, the oldest commits in the nextbsd-redux repository are only two months old. He told us that he didn’t do all this development in just that brief period.
“I’ve had two iterations of this work before anything migrated outside of my personal GitHub account into an org. The first iteration was entirely vibe coded just to see if it could be done with a sockets-only version of launchd, without Mach and LaunchDaemons for devmatch and devd.
“The entire time, I was documenting everything extensively at pkgdemon.github.io. I did things like compare FreeBSD’s mechanisms for kernel module loading to Linux and Darwin. I figured out what the gaps were. I confirmed that Darwin had solutions to fill the gaps that I wanted to fill, but I would need Mach. This is where I started using AI more heavily for months of just planning, researching, refining plans.
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“So for the second iteration, I repeated the same work with just a Mach kernel module only, and launchd in a single repo. Then I took a few things like libxpc, last updated by RavynOS, and first created by the original NextBSD developers to act as the glue for launchd bootstrap. There were a few glue components like that, where there were no code drops from Darwin that NextBSD had written alternatives for, and rayvnOS continued to carry forward. That is where the NextBSD original code lives on; the rest is clean room. This is also where I began to more interactively review every code change with Claude Code developing automated testing all the way through – starting only with a Mach kernel getting loaded, let’s write tests that cover every part of it, etc.
“Specifically for the third iteration, I broke everything out into repos for things like the kernel itself, modules to be converted to kexts, the superset of tooling from Darwin. This is where I moved to cross building everything natively in GitHub with automated tests to gate everything. So in that sense, AI tooling is involved in almost every stage of things still, but so am I if that makes any sense.”
This vulture is intensely skeptical about the use of LLMs for writing code, but for such an interesting experiment as this, we’re willing to suspend our disbelief. Currently, NextBSD is more about experimentally trying to bring together components and code from very different sources, and get them working together. We’d be fascinated to see if NextBSD can get to the stage of being a working OS that can run on a laptop, bringing elements of Apple’s userland to FreeBSD’s very solid kernel. We’re happy to see this project back and in active development, and we hope it delivers interesting results. ®
Two sides with less-than-clever records meet on Matchday 3 of the Nations Championship 2026 as Australia host Italy in Perth. Joe Schmidt takes charge of the Wallabies for the final time with both teams desperate to avoid ending the Southern Hemisphere Series with three defeats from three.
Schmidt has more than a little pride on his agenda to go out on high. His Wallabies side are on a six-game losing streak, winning just one of their past 10 outings. Another defeat here and Schmidt will end an ignominious two-year spell with the lowest win percentage of any Aussie coach in the professional era. The Kiwi has kept faith with Declan Meredith at fly half after last weekend’s 42-26 loss to France, with Ben Donaldson returning to the bench. Local Perth hero Carlo Tizzano gets the nod in the back row, with Fraser McReight on the bench. Max Jorgensen again starts on the wing.
Italy may have lost 47-17 to New Zealand but they pushed the All Blacks hard before a Lorenzo Cannone red card ended their chances. Gonzalo Quesada, suspended from the touchline after falling foul of referee abuse last time out, has made nine changes from that defeat, with Tommaso Menoncello somewhat surprisingly out of the 23 altogether. Louis Lynagh, son of Wallaby legend Michael, will start on the wing with Monty Ioane on the opposite flank. Nacho Brex continues in the enter, with the tactical work coming from fly half Paolo Garbisi.
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Read on as we explain how to watch Australia vs Italy for free in the 2026 Nations Championship.
Can you watch Australia vs Italy for free?
Yes. Australia vs Italy is being shown on free-to-air Rugbypass TV in the US, on ITVX in the UK, on Virgin Media Play in Ireland and on 9Now in Australia.
Traveling abroad right now? You can use a VPN to watch Australia vs Italy for free as if you were right at home.
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Use a VPN to watch Australia vs Italy live streams
A VPN is handy piece of software that can make your device appear as if it’s back in your home country, so you can unlock your usual service. The best VPN right now? We recommend NordVPN – it does everything and comes with up to 75% off.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in the US
Australia vs Italy is available to live stream for FREE on Rugbypass TV in the US.
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You can tune in via the Rugbypass TV website or app, and it works with Chromecast, Airplay, AppleTV and Android TV.
Outside of the US? Use a VPN while you’re traveling away from home to unlock your stream.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in the UK
In the UK, Australia vs Italy is free-to-air on ITV1, with live streaming available via ITVX.
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All you need is an account, a TV license and a UK postcode (e.g.HA9 0WS). Sign up here!
If you’re out of the UK but still want to tune in, explore the VPN route set out above, which will help you access your accounts from anywhere.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in Ireland
Australia vs Italy is free-to-air on Virgin Media One in Ireland, with live streaming available via the Virgin Media Play platform.
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Outside Ireland? You’ll need to download a VPN, as detailed above, to tap into your free Nations Championship stream from abroad.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in Australia
In Australia, Wallabies vs Italy is free-to-air on Channel 9, with live streaming available via 9Now.
Stan Sport, meanwhile, is providing coverage of every Nations Championship game. Stan Sport costs AU$20/month on top of a Stan subscription, which itself starts at AU$12/month.
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Not in Australia right now? You can simply use a VPN like NordVPN to watch the action as if you were back home.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in New Zealand
In New Zealand, Sky Sport NZis showing the Australia vs Italy game.
You can access Sky Sport through satellite TV or get a live stream, with the Sky Sport Now subscription service starting at NZ$29.99 per day or NZ$59.99 per month.
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Those outside of New Zealand for any part of the Nations Championship can use NordVPN to gain access to their home streaming service.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in South Africa
The Australia vs Italy game is being shown on Supersport in South Africa.
You’ll need to get a DStv access package to watch the Nations Championship 2026, with prices starting at Rs99/month for the streaming version.
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Abroad right now? Just use a VPN and tell your device that you’re back home and you’ll be good to go.
How to watch Australia vs Italy live streams in Canada
(Image credit: Other)
In Canada, Australia vs Italy is being shown on Premier Sports.
You’ll need either the monthly CA$29.99 pass to watch this game. Or to catch the whole tournament, there’s the CA$79.99 six-month pass or the CA$139.99/year annual subscription.
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If you’re out of Canada but still want to catch the action, explore the VPN route set out above, which will help you access your accounts from anywhere.
What is the Australia vs Italy start time?
The scheduled Australia vs Italy kick-off time on Saturday, July 18 is 6.10pm AWST local time in Perth, which is 3.10am PT / 6.10am ET / 11.10am BST / 8.10pm AEST.
What is the Australia vs Italy head-to-head?
The Wallabies have won 18 of their 20 previous encounters with Italy. The Azzurri have won two.
In Australia, the head-to-head stands at 7-0.
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Can I watch Australia vs Italy on my mobile?
Of course, most broadcasters have streaming services that you can access through mobile apps or via your phone’s browser. For example, Rugbypass TV, ITVX, Virgin Media Play and 9Now all have dedicated apps.
We test and review VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: 1. Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service). 2. Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad. We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services. Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing.
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