Google’s long-awaited new smart speaker is finally official, although it will not actually land on store shelves until June 25. The $99.99 Google Home Speaker is not just a long-overdue hardware refresh; it is Google’s first audio product built specifically around Gemini for Home, with 360-degree sound, improved microphone processing, more natural conversations, and the ability to handle multi-step requests without making users speak like they are submitting a help-desk ticket.
AI is not slowly creeping into consumer A/V. It has been living in the category for years through voice control, streaming recommendations, picture processing, room correction, smart cameras, automation, and the increasingly complicated network of devices sitting in people’s homes. What has changed is the scale of the fight. Google’s Gemini for Home now faces Amazon’s Alexa+ and Apple’s newly introduced Siri AI in a much larger battle to become the preferred control layer for the living room, the smart home, streaming services, connected cameras, and whatever paid ecosystem each company can build around them.
The speakers may remain relatively inexpensive gateway products, but the stakes are enormous. Google, Amazon, and Apple are not competing simply to answer trivia questions or switch off a lamp from across the room. They are competing for the household interface: the assistant consumers trust to control devices, surface information, make recommendations, manage routines, and potentially keep them inside one company’s hardware and services ecosystem.
Google Home Speaker is the latest opening shot in that phase of the war. Whether Gemini proves genuinely more useful than its rivals, rather than simply more articulate while failing to dim the correct lights, is the part that will matter.
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Google Is Rejoining a Smart Speaker Market That Did Not Wait Around
The $99.99 Google Home Speaker does not require a monthly subscription for its core Gemini voice-assistant features, including smart-home control, music playback, timers, reminders, and general questions. But Google Home Premium is where the more ambitious version of the platform lives.
The Standard plan costs $10 per month in the U.S. or £8 per month in the U.K., adding Gemini Live, automation assistance, intelligent alerts, and 30 days of event video history. Google includes six months of the service with eligible new speaker purchases, but once that trial ends, consumers will need to decide whether the more conversational and capable Gemini experience is worth another recurring smart-home bill.
Google also arrives at a moment when its smart-speaker ecosystem has been looking rather thin. The JBL Authentics 300 and Authentics 500, launched in 2023, remain among the few meaningful third-party speakers to offer Google Assistant, and both are notable because they also support Amazon Alexa. They are still capable products, but they are hardly evidence of a platform firing on all cylinders in 2026.
Amazon, by comparison, has kept moving. Its own lineup includes the Echo Dot (5th Gen), the newer Echo Dot Max, Echo Studio, Echo Show 8, and Echo Show 11, all positioned around Alexa+ and Amazon’s broader smart-home ecosystem. Alexa has also found its way into products beyond the Echo family.
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The Sonos Era 300 and new Sonos Play support Alexa in compatible regions, while Bose has now launched the Lifestyle Ultra Speaker and Lifestyle Ultra Soundbar with Alexa built in and Alexa+ support in the U.S.
Denon’s new Home 200, Home 400, and Home 600 show that the multi-room wireless speaker category is still evolving as well, even if those models are more about HEOS, Dolby Atmos Music, and higher-quality streaming than becoming another Alexa endpoint. That distinction matters. Google is not simply trying to catch up in smart-speaker hardware; it is trying to persuade consumers, manufacturers, and developers that Gemini for Home deserves to be the intelligence layer sitting in the middle of their connected homes.
That is a much harder job than playing a playlist or switching off the kitchen lights, especially when Amazon already has a deep hardware bench and Apple continues to keep Siri tightly tied to its own ecosystem.
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More Than a Gemini Badge
The Google Home Speaker is not just old Google hardware with a Gemini logo stamped on the fabric. Inside the compact 3.4-inch-high, 4.2-inch-wide enclosure is a quad-core 2.0GHz Cortex-A55 processor with an NPU, 1GB of LPDDR4 memory, and 4GB of eMMC storage. Google is clearly treating this as a more capable local smart-home endpoint, not merely a cloud-connected speaker waiting for instructions.
Audio is handled by a single 58mm full-range driver designed for omnidirectional playback. Google calls the result balanced 360-degree sound, which sounds sensible for a small room speaker, podcasts, casual music listening, and background use. It is not a multi-driver Sonos Era 300, an Echo Studio, or anything pretending to replace a real stereo system. Google has not published amplifier power, frequency-response, or maximum-output figures, so any serious assessment of its musical performance will have to wait until retail units are available.
The microphone array is more important than the driver count. Google uses three far-field microphones and says its processing adapts to the room so Gemini can better understand natural requests, corrections, and follow-up questions. A two-stage physical microphone-mute switch remains on the hardware, which matters when the speaker is designed to keep up with a conversation rather than simply wake, answer, and go back to sleep.
Connectivity is also more current than Google’s last dedicated speaker generation. The Home Speaker supports Wi-Fi 6 on 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks, Bluetooth 5.4, and Thread 1.3, and it can serve as a Matter hub within Google Home. That gives it a legitimate role as a smart-home controller, not just a voice-controlled music puck. Google does not list direct Zigbee support, a line input, battery power, or a second driver in the published specifications; that is where Amazon’s Echo Dot Max and more ambitious wireless speakers retain practical advantages.
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For A/V users, the most interesting feature is the Google TV connection. Two Google Home Speakers can pair with a Google TV Streamer for spatial surround sound, while the speaker can also join groups with Nest speakers, Nest displays, and other Google Cast-enabled devices. It will not replace an AVR or a serious soundbar, but it gives Google a cleaner bridge between its smart-home and TV platforms than it has had in years.
The Bottom Line
Google’s strongest pitch is not that it suddenly has the deepest smart-speaker catalog. It does not. The more interesting shift is that Gemini can move beyond isolated commands and work with context. Gemini Live allows a more fluid back-and-forth conversation, while Help me create lets users build automations by describing what they want rather than digging through a settings menu like it is 2014. For Nest camera owners, the higher Google Home Premium Advanced tier can also search camera history and generate daily summaries of what happened while nobody was home.
That is useful, but it also exposes the catch. The speaker includes six months of Google Home Premium Standard, which unlocks Gemini Live and complex automation creation. After that, the fuller experience costs $10 per month, while the camera-history search and Daily Summaries features sit behind the $20-per-month Advanced tier. Google is selling a $99 speaker, but the differentiators that make Gemini feel genuinely different can turn into another household subscription before the year is out.
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Amazon remains the safer choice for Prime members, Ring households, and anyone who wants more hardware options. Alexa+ is included with Prime, and Amazon’s current AI-focused range includes the Echo Dot Max, Echo Studio, Echo Show 8, and Echo Show 11. The Echo Dot Max is particularly awkward competition at the same $99.99 price: it adds a two-way speaker system and supports Zigbee, Matter, and Thread, while Google lists Matter and Thread but not Zigbee support for the Home Speaker.
Apple is not yet competing on equal terms here. Siri AI has been announced for iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro, but Apple has not announced its availability for HomePod or tvOS. That leaves HomePod and HomePod mini as strong choices for Apple Music, AirPlay, HomeKit, and privacy-minded Apple households, but not yet direct rivals to Gemini Live or Alexa+ as conversational AI speakers.
The Google Home Speaker is the right choice for people already living with Nest cameras, Google TV, Android, and the Google Home app who want a more conversational assistant and smarter automations. Alexa+ remains the more complete option for Prime, Ring, Echo, and Zigbee households. Apple remains the obvious answer for people who want their smart home to stay firmly inside Cupertino’s walled garden, even if Siri AI has not yet arrived in the HomePod.
Sennheiser has launched its first serious challenger in the growing open-ear earbuds market, with the new Accentum Clip promising the situational awareness that this category is known for. It does so without sacrificing sound quality.
Open-ear earbuds have become increasingly popular among commuters, runners and gym-goers who want to stay aware of their surroundings while listening to music. However, the trade-off has often been weaker audio performance. That’s exactly what Sennheiser is aiming to address here.
The Accentum Clip uses a 12mm dynamic driver and carries Hi-Res Audio Wireless certification, with support for LDAC on compatible devices for higher-quality music streaming. In addition, Sennheiser has included a Dynamic EQ feature that automatically adjusts audio performance at lower volumes. This helps maintain bass and clarity without introducing distortion.
The earbuds feature a clip-style design that sits outside the ear canal rather than sealing it off. According to Sennheiser, this allows users to hear traffic, conversations and other environmental sounds naturally, without relying on transparency modes.
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Each earbud weighs just 6.8g and uses a flexible silicone bridge designed to fit a wide range of ear shapes. An IP54 rating means they’re protected against dust and sweat, making them a natural fit for workouts and outdoor use.
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Image Credit (Sennheiser)
Battery life is another highlight. The Accentum Clip can deliver up to nine hours of listening on a single charge, while the included charging case extends total playback to 36 hours. Notably, a quick 10-minute charge provides up to two hours of listening time.
Elsewhere, the earbuds are powered by Bluetooth 6.0. They support multipoint connectivity and Google Fast Pair. Furthermore, they use dual microphones with AI-powered noise reduction to improve call quality in noisy environments.
The Accentum Clip will be available in Black and Cream from 23 July 2026 in the UK, with pricing set at £149.
Adobe is bringing AI assistants to some of its biggest creative apps.
New chatbot-style tools are now rolling out in public beta for Photoshop, Premiere Pro, Illustrator, InDesign and Frame.io. The new assistants are designed to handle repetitive tasks and help users make edits using natural language prompts.
Rather than digging through menus or learning complex workflows, users can simply describe what they want to do. Then, the software does much of the heavy lifting.
For Photoshop users, that means being able to reorganise layers, swap backgrounds, resize assets for different platforms and make other edits by describing the desired result. It’s a broader version of the AI-powered editing tools Adobe has already introduced through Firefly. Furthermore, these tools are also in the web version of Photoshop.
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Premiere Pro is getting what could be one of the most useful implementations. The assistant can organise footage into bins, rename clips based on what’s happening in a scene and even analyse spoken dialogue to automatically place markers on a timeline. In addition, Adobe says it can also help create an initial video structure. This reduces some of the setup work that often comes before editing can begin.
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Illustrator’s assistant focuses on production tasks, helping users spot missing fonts, fix colour mode issues and reorganise layers. It can also generate multiple design variations from spreadsheets and documents.
Meanwhile, InDesign’s version is aimed at publishing workflows, allowing users to apply styling updates and print-readiness checks across entire layouts. Frame.io users can use the assistant to organise assets, surface revision notes and even suggest B-roll footage during the editing process.
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While each assistant is tailored to its respective app, they’re all powered by Adobe’s underlying “conversational creative agent” technology. Adobe says the goal is to give every creative professional an AI assistant that understands the tools they’re already using. Rather than offering a one-size-fits-all chatbot, Adobe aims for a more personalised experience.
The rollout marks one of Adobe’s biggest AI expansions yet. After introducing AI assistants to Express, Acrobat and Firefly, the company is now bringing the same prompt-driven approach directly into the Creative Cloud apps. These are the apps that many designers, photographers and video editors use every day.
Tech has taken over our lives. We have smartphones, smartwatches and smart TVs. There are even smart fridges, smart toilets and smart sex dolls. (Or, uh, so I hear.) And with the rise of AI, Big Tech is now jumping on the smartglasses bandwagon… again.
An analog rebellion is brewing. I recently went to a Barnes & Noble for the first time in well over a decade. I was surprised at how many young, hip people were there, scouring the print books and vinyl records. Then there’s the resurgence of digital cameras, film cameras and cassette tapes.
When smartwatches started popping up in the mid-2010s, they promised quick info at a glance without having to grab your phone. In theory, that meant freeing you up to engage with the world around you. But in practice? Well, over a decade later, not everyone finds that to be the case.
To be clear, nobody’s arguing that people are ditching smartwatches left and right. In fact, the market is steadily growing, not shrinking. But not everyone wants to keep marching in that direction.
“My smartwatch kept me attached to b******t I wanted it to get me away from,” born-again analog watch user RadioAdam posted. But not everyone needs to go back to the days of Casio and Timex. Minimal wearable tech products can track your fitness, just without feeling like you have a second phone on your wrist.
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Notification overload
The persistent nag of the online world can feel even more intrusive when it’s on your wrist. It’s one thing to hear your phone chirp in a pocket or bag. It’s another to have a wearable device poking you every time something comes in.
“I don’t want my wrist to communicate with me at all” u/NeoMoose wrote in the Whoop subreddit. “My phone is already too much distraction.” Of course, you can silence notifications. But at that point, you (like these smartwatch expats) might question how much you need one in the first place.
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Big Tech sold us the always-online lifestyle as a utopia. But the reality has too often resembled a dopamine-addiction hellscape. And if you’re looking to cut down on devices, smartwatches are an obvious candidate for the first item on your list.
Feature (and tracking) fatigue
Will Shanklin for Engadget
Smartwatches can suffer from feature creep. While an Apple Watch has potentially lifesaving ones like fall detection and the ability to call emergency services from your wrist, it (and its competitors) also have… lots of other stuff.
For instance, Redditor u/Adventurous_Rice_731 briefly switched from a minimal Whoop to a Garmin smartwatch and quickly regretted the decision. “Went to my first [workout] and realized how many times I was actively checking the screen, looking to see if all my reps were recording,” they posted. “Overall, I just found myself glued to it even during TV time.” Simpler devices could keep you focused on not just the task or activity at hand, but also help you stay present in moments.
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For some, health tracking can (ironically) increase stress. On top of that, when smartwatches and other fitness trackers measure things like sleep, stress and recovery, they’re merely estimates. Those things can’t be measured directly with a wrist-worn device, only approximated via advanced algorithms. Some people don’t see much point in using data that’s little more than an informed guess, as opposed to paying closer attention to their body.
In this economy?
Smartwatches, at least the most useful ones, can be expensive. For example, the Apple Watch Series 11 starts at $399. Samsung’s and Google’s alternatives are in the same ballpark. And while the Apple Watch SE is a more affordable $249 and up, it lacks several key health features (ECG, blood oxygen and hypertension monitoring).
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With inflation running rampant, it’s easy to cast a more critical eye on the value of a smartwatch. Sure, it’s nice not to have to whip out your phone to check messages or the forecast. But is it $400 nice? If all you want is health tracking, wearables like Google’s Fitbit Air and Nothing’s CMF Watch 3 Pro offer it for a small fraction of the price.
Road safety
Smartwatches may also make driving less safe. One study found that drivers were more distracted by smartwatch notifications than phone alerts. Glancing down at a watch seems more likely to take your eyes off the road than glancing at a phone, often mounted on a dashboard. (For the record, voice-based responses on either device were the least distracting.)
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Arguably, this one is more about applying common sense and self-control than it is about the device itself. But it’s another factor to weigh when questioning whether you need a screen on your body.
Style and substance
Cherlynn Low for Engadget
Tech companies do their best to make smartwatches look good. I’m in the camp that doesn’t mind the aesthetic of the Apple Watch and some of its rivals. But if I were basing my decision on style alone, above all else? I’d go with a sleek analog watch without hesitation.
The advantage of screenless tracking bands is that they’re typically subtle enough to wear alongside more stylish watches. They could also be easier to dress up or wear to events where smartwatches are frowned upon. And if you’re looking for something that still tells the time and tracks your steps while looking like a classic timepiece, there are hybrid smartwatches from companies like Withings and Garmin that could meet those needs.
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Opting for something simpler
Cherlynn Low for Engadget
If a smartwatch seems like a bit much, there are simpler and cheaper alternatives.
Screen-free fitness bands are having a moment with the recent launch of Google’s $100 Fitbit Air. The device, which impressed us in our review, is currently sold out everywhere. Whoop, the apparent inspiration for Google’s product, is another screenless contender with robust health tracking. However, it requires a subscription that ranges from $149 for the first year (then $199) to $359 annually, which can put some people off.
Then there are smart rings. Although they’re more expensive (the new Oura Ring 5 starts at $399), they excel at sleep tracking and recovery metrics. Of course, they also lack a screen and haptics, so it’s one less thing bugging you. There’s also the Samsung Galaxy Ring, a $400 competitor that’s often on sale for $300 at big-box retailers.
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As a bonus, these free up space on your wrist for an analog watch. “I can wear a mechanical watch and be more in the moment,” u/Th3p4l4d1n posted. “The Whoop allows me to do that more since it has auto workout tracking.” Plus, you don’t need to worry about charging classic timepieces. And they won’t become obsolete in a few years.
There’s no shortage of variety (in style and price) in that space. For example, Casio has a plethora of options, starting at $30. Or, for that matter, head to any jewelry or department store and have at it. And while old-school timepieces don’t promise the moon, they also won’t lower your attention span or raise your blood pressure.
Siri AI is turning out to be absolutely brilliant, except when it isn’t, plus there are now Snap Spectacles, and rumors about the iPhone Fold, on the AppleInsider Podcast.
Of course you haven’t been so foolish and reckless as to install the developer betas of iOS 27 and the rest. These do seem to be remarkably stable, but your two hosts have both had problems, and totally different ones.
They’re not calamitous problems, but these are the same betas, on similar devices, being used in the same way, yet giving completely different difficulties. So, seriously, stay away for now.
Although when Siri AI is at its best, it is superb and you will want to use it. Just be reassured that Siri AI is far from always at its best, and both hosts are hoping for some marked improvements before this is all released publicly.
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But speaking of releasing publicly, this week also saw the launch of another set of AR glasses. Snap has released its Snap Specs and from just the right angle, in just the right light, they still look poor.
Lastly, it wouldn’t be a week of Apple news without iPhone rumors, and there have been so many this time. From conflicting reports of delays with the iPhone Fold, to perhaps wishful thinking about an iPhone Air 2, we’ve got it all.
BONUS: Subscribe via Patreon or Apple Podcasts to hear AppleInsider+, the extended edition. This time, it’s about those different beta problems and just how it’s affecting our work.
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Waymo had to recall a similar number last month after it discovered a bug that allowed AVs to drive onto flooded roads.
A new recall notice shows that Waymo is pulling nearly 3,900 robotaxis from US streets over a software issue that lets autonomous vehicles (AVs) enter and drive in closed freeway construction zones.
“Under certain circumstances”, Waymo’s fifth-generation automated driving system (ADS) software could allow AVs to enter and drive “at speed” in freeway construction zones, according to the safety recall report filed with the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) on 17 June.
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The ADS in question is unable to recognise construction zones, or “inappropriately” prioritises avoiding other freeway hazards, the document noted. Waymo said it owns all of the 3,871 robotaxis it is recalling.
Mounting safety concerns alongside political roadblocks hindering its rollout plans in the US are bringing into question whether Waymo – or its competitors – might succeed in enabling wider robotaxi adoption.
Waymo said it began monitoring the latest issue after six separate incidents in April where its robotaxis failed to recognise, and drove past, ramp closure signs into pre-planned freeway construction zones in Arizona.
Seven similar incidents in mid-May saw Waymo AVs drive between traffic cones to enter freeway lanes with active construction in the San Francisco Bay Area. The company decided to recall the cars on 8 June.
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“We identified an area of improvement regarding performance around freeway construction zones,” the company said in a statement to news publications. “We voluntarily restricted freeway operations last month while making improvements, proactively notified state and federal regulators, and decided to file a voluntary software recall with NHTSA.”
This is the sixth recall Waymo has had to issue for its robotaxis, TechCrunch reported. In December, the company issued a software recall after its AVs drove dangerously around school buses. Other recalls involved low-speed collisions with gates and telephone poles.
Waymo is currently being investigated by the US vehicle safety authority after one of its AVs struck a child near a school in California.
‘If this pilot delivers what we expect, it adds real momentum to Ireland’s decarbonisation story,’ said Equinix’s Irish head Peter Lantry.
Global data centre giant Equinix is testing its first hydrogen-powered back-up units in Ireland.
The 12-week pilot programme will test two hydrogen power generators developed by UK clean energy company GeoPura situated at Equinix’s DB3 data centre in Dublin’s Blanchardstown. The units are currently being used to support cooling systems within the facility.
The three partners believe that the project could provide solutions for Ireland’s grid constraints, which faces mounting pressure from data centres that consumed 22pc of the country’s total metred electricity in 2024. That figure is only set to rise as more companies situate these massive energy users in Ireland.
Equinix and ESB said they will gain valuable data insights into carbon reduction potential as a result of the project, which could be beneficial to policymakers and universities as they assess Ireland’s renewable needs.
Currently, Ireland has 72 data centre buildings that created more than 850,000 jobs and added more than €100bn in annual gross value to the economy, according to a March report from KPMG. The Government says data centres directly employ only 21,000.
Meanwhile, climate activists say that the rapid expansion of data centres cost the Irish economy €715m between 2015 and 2023. Climate group Friends of the Earth, in a recent report, said that households could face an additional €1.43bn in electricity costs linked to data centre growth between 2026 and 2034.
“As data demand continues to grow, solutions like hydrogen power units offer a reliable, clean alternative to traditional backup generation,” said Paul Lennon, the head of asset development at ESB generation trading.
Peter Lantry, the managing director of Equinix Ireland said: “If this pilot delivers what we expect, it adds real momentum to Ireland’s decarbonisation story.”
The new hydrogen generators are a first for Equinix’s 280-plus data centre footprint worldwide. The two deployed generators have helped Equinix bring its power use effectiveness (PEU) – a metric used to measure the efficiency of power usage by data centres – to below 1.3, the company said.
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A lower PEU means data centres are using a majority of the energy consumed for computing. An ideal PEU is 1, which would mean that all the energy consumed by the facility is used for IT, with no overhead for cooling, lighting or other support.
The units, housed in shipping containers, are powered by green hydrogen and use advanced fuel cell technology that allows the system to produce “clean, silent” energy, Equinix said.
They make “zero” direct onsite emissions, and only produce water and heat as byproducts at the point of use. The back-up generators can also respond in real-time to changes in grid capacity and turn on on its own when needed.
“As demand for digital infrastructure continues to grow, operators are facing increasing pressure to secure reliable power, reduce emissions and minimise the impact on local communities,” said GeoPura CEO Andrew Cunningham.
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“This trial shows how hydrogen can help address those challenges today. By combining hydrogen fuel cell technology with battery systems and uninterruptible power capabilities, we’re delivering reliable zero direct onsite-emission power that can respond instantly when required.”
The partners also believe that hydrogen power in this context could offer a viable lower-carbon alternative for construction sites and other temporary power needs traditionally reliant on diesel generation. Hydrogen fuel units such as these are scalable up to 50 MW to support both backup and prime power applications.
According to the trio, the waste heat could also make potential uses for future district heating projects and the water can be recycled into the on-site cooling systems.
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The Hidden Cost of Cyber Risk report, found that often the challenges being faced by companies are as a result of everyday cyber disruption, rather than large scale isolated issues.
The eir business Hidden Cost of Cyber Risk report, which is supported by Microsoft and the Kemmy Business School of the University of Limerick, has found that on average cyber attacks are costing Irish small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) up to €3.4bn annually.
However, the greatest impact is not from large-scale, one-off breaches, but rather frequent, day-to-day cybersecurity-related disruptions, that are in turn, driving losses for many Irish companies.
Reportedly, SMEs lose more than 7.2m working days every year due to cyber incidents, with affected businesses experiencing multiple incidents annually. For individual firms, this equates to nearly three working weeks lost annually.
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Susan Brady, the managing director at eir business, said: “This report shows that cyber risk is not just about rare, large-scale attacks.
“For most SMEs, it is the cumulative impact of everyday incidents, from phishing emails and ransomware attempts to service disruptions, that drives significant loss of time and productivity. These risks affect not just individual businesses, but supply chains, customers and the wider business ecosystem.
Challenges big and small
The report noted that, while single events can have significant financial implications, research suggests that the cumulative effect of repeated disruption, downtime, lost productivity and operational interruption creates the greatest economic cost per SME annually. The report also found that “much of this impact is avoidable”, for organisations exhibiting higher ‘cyber preparedness’.
The report stated that the companies with more cyber preparedness tend to experience fewer incidents, lower overall losses and significantly less disruption. Moreover, the organisations with higher levels of preparedness can reduce annual downtime from more than 30 days to around five days, while structured data management significantly lowers the likelihood of experiencing an attack.
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Commenting on the report, the Minister of State at the Department of Enterprise, Tourism and Employment Alan Dillon, TD said, “Small and medium-sized enterprises are central to the Irish economy and ensuring they are resilient in an increasingly digital environment is critical.
“This research highlights the real and growing impact that cyber risk is having on businesses across the country, not just in financial terms, but in disrupted operations and lost productivity. However, with the right support, guidance and focus on practical measures, businesses can strengthen their resilience and reduce their exposure. “
Dr Mauricio Perez-Alaniz, an assistant prof in the Department of Economics, for the Kemmy Business School welcomed the attention to the issue. He said, “While SMEs are increasingly being reminded about the potential productivity and sustainability gains that can arise from the adoption of digital technologies, the issue of cyber risk, and the associated costs of cyberattacks, require more attention.
“This report seeks to do just that. It provides an intuitive approach to quantify the costs of cyber-attacks in terms of direct economic costs, and more importantly, potential costs associated with downtime. It is important to keep in mind that fully quantifying such costs is difficult. While the estimates presented by the report are necessarily high-level and resting on a set of assumptions, they offer important insights into the scale and nature of the issue.”
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In early June, ESET published a similar report, the SMB Cyber Readiness Index 2026, which also indicated that some organisations are neglecting to pay attention to everyday threats, amid a sharper focus on large-scale, one-off cyber incidents. The report found that businesses are risking harm and loss of profits by allowing threats perceived to be smaller, to ‘pass through’.
Previously commenting on the report, Michal Jankech, the vice-president of enterprise, SMB and MSP at ESET, said: “While 78pc of SMBs recognise cybersecurity’s strategic importance, inconsistent understanding of key threats, technology and terminology, including MDR and security posture, suggests there is still room for improvement. Any improvement will have to start with a reality check.
“We’ve found SMBs’ concerns are often shaped by headlines on emerging threats like AI-driven attacks, while more routine risks, phishing, unpatched vulnerabilities and lack of monitoring, are underestimated. This hints that many respondents misperceive their security posture and resilience.”
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Integrity360’s Richard Ford discusses the unease caused by Anthropic’s advanced cybersecurity AI model, and how cyber teams can prepare for such technology.
In the time since Anthropic first revealed Claude Mythos in April, discourse around the cybersecurity AI model has been unceasing.
Anthropic’s claims that Mythos has seemingly advanced capabilities in finding and exploiting software security vulnerabilities caused a frenzy in public and private sectors around the world – including in Ireland.
“The issue is not that Anthropic has created this. The issue is that Anthropic has demonstrated that this is possible,” said Richard Browne, director of the National Cyber Security Centre, when speaking to the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Artificial Intelligence shortly after the Mythos reveal.
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Mythos has not been released to the general public yet, though Anthropic had been granting access to a pool of companies, banks and authorities – that is, before a recent US government order resulted in the company disabling the model for all of its users.
But while institutions and governments panic over the capabilities of this new AI model, Integrity360 CTO Richard Ford says Mythos should be approached with “measured scrutiny rather than hype”.
“Based on the information available so far, the model appears capable as an autonomous attack tool, but there is no clear evidence that it materially outperforms existing large language models in this area,” he tells SiliconRepublic.com.
“The more important point is how it could be used. In the hands of threat actors, Mythos does not need to be revolutionary to be dangerous.
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“It would still be highly effective when targeting organisations with weak security postures, particularly those lacking strong access controls, patching discipline and visibility across their environments.”
Hype and disruption
Ford says that much of what is driving both the hype and the concern around Mythos comes from self-reported results, with limited independent validation.
This makes it difficult to separate genuine technical advancement from narrative, he says.
“There is a legitimate question around whether the capabilities are being overstated or simply presented without enough context.
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“Early claims of large-scale vulnerability discovery sound significant, but without external benchmarking or reproducibility, it is hard to assess how meaningful those findings are in practice.”
Ford adds that in the light of Anthropic’s previous difficulties with the US government, sceptics could reasonably question whether the Mythos announcement was “partly about shaping perception as much as demonstrating capability”.
But what if the purported sophistication of Mythos is as significant as Anthropic claims?
“If the claims hold true, there is a clear view that models like Mythos could begin to disrupt areas such as bug bounty programmes and the wider ethical hacking market,” says Ford. “The concern is not that human researchers become obsolete overnight, but that AI can significantly accelerate vulnerability discovery, shifting the balance in terms of speed, scale and cost.
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“We are already seeing early indicators of this trend. AI-driven platforms are performing strongly in competitive CTF environments, where rapid analysis, pattern recognition and automation provide a clear advantage.
“That raises questions about how traditional bug bounty ecosystems evolve, especially if AI can identify issues faster than human researchers or commoditise parts of the process.”
How can organisations prepare?
Though Mythos has not been fully released to the public yet – and is currently disabled as of last week – Ford has some advice for cybersecurity teams regarding the eventual widespread availability of AI models such as Mythos.
“Cybersecurity teams should treat models like Mythos as an acceleration of existing threats rather than something entirely new,” he says. “The priority is getting the fundamentals right, because AI will exploit weaknesses faster, not differently.
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“Strong identity controls, consistent patching and full visibility of assets remain critical. Organisations that lack these basics will be the easiest targets for AI-assisted attacks. In short, the better your fundamentals, the more resilient you will be as AI-driven threats become mainstream.”
Ford says organisations should avoid reacting to Mythos with panic, but should also take its implications seriously.
“The direction of travel is clear: AI is becoming embedded in both attack and defence,” he says.
He believes any organisation that is not building an AI-driven cyber defence will fall behind and “move directly into the crosshairs of attackers”.
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“That does not mean chasing hype, but it does mean investing in capabilities that improve speed, scale and decision-making across detection and response,” he explains.
“At the same time, this only works if the fundamentals are in place. The organisations that will succeed will be those that combine solid core controls with intelligent automation, allowing them to keep pace as the threat landscape continues to accelerate.”
The reveal of Mythos has undoubtedly rocked the boat in relation to AI and its place in cybersecurity.
But while many worry about the impact of Mythos’s capacity for cyber exploitation, Ford believes the most significant long-term effect of such AI technology will be “a structural shift” in how quickly and cheaply cyberattacks can be executed – rather than a single breakthrough capability.
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“If models like Mythos mature as suggested, they will compress the time between identifying an exposure and exploiting it,” he says. “Tasks that once required skilled researchers and time investment, such as reconnaissance, vulnerability discovery, and initial exploitation, will become increasingly automated and scalable.
“That changes the economics of cyberattacks, allowing threat actors to operate at higher volume and with greater efficiency. All of this depends of course on whether Mythos is indeed just hype or the real deal.”
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Netgear Orbi 970 (2-Pack) for $1,300: There’s no denying that the tri-band Wi-Fi 7 Netgear Orbi 970 is an impressive quad-band mesh. This mesh system is incredibly fast, reliable, and provides expansive coverage with plenty of high-speed Ethernet ports. However, the astronomical price makes it hard to recommend. You can get similar performance for less, and full parental controls now require a separate subscription from the security software. Ultimately, this system is only worth considering if you have a large home, a multi-gig connection, and a generous budget.
More Wi-Fi 6 or 6E Mesh Systems I Liked
TP-Link Deco XE70 Pro
Photograph: Simon Hill
TP-Link Deco XE70 Pro (3-Pack) for $250: Support for Wi-Fi 6E, which operates on the 6-GHz band, is common, but with Wi-Fi 7 rolling out, 6E routers and mesh systems like this are falling in price. A two-pack of this tri-band mesh system is relatively affordable and enough to cover most homes, making this perhaps the best Wi-Fi 6E mesh for most people. I also tested the XE75 ($270 for a three-pack), which is almost identical, but has three Gigabit ports and no multi-Gig. There is also the XE75 Pro ($400 for a three-pack), which features the 2.5-Gbps port and theoretically offers slightly more bandwidth but is far more expensive. Since TP-Link frequently discounts its products, the standard model is the best choice for most people—though multi-gig users should opt for the Pro.
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TP-Link Deco X50 Outdoor for $150: This was our previous outdoor pick, and it’s still a good dual-band Wi-Fi 6 router that will form a mesh with any Deco system (I tested with the Deco X50 4G). It’s a solid performer, but with the Wi-Fi 7 BE25 Outdoor coming in around the same price, I’d pick that instead.
TP-Link Deco X55 (3-Pack) for $150: This affordable Wi-Fi 6 mesh delivers decent coverage and performance, with optional parental controls and antivirus protection, making it ideal for a modest family home. This is a dual-band system (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz). There are two gigabit Ethernet ports on each router. Coverage and speeds are solid, falling short of the Asus XT8 but beating systems like the entry-level Eero 6.
Google Nest Wifi Pro
Photograph: Simon Hill
Google Nest Wifi Pro (3-Pack) for $400: Mesh systems don’t come much simpler than this. Google’s Nest Wifi Pro is a tri-band (2.4, 5, and 6 GHz) Wi-Fi 6E system that works via Google Home, and each router sports two 1-gigabit ports. The setup is super simple, coverage and performance were solid and consistent, and my testing was refreshingly free from glitches and buffering, though WIRED editor Julian Chokkattu had issues that Google’s customer support could not fix. The Nest Wifi Pro came mid-table in raw speed at short, mid, and long range, and settings in the Home app are very bare-bones. Disappointingly, it is not backward compatible with older Nest routers.
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TP-Link Deco X20 (3-Pack) for $130: The Deco X20 is an affordable Wi-Fi 6 mesh that delivers decent coverage and performance, with optional parental controls and antivirus protection, making it ideal for an average family home. This dual-band (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz) mesh was our budget pick for a long time, and there are two gigabit Ethernet ports on each router. Coverage and speeds are decent, falling short of the Asus XT8 but beating systems like the entry-level Eero 6. The app is straightforward, and it’s easy to set up a guest network. Originally released with the free HomeCare software, this has since changed to a HomeShield system, so it’s not as good a bargain as it once was.
Linksys Velop Pro 6E
Courtesy of Linksys
Linksys Velop Pro 6E (2-Pack) for $280: Once up and running, this tri-band (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 6 GHz) Wi-Fi 6E system offers impressive range and decent speeds. It is competitively priced with quite a few dips in cost (don’t pay full price), comes with basic parental controls, and offers handy features like device prioritization and a guest network. But I had a terrible time with the installation. The app continually failed partway through the process, and I had to factory reset the routers. Even then, it took multiple attempts to add the nodes. It’s also not backward compatible with older Velop “Intelligent Mesh” systems, because this is a “Cognitive Mesh” system.
TP-Link XE200 (2-Pack) for $290: This tri-band Wi-Fi 6E mesh system (2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 6 GHz) was fast, offered consistently wide coverage, and blew away the Wi-Fi 6 competition at close range. I downloaded a 50-GB game in 20 minutes and didn’t encounter any issues during testing. As it uses the 6 GHz band for backhaul, you have to think about placement and try to keep routers in sight of each other and within 50 feet (or better, connect them via Ethernet cable). While the XE200 is better than the XE70 Pro above, it’s simply too expensive, though it has seen some deep discounts recently, so keep an eye out for deals.
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