HANDS ON Even after 60 releases, to borrow Carlsberg’s slogan, OpenBSD is probably the most secure FOSS Unix-like OS in the world.
OpenBSD 7.9 arrived just a couple of days after
project lead Theo de Raadt’s birthday. Our congratulations to both. The
last four months or so have seen the fastest succession of security
issues in Linux that we can remember in the project’s existence so far,
but OpenBSD sails on serenely.
Back in March, Anthropic announced that
its Claude Mythos LLM had found a successful OpenBSD attack – but it
wasn’t a hole. A TCP/IP packet with malformed Selective
Acknowledgement options could crash the kernel. This was a real
problem, and the bug that caused it went back 27 years, but it doesn’t
let anyone in. The OpenBSD developers had already included a fix
for the bug two weeks earlier, so OpenBSD 7.8 users would get it the
next time they ran sysupdate, and it is of course fixed in
this version.
LXQt on OpenBSD, because you don’t have to live in an xterm if you don’t want to
The new features in version 7.9 are relatively modest. On x86-64
machines – which it terms amd64 – 7.9 now supports a
maximum of 255 processor cores, and fixes a bug on machines with over
512 GB of RAM. It can also handle up to 52 partitions per disk.
Internally, there can be up to 64, but the limit is now the number of lowercase and uppercase letters of the Roman alphabet, which it uses in
labels.
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On x86-64 and Arm64, the CPU scheduler now understands heterogeneous
CPU cores with different performance levels, and can assign processes to
four different performance levels described by the letters S-P-E-L,
denoting SMT, performance, efficient, and lethargic.
This should improve power management, and another feature called
“delayed hibernation” can also help. Rather than letting a suspended
laptop simply turn off if its battery runs out, when power levels get
very low, the machine will wake up then immediately hibernate – a
process that ends with it turning completely off. OpenBSD still doesn’t have a
journaling file system. It uses FFS2, an improved
version of the original Berkeley Fast File
System developed by Kirk McKusick. This used to include a
performance enhancement called soft updates (McKusick’s
own explanation) but these were removed
in 2023. That means that turning off a running machine without
shutting it down could cause disk corruption. Delayed hibernation will
help prevent one cause of that, at least.
The release announcement also lists other changes, including improved support for RISC-V boards, basic support for Wi-Fi 6, the
graphics driver stack from Linux kernel 6.18, and even more
optimizations to the already-low-latency sound driver stack. There are
various tweaks and bug fixes for the various RISC
platforms it supports. Version upgrades include LibreSSL 4.3.0,
OpenSSH 10.3, and many improvements to the Berkeley Packet Filter (bpf) and Packet Filter firewall (pf), including source
and state limiters.
Desktop use is not the primary goal of OpenBSD, but you certainly
can. It includes multiple window managers and desktops, as documented
in its handbook – although this is slightly out of date. Version 7.9
includes GNOME 49, KDE Plasma 6.6, MATE 1.28, Xfce 4.20, LXQt 2.2, and
various more minimal window managers. It has its own X11 server, Xenocara, based on X.org 7.7 and
Xserver 21.1.21, but you can also run XLibre with some manual effort,
and some desktops support Wayland. There is also a downstream project to
build a live bootable medium called FuguIta, although it hasn’t caught up
with the new release just yet.
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OpenBSD releases are each accompanied by a unique banner painting and theme tune. This time, it’s a swinging jazz instrumental called Diamond in
the Rough [MP3], which we really enjoyed. It’s by Bob Kitella, who along
with de Raadt is one of the team at the Alberta internet
exchange YYCIX.
Calling OpenBSD a diamond in the rough seems quite
appropriate. It does have some significant gaps in its
functionality, but it is small, clean, and secure. We very much enjoyed
a recent essay on ascetic computing by
Dave “Ratfactor” Gauer, in
which he discusses why his OS of choice is OpenBSD.
Out there in the chaos of the open source communities on the social
networks that this vulture visits, we often encounter great resistance
when we tell people that they’re experiencing problems because of their
poor choice of equipment. For an easy life and a reliable computing
experience, we advise against wireless devices (peripherals or
networks), Bluetooth audio devices, and so on. The vicissitudes of
Nvidia support on Linux have long been well understood, and eloquently
conveyed by Torvalds himself.
Avoid this stuff, use devices with plain old cables, and things tend
to work more easily and more reliably. Here, we are coming to
appreciate the OpenBSD stance on Bluetooth, for instance: it simply does
not support it at all. This approach reminds us of the way that Python
sliced through the Gordian knot of indentation styles. For instance,
this C
style guide [PDF] identifies 14 named indentation systems. Python
dispenses with all that by making indentation syntactically significant,
ending the flame wars at a stroke. Of course, many veterans howl their
dismay and rage at this – and yet Python consistently ranks as the
world’s favorite language, over
and over
and over
again. OpenBSD cuts through some of the complexities of Linux and
the other BSDs in a broadly similar way.
No LLM-created code has been committed directly into OpenBSD as yet – and it looks unlikely, if only for copyright reasons, as de Raadt laid
out in March. The tmux changes were grandfathered in indirectly because OpenBSD has included tmux in its base system since 2009. We’ve
looked at the changes and they seem small, clean, and innocuous to us.
Arguably, the objection is an ideological one of purity. We fear that
OpenBSD may end up on the Open
Slopware list we mentioned in January. When we reported
recently on Fedora and Ubuntu’s AI moves, we mentioned the Stop slopware site and the No-AI Software
Directory. This probably means OpenBSD won’t appear on the latter either, but we suspect that the team will not care.
OpenBSD version upgrades are relatively simple, straightforward, and well
documented. So, to take 7.9 for a spin, we first tried it in a
VirtualBox VM. Although it’s a small OS, it wants a large virtual drive because by default it creates nine separate partitions, and
because of their different permissions, they’re a key part of the OS’s
enviable security. Worse still, their sizes cannot be dynamically
adjusted. Since the installation program is a very low-tech plain-text
affair, it offers no help with customizing the layout: if you don’t like
its proposal, then you must devise your own completely from scratch. It
really would help massively if OpenBSD had some kind of simple Logical
Volume Manager.
Give it enough space, though, and installation goes smoothly. We
also tried on the bare metal of an old Lenovo ThinkPad X220, with its
own dedicated 128 GB SSD. This threw up an interesting wrinkle: it found
the machine’s Wi-Fi controller no problem, identifying it as an
Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6205 – but because the necessary firmware was not included on the 761 MiB ISO
download, it couldn’t activate the device, even though it let us enter our WLAN credentials. That’s a problem, as the installer defaults to
fetching the installation file sets from the internet. We plugged in an
Ethernet cable, and then installation continued and finished
successfully. The installer automatically installed the required
firmware package, so on our first reboot, the Wi-Fi connection came
online all on its own.
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Installing this vulture’s preferred desktop
environment was as simple as logging in as root and
entering pkg_add xfce. Selecting it is not quite so easy,
though: OpenBSD’s display manager, xenodm,
lacks the ability to choose a desktop environment. To fix that, we
needed a one-line, two-word script: create an ~/.xsession file containing exec startxfce4, and that was it – a fully working graphical desktop. We added a second monitor, and it was
detected, added, and enabled automatically, and we could set it to
portrait mode in Xfce’s display settings.
Although the X11
section of the OpenBSD Handbook says that KDE’s
recently replaced SDDM is available, as far as we can tell, it has been removed from 7.9 – as has Ubuntu’s LightDM. Even so,
just saying “yes” when the installation program asks if you want GUI
results in a working Fvwm 2.2.5
environment.
The Reg FOSS desk has been exploring OpenBSD since version
7.1 in 2022, including 7.2, 7.5, 7.6, 7.7,
and 7.8.
It’s still not an easy OS to install, but if you can dedicate a computer
to it, installation is much easier. We recommend avoiding complexities
like dual-booting and multiple drives. As a small bonus, it boots and
installs perfectly from a Ventoy
multi-OS USB key.
OpenBSD still supports x86-32, there’s no trace of systemd and never
will be, and if you really want GNOME or KDE, you can have them.
Bringing up a GUI-based system remains substantially easier than it does
on FreeBSD. If you’re prepared to obtain the hardware it wants, rather
than hoping that it will support whatever kit you happen to already
have, this is an excellent way to improve your Unix skills – as well as
starting to enjoy computing again, free of the distractions of shinier
FOSS OSes. ®
Dunbar Pharma’s Leah Fletcher discusses Ireland’s potential in the cannabinoid therapy landscape and how breaking the traditional is a critical step towards advancement.
Leah Fletcher is the co-founder and CEO of Irish biopharmaceutical Dunbar Pharma, which specialises in researching, developing and manufacturing EU-GMP-certified, plant-based active pharmaceutical ingredients.
A fan of the non-traditional route, Fletcher first began her career as a teacher in an Irish national school and then a school in British Columbia, Canada before taking a “huge leap from classroom to cleanroom”.
Her time teaching had instilled within her a deep interest in the human capacity to learn, adapt and navigate complexity, as well as how policy inevitably shapes society when there is a widening gap between what exists and what people are in need of.
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She told SiliconRepublic.com, “My interest in cannabinoid medicines began while I was living in Canada around the time cannabis was legalised there. I was fascinated by how quickly the conversation around the plant was changing and how emotional, political and commercial it was. At the same time, I was aware of campaigners in Ireland, many of them mothers, lobbying for access to cannabinoid therapies for their children.”
As a new mother herself, this change in how the plant was being viewed and its potential made a significant impact and she began to think more often about the emerging gap between patient needs, the room for public debate and safe, regulated access.
Fletcher said, “I became interested in how cannabinoids could be moved away from uncertainty and placed into a pharmaceutical framework: evidence, quality, consistency, compliance and patient safety. I saw pharmaceutical systems not as a barrier, but as a solution.”
But, as is often the case with anything worth doing correctly, it wasn’t all plain sailing for Fletcher as she began this new venture.
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Personal or professional progress
“It would not be fair to paint a rosy picture. This has likely been one of the toughest professional journeys I will ever experience. One of the biggest obstacles has been the personal sacrifice of building something from the ground up,” said Fletcher.
She noted the importance of finding balance in entrepreneurship, but admitted that balance isn’t always possible and when you are missing family events, weddings and birthdays because of work in a lab, a conference, or travel, there is often a lack of honest, open conversation on the topic.
She said, “When you are building something you believe can improve people’s lives, there is a window where you have to give your whole self to it. That does not mean it is easy or sustainable forever, but in start-up mode, you have to be ready for whatever moves the project forward. It gets easier once the biggest hurdles are complete and a strong team is in place, but the early years require enormous resilience.”
Coming from a non-traditional, non-pharma background also presented a significant challenge for Fletcher as she found herself in a technical, regulated industry that required her to learn new language, systems and standards and to meet expectations. She explained the easiest way to navigate such a change is to accept and expect that you are likely the “least experienced person in the room”.
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But the highlights for Fletcher have been deeply personal as well as professional.
She said, “One of the greatest privileges has been building things from scratch with my husband as co-founder and my father as facilities manager. It has been a family affair and something my young son has witnessed as he grows up. When he was a toddler, he used to say, ‘Mama makes magic potions’. There is no magic, but I love that, through his eyes, the work looked magical.”
Ireland and the global stage
Describing Ireland’s cannabinoid therapy landscape as “cautious and tightly controlled”, Fletcher explained that while access to therapies does exist it is limited and often focused on specific, treatment-resistant conditions.
“That reflects where we are as a country,” she said. “There is interest, but also a need for more clinical confidence, education and structured pathways. Ireland’s potential is much bigger than its domestic market. We already have a global reputation in pharmaceutical manufacturing, compliance, quality and life sciences talent.
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“Those strengths matter because the future of cannabinoid medicines will be built on pharmaceutical credibility. Ireland also has world-class academic work happening around cannabinoid science and applications, including research activity at University of Galway, Trinity College Dublin and others. The knowledge base is here. The pharmaceutical infrastructure is here. The manufacturing discipline is here. The question is whether we connect those strengths well enough to create more home-grown pharmaceutical companies.”
She explained, businesses receive significant support from committed Irish investors and agencies such as Enterprise Ireland, but added, if Ireland wants more indigenous pharmaceutical companies to be able to compete globally, then the country is in need of stronger, flexible funding options for scale-up companies in regulated sectors.
Fletcher said, “Life sciences companies do not scale like software companies. Timelines are longer, regulation is heavier, capital requirements are different and risk is more complex.
“A company may need to fund licensing, controlled-drug permissions, facility build-out, cleanrooms, validation, stability programmes, specialist equipment and skilled teams before meaningful commercial traction is possible. That requires patient capital and policy structures that understand the sector.
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“For cannabinoid therapies, Ireland could become a specialist hub for high-quality cannabinoid APIs, formulation, analytical development and regulated international supply. There could be many more companies like Dunbar Pharma contributing to global medicine, local employment and the Irish economy. Sometimes the difference is not talent or ambition; it is whether funding and policy supports are designed for the realities of building regulated pharma companies from the ground up.”
Real world impact
And it isn’t just the economy that would benefit from additional support in building up healthcare-based start-ups. Fletcher stated that the creation and availability of alternative therapies for patients is critical, but implementation and access must be carried out responsibly. Especially in an environment where many people are living with conditions that are difficult to treat and manage.
She said, “Innovation matters because patients deserve continued effort, not resignation. Alternative therapies must be held to high standards. Hope is powerful, but it has to be protected by evidence, quality and ethics. In cannabinoid medicine, public perception can be polarised, so innovators must avoid overpromising and build systems clinicians, pharmacists and patients can trust.
“It is also not enough to simply have the medicine. Access has to be designed into the system. Across Europe, we are seeing movement towards more practical access models: telemedicine, better private coverage, fewer barriers to specialist consultations, pharmacist-led models and more sensible scheduling of controlled drugs where appropriate.”
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She is firmly of the belief that Ireland’s innovators and entrepreneurs have the skill needed to make an impact in the space of cannabinoid therapies, it just requires a dose of bravery, industry know-how and support.
Fletcher said, “Ireland has the talent, discipline and scientific credibility to build serious companies in complex technical sectors. We do not always need innovation to come from large multinationals or major global hubs. Smaller Irish teams can do ambitious, globally relevant work too.”
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LG’s best OLED yet? The OLED65G6 delivers an excellent picture performance across a range of sources. There are a few flaws and aspects I’m not fond of, but this is a strong start to LG’s 2026 TV line-up
Bright, colourful, accurate-looking HDR picture
Impressive upscaling
Anti-reflection panel
Robust gaming performance
Wealth of entertainment options
Sound system is just ‘fine’
Apps ringfenced webOS sign-up
Dolby Vision x Filmmaker mode doesn’t seem to ‘adapt’
Anti-glare panel produces purple colour
Game mode is a little too bright and sounds a too sharp
SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10208579
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Key Features
Hyper Radiant Colour Tech
2nd Gen panel of the Primary RGB OLED panel
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LG Shield Security
Secures data, offers multi-year updates
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Dolby Atmos FlexConnect
Supports wireless immersive sound
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Introduction
Another year, another G-series OLED from LG. But don’t assume that this is another rehash because there have been changes under the hood.
LG has bet big on OLED with only Samsung as its main challenger, while others have placed their chips on alternatives such as Mini LED and RGB TVs.
The reasoning behind Mini LED/RGB is that they offer higher brightness, wider colour range and better performance in bright rooms. LG disagrees.
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And with the OLED G6, it’s taking on the naysayers to disprove the notion that OLED may be inferior.
This is LG’s brightest OLED yet, and more than a decade after it launched its first OLED, it wants customers to know that OLED is still the best in the business.
So the gloves are off (again). Can LG’s G6 OLED knock its RGB rivals out, or is this going to go the distance?
Design
Stand or wall-mount version
Vanta Black Anti-Reflective panel
Strong viewing angles
There haven’t really been any significant changes to LG’s design of the G6-series in years – ‘if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it’.
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The stand takes about four minutes to assemble, but it seems to be the same as the G5 and G4 stands. Of course, if you buy the wall-mounted version, you just deal with hanging it up on your preferred surface. Connections are side- and downward-facing for feeding sources to the TV.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
The stand is adjustable. You can hang it in its low orientation, or if you want to put a soundbar below, put the stand into its high position.
The OLED65G6 features LG’s Vanta Black Anti-Reflective coating to reduce reflections and maintain black levels in a bright room. Black levels remain strong, but I don’t find the G6 necessarily as good as Samsung’s glare-free OLEDs at mitigating glare and reflections. That said, the S95H does raise blacks slightly in a dark room but the OLED G6’s panel does create a purple tinge to reflections.
Wide angles are very strong, and while brightness and colour saturation do tail off, you’d have to be very wide and far to notice this.
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User Experience
Five-year software updates
LG webOS platform
LG’s webOS interface still fundamentally looks like the webOS it’s been for the last few years. There’s no room for Freely but all the UK catch-up and on-demand apps are provided, side-by-side with the big global apps such as Disney+, Netflix and Apple TV.
Accessing these apps requires an LG account. In previous years, this was ring-fenced to some but not all apps; now it’s required for all apps. It’s not a change most will like unless they already have an LG account.
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You get five years of updates with LG’s Re:New program that guarantees four major software updates.
The interface itself is swift and responsive. Scrolling down to the bottom doesn’t take long, the interface free from clutter or meaningless diversions. There are ads, of course, but I don’t find them intrusive. Flick to the left and you’ll be received by LG’s Information Board, which offers weather updates, Google Calendar and any smart tech in your Home Hub.
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Given this is the G-Series TV (which once upon a time stood for Gallery), there is LG’s Gallery+ app, where you turn the G6 into a picture painting (not to be confused with LG’s Gallery TV, which can also do the same thing). A subscription is required, but there’s free content alongside AI-generated… things.
With the LG Sports app, you can keep track of your favourite teams across a range of sports, as well as access content via Prime Video, YouTube, Apple TV, and DAZN. Currently, there’s a spotlight on the World Soccer Festival (you can guess what that is).
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Gaming
Cloud gaming
4K/165Hz for PC gaming
AMD and Nvidia VRR
LG still pushes the G-Series as a gaming TV despite its more lifestyle focus, and I measured input lag remains quick at 12.9ms. All four HDMI 2.1 inputs support ALLM, VRR and 4K/120Hz.
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PC gamers get a boosted 165Hz refresh rate with both AMD FreeSync Premium and Nvidia G-Sync included. There’s also Dolby Vision Gaming (4K/120Hz) and the HGIG standard, which covers off most of the gaming HDR formats aside from HDR10+ Gaming.
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For further tweaking, press the Settings button when the TV is in its game mode, and the Game Optimiser pop-up allows for deeper customisation, including adjusting black levels or switching the Game Genre setting to optimise for specific game types.
Head to LG’s gaming portal and that has cloud gaming options in GeForce NOW (which supports 4K/120Hz in the cloud), Amazon Luna, Xbox app, Utomik, and Blacknut, while Twitch broadcasting is built in too.
Connectivity
Four HDMI 2.1 inputs
Bluetooth
If this feels like Déjà vu, then that’s because nothing much has changed on the connectivity front. There are four HDMI 2.1 inputs, one of which supports eARC for a sound system. Other HDMI 2.1 features include QFT to reduce latency during gaming and QMS, which eliminates black screens when switching to other HDMI sources.
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The rest covers a headphone output, digital optical output, two RF aerials for broadcasts, Ethernet, three USB 2.0 inputs, and a CI+ 1.4 common interface slot.
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That’s virtually the same as it’s been for the last few years, which is fine, though the Hisense UR9 drops a HDMI input for a DisplayPort, which is different from the accepted norm.
This is the second year of LG Display’s Primary RGB Tandem panels, and the G6 is upping brightness further.
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This year, it boasts what LG calls its Hyper Radiant Colour Tech, and along with the Alpha 11 AI Processor Gen3, it says it can boost peak brightness by 3.9 times.
That sounds like the usual marketing mumbo jumbo that doesn’t mean much to most people. I wasn’t able to record the figures of the OLED65G5 as I didn’t have the necessary equipment, but now I do and the OLED65G6 is one of the brightest OLEDs I’ve tested. In its Standard mode it registers the following:
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HDR Window (%)
Nits
2
2668
5
2499
10
2458
100
400
The OLED65G6 can go even brighter, registering above 3000 nits in Filmmaker and Vivid modes, while very briefly reaching 4000 nits in the latter. If you’re of the opinion that OLEDs aren’t bright enough to watch during the day, the OLED G6 rebuffs that. And I suspect that when the G7 turns up, it’ll be even brighter.
HDR support covers HDR10, HLG, and Dolby Vision, and LG says there’s Dolby Vision x ambient Filmmaker mode, though as I’ll get to later, I’m not entirely convinced this is the case.
The 4.2-channel system has 60W of power at its disposal. On paper, it’s the same as the OLED65G5 model, but LG has re-tuned it to sound warmer and offer more bass. As always, we’ll hear whether that’s the case.
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LG’s α11 AI Sound Pro feature claims to up-mix Dolby Atmos sound to 11.1.2 virtual channels, and I’d recommend using it – it’s a much more expansive sound when enabled.
WOW Orchestra combines the TV’s speakers with an LG soundbar to create a bigger sound, but the OLED65G6 also supports Dolby Atmos FlexConnect and will work with the Sound Suite speaker system LG launched in 2026.
The G6 features AI experiences powered by Google Gemini and Microsoft Copilot, which you can mostly (if not completely) avoid. LG’s Shield security system protects your data through the cloud and in real-time.
Picture Quality
Crisp, clear, detailed 4K images
Not the brightest Dolby Vision performance
Slick motion processing
There’s been a lot of kerfuffle surrounding the launch of LG’s new 2026 TVs. Reviewers have mentioned different issues, different firmware updates – it’s all been a slightly messy rollout.
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On my part, the G6 OLED I received seemed to have firmware dating back to 2024, which I couldn’t believe and thought I’d misread, but I updated the TV anyway. I’ve not experienced the issues some have, but there is one issue I’d like to point out.
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I don’t think the Dolby Vision x Filmmaker mode is working properly.
On its website, LG notes it is the ‘ambient’ version of Filmmaker mode, but this is either not true, or it’s not working. Dolby Vision x Filmmaker mode is dark – and it’s meant to be like that as it’s tuned for watching with the lights off. The problem is that when the TV asks you to watch in this mode, it doesn’t compensate for ambient light. In a bright room, it’s so dark that detail is missing. I’ve turned on the AI Brightness mode in the settings, and that’s had zero effect.
Dolby x Filmmaker
Dolby Vision Home Cinema
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Whether it was night-time scenes in Civil War, Dune or Sinners; detail is lost to the darkness in a bright room. Switching to Dolby Vision Home Cinema fixed this, but every time the LG G6 OLED receives a Dolby Vision signal, it’ll ask to watch in Filmmaker mode. My advice is to decline unless you’re watching in a dark room.
Aside from that, the LG OLED65G6 looks terrific in virtually all its picture modes. It’s not a massive increase in a real-world sense from the G5, but it is better.
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Colours are rich, punchy, varied, but also seem accurate out of the box. Compared to a Hisense UR9 sat alongside it for the majority of testing, colours, shades and tones always seem to strike a better expression on the LG, with a more convincing performance.
Sharpness and detail are excellent; the OLED65G6 wrings every last bit of detail from the dank corridors and rusty surfaces of the Romulus station in Alien: Romulus; better than the Hisense UR9, which is softer, not as sharp and not as defined.
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Where the LG loses points is with dark detail, which, while good across the films I demo on the OLED65G6, there are instances where black levels are a little impenetrable. But overall, black levels are rich and rock solid. There’s not a raised black in sight, even in a brightly lit test room. The pixel-perfect control of black levels means OLED TVs still reign over backlit LCD TVs.
In Disney’s Soul when Joe falls into The Great Beyond, highlights are rendered brightly, the sense of contrast from the TV is greater than the Hisense UR9, the pixel-perfect dimming also means it’s more precise with the starfield, picking out the varying brightness of the stars clearly and sharply.
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It’s even more notable with Interstellar as they travel through the wormhole into another galaxy. As the camera pans past stars, the LG picks up more stars – and therefore more detail – than is visible on the Hisense.
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With HDR10 content, the LG can feature white tones that are a little less bright – especially the ‘Construct’ scene in The Matrix Resurrections where Neo wakes up in a white room. Full-screen brightness is an area where Mini LEDs still have the advantage.
The Vivid mode features colours that are punchy, pure and rich – a boost in colour volume over the Home Cinema mode with a wider range of colours, and a performance that’s more balanced than it has been in recent years.
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Brightness is excellent, contrast is terrific, detail levels are excellent and motion is handled with few issues. The Vivid mode boosts brightness and colours in all the right places, and it does so without adding distracting noise or garish colours. There are moments where it is oversaturated, but this the best Vivid mode I’ve seen on an LG TV.
A brief note on the Game Optimiser mode. It’s a little too bright to my eyes, and seems to introduce some clipping (loss of detail) with bright sources.
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Upscaling
Impressive levels of detail
While the LG G6 OLED handles HDR content impressively well, most tend to watch in HD rather than 4K. It’s a good thing the OLED65G6 continues its excellent performance in this area.
With a Blu-ray of Mad Max: Fury Road, colours strike the right look (the red-orange of the ‘wasteland’, the blue skies, the white tones of the clouds). The LG uncovers more detail than the Hisense UR9 with a clearer sense of sharpness and finer detail visible. The LG retrieves more detail in the characters’ clothing, revealing more of the wear and tear they’ve been through.
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The same is true with a Blu-ray of Pacific Rim – colours are consistently better on the LG than on the Hisense, complexions feature more colour and life, and the dark detail performance is the opposite of its HDR picture, offering more insight into dark scenes than the Hisense.
Colours have more punch, solidity and range. It’s a very pleasing HD image.
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With a DVD of There Will Be Blood, the LG handles noise well, although it doesn’t eliminate all of it; it balances noise reduction without affecting film grain better than the Hisense.
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Sharpness and detail are good enough for a DVD source, and I noticed the LG picked out more detail with Plainview’s beard than the Hisense UR9 did. There’s a touch more definition on the LG, colours – again – seem more accurate, with a richer and punchier feel for colours.
Sound Quality
Warm delivery
Clear dialogue
AI Sound Pro with Atmos
LG’s taken the G6 OLED in a different direction with its sound, responding to customer feedback.
The issues ‘fixed’ with the G6 aren’t the ones I’d have gone for. While the G5 sported a thinner sound, it was clear and sharp, especially with the highs. The G6 carries more bass and a warmer tone, but the highs have dulled and it’s not as detailed.
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The built-in system isn’t very loud at my usual listening levels, and has to be pushed to close to 80 to have an impact. You won’t want to listen to stereo programming with AI Sound Pro as the processing can make it sound harsh. If it’s a Dolby Atmos soundtrack, enable AI Sound Pro; otherwise, use Standard mode for everything else.
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For stereo content, the Standard mode is a good choice. Watching The Capture on iPlayer, and it’s clear, with a big, broad soundstage, good bass, and decent dynamism.
Switch to Atmos in AI Sound Pro, and there’s a warmer tone with richer bass and a smoother performance. Despite the emphasis on more bass, the LG can sound a bit tubby at times –in Blade Runner 2049, the lows can sound muddled and soft, and the highs aren’t the sharpest.
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With Civil War, the LG isn’t the most energetic, coming across as tepid and quiet at half volume. Pump the volume up and there’s slight distortion but regardless the action scenes sound sluggish. It’s fine but not exciting.
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Dialogue is clear and, for the most part, natural, though there have been times when the warmth of the sound renders male voices a little bassy. Watching series two of Daredevil: Born Again, and there are moments where the tone of voices isn’t quite right.
Nevertheless, sound is spread across the screen, and at times you can hear effects pushed out from the frame, widening the soundstage even further.
When playing games on the PS5, the sound system goes for a sharper response, and I find it too crisp and sharp in Game Optimiser mode.
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SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10208579
Should you buy it?
It’s too soon to say whether this is the best OLED of 2026, but the LG G6 OLED delivers impressive picture across a range of sources
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The Dolby Vision x Filmmaker mode isn’t quite working
If the Filmmaker mode is meant to be adaptive, changing its performance with regards to the amount of light in a room, then it’s not working properly.
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Final Thoughts
The G6 OLED is another excellent effort from LG. The picture quality is brighter, slightly more colourful, punchier, and feels like it’s more accurate.
The Dolby Vision x Filmmaker mode isn’t working as advertised in terms of its ambient function. It’s preferable to play in Dolby Vision Home Cinema in a room with lots of ambient light (if you’re in a dark room, Filmmaker mode is preferred).
Even though LG has given the sound system a retune, it still struggles with volume and is not the most exciting delivery. I also wish LG hadn’t locked all apps behind an account sign-up, either.
But the LG remains great for gaming, and there’s a wealth of entertainment options (if you get past the sign-up). RGB Mini LEDs are brighter, but they don’t offer the same level of contrast and control as far as black levels go. At least not yet.
Is it the best OLED? It depends on what you want. In terms of respecting the source, I’d say it’s the Sony Bravia 8 II. For sheer spectacle and mitigating reflections, it’s the Samsung S95H.
The LG G6 OLED finds itself in between those two, delivering accurate but great-looking HDR images without the slightly raised blacks of Samsung’s S95H.
LG’s best OLED yet? Absolutely, and a contender for one of 2026’s best TVs.
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How We Test
The 65-inch LG G6 OLED TV was tested over a month with real-world use and benchmark tests that included measuring brightness, input lag and using the Spears and Munsil Benchmark UHD disc to test viewing angles and colour accuracy.
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Tested with real world use
Tested for a month
Benchmarked with Spears and Munsil disc
FAQs
Does the LG G6 OLED come in sizes bigger than 77-inches?
At the time of review, the LG G6 OLED is only available in 48, 55, 65, and 77-inch models.
Test Data
LG OLED65G6
Contrast ratio
Infnity
Input lag (ms)
12.9 ms
Peak brightness (nits) 5%
2499 nits
Peak brightness (nits) 2%
2668 nits
Peak brightness (nits) 10%
2458 nits
Peak brightness (nits) 100%
400 nits
Set up TV (timed)
240 Seconds
Full Specs
LG OLED65G6 Review
UK RRP
£3099
Manufacturer
LG
Screen Size
65.4 inches
Size (Dimensions)
1441 x 263 x 910 MM
Size (Dimensions without stand)
826 x 1441 x 24.3 MM
Weight
27.3 KG
Operating System
webOS
Release Date
2026
Model Number
OLED65G62LW
Model Variants
OLED65G66LS
Resolution
3840 x 2160
HDR
Yes
Types of HDR
HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision, Dolby Vision x Filmmaker
Refresh Rate TVs
48 – 165 Hz
Ports
Four HDMI 2.1, three USB, ethernet, optical digital out, CI+, two RF tuners
HDMI (2.1)
eARC, ALLM, VRR, 4K/165Hz, QFT, QMF
Audio (Power output)
60 W
Connectivity
Wi-Fi, Google Cast, AirPlay 2, WiSA, Bluetooth 5.3
The 2026 World Cup is rolling out two layers of technology that most of its 10 million visitors will actually touch: a consumer-AI layer led by Google, and a biometric-identity layer that turns a fan’s face into a ticket. This is the quieter half of the tournament’s tech, the half aimed at fans rather than threats.
Across 16 host cities in the US, Canada, and Mexico, neither layer comes with a robot dog attached. Both, though, are likely to outlast the final.
Google’s Gemini goes to the World Cup
Google has made Gemini and its Pixel phones official sponsors of several national teams, among them France, Argentina, Morocco, Iraq, Turkey, and the United States. Pixel is the official phone of the French squad, which is also using Gemini for team communications.
For fans, Google is pushing tournament features across Search, Maps, Waze, and the Gemini app: live score tracking, AI-generated tactical diagrams, and match highlights the app assembles on demand. It is also making its AI Mode Pro visuals free over the summer, timed to the tournament. For Google, the World Cup is a global launchpad for Gemini, dressed as fan service.
At the gate, the bigger change is biometric. At Gillette Stadium near Boston, fans can opt into facial recognition that links their face to a digital wallet, so they enter and pay without a ticket or card. Several venues are testing similar face-based entry.
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Around the stadiums, cities are wiring up wider surveillance. In Seattle, officials connected stadium-district CCTV and automatic licence-plate readers to a Real-Time Crime Center, after a public fight over when the cameras switch on and whether they would track immigration status. None of this is unprecedented: Qatar ran the 2022 World Cup with around 22,000 cameras across eight venues. The new element is the consumer-facing pitch, that handing over your face is simply faster.
This biometric layer sits alongside the more visible security hardware TNW has already covered, the robot dogs, hunter drones, and AI cameras, but it is the part fans will queue up and opt into themselves. And the core technology is fallible: facial recognition is something independent studies have shown misidentifies women and people of colour more often than white men, and which TNW has long flagged as a civil-liberties risk once it scales.
Even the referee is now a camera
The AI reaches the pitch too. FIFA’s body-worn ‘Ref Cam’, trialled at the 2025 Club World Cup, is now written into the Laws of the Game and will be available in every match, with selected moments fed to broadcasters and stadium screens. FIFA’s partner Lenovo is using AI to clean up the footage, claiming up to 50 per cent less motion blur from a sprinting referee.
The pitch is transparency. The effect is one more live, AI-processed feed in the broadcast.
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The bill falls on the fans
More than 120 civil-society groups, including the ACLU and Amnesty International, have issued a travel advisory for the tournament. They warn of racial profiling, device searches, social-media screening, and facial recognition, and advise some travellers to remove face-unlock from their phones before flying.
In February, ICE said its agents would play a ‘key part’ in tournament security.
The face-payment systems are, for now, opt-in. The question the tournament leaves open is what happens on 20 July, the day after the final. Stadium facial recognition, licence-plate networks, and AI video analytics rarely disappear when the crowds do.
The World Cup is where the softer half of this infrastructure gets normalised, in front of 10 million people, as the price of getting through the gate.
This article is crossposted from IEEE Spectrum’s careers newsletter. Sign up now to get insider tips, expert advice, and practical strategies, written in partnership with tech career development company Parsity and delivered to your inbox for free!
There is no shortage of people telling recent engineering graduates that their degree was a mistake and that AI is coming for their jobs before they even land one. I respectfully disagree.
I have been a software engineer for 12 years, done well over 100 interviews on both sides of the table, and run Parsity, an AI engineering program. A few patterns emerge consistently in who actually breaks through in today’s job market. Here’s why I think the job market isn’t as dire as it looks, and what I would do if I were looking for my first tech job.
The Numbers Need Context
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York recently placed unemployment for recent CS graduates in the United States at 6.1 percent, with computer engineering graduates at 7.5 percent. Compared to philosophy majors at 3.2 percent and art history graduates at 3.0 percent, those figures look alarming. They require more context than most headlines provide.
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When researchers factor in underemployment (graduates working jobs that don’t require a college degree), then engineers are doing relatively well, coming in below 20 percent, against a 42 percent average across all recent graduates. Many majors reporting lower unemployment are achieving that figure by accepting work entirely unrelated to their field. Scored across unemployment, underemployment, and early-career earnings together, CS and computer engineering still rank among the top fields for overall labor market outcomes.
The degree is not the problem. The hiring pipeline is. Job postings labeled “entry-level software engineer” grew roughly 47 percent between late 2023 and late 2024, while actual hiring into those roles dropped approximately 73 percent in the same window. So-called “ghost jobs,” used to create an illusion of company growth, are everywhere. This makes the front door harder to find, but it exists.
Here Is What To Do About It
Do a broad search of your (real-life) network. Roughly 26 percent of job offers come through referrals. Look at your actual network—classmates, professors, past internship contacts, relatives—and identify people at companies that might be hiring. The goal is a warm introduction to someone who is or knows a decision maker. One introduction carries more weight than a hundred cold applications through a portal.
Find symmetric risk. A junior engineer is a risky hire by definition. A startup carries a matching risk profile, meaning potentially lower compensation, no certainty of longevity, and higher performance expectations. But that shared risk creates mutual interest. The learning curve is steep, the exposure is broad, and the track record transfers directly. For engineers whose longer-term goal is a large organization, a startup is not a detour. It can be how you build the experience those organizations eventually want to see. The first job is for validation and learning. It is not a life sentence.
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Manufacture experience rather than waiting for it. Employers want experience but will not hire you to get it. The way through is to create it: a deployed project, an open-source contribution, building something real for a small business or family member. Recruiters are skeptical of toy projects. A deployed application solving a real problem, combined with the ability to talk clearly about the decisions you made and why, still moves the needle.
Gain practical AI engineering skills, not just AI tool fluency. Using Cursor or Copilot is now a baseline expectation. What differentiates candidates is going one level deeper. Most working engineers, including senior ones, have not built a RAG pipeline or designed a multi-agent system. Understanding how to chunk documents, generate embeddings, store and query them from a vector database, and wire it into a production application puts a candidate ahead of a significant portion of the market on a skill in rapidly growing demand. AI and data science roles grew 163 percent in job postings in 2025. The engineers who understand how these systems actually work, not just how to prompt them, are in the shortest supply.
Stop optimizing around conditions you cannot predict. Nobody anticipated the 2021 hiring boom. Nobody predicted this correction. Build durable skills. The demand for engineers who can reason clearly about systems is not going away. Where you start is not where you end.
—Brian
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More major workforce reductions are on the horizon at Big Tech companies: Meta announced it will cut 10 percent of its workforce, or about 8,000 employees, and Microsoft plans to offer buyouts for 7 percent of its U.S. employees in a voluntary retirement program. The cuts are understood by many to be linked to AI. But is AI really to blame? For The Conversation, two academics at the University of Sydney give their two cents.
Tom Burick got his start as a roboticist. But when a financial downturn forced him to close his robotics business, he thought of the effect teachers had on his life and decided to pay it forward. Burick now works as a technology instructor at a school for students with autism, where he recently led a project building a full-scale replica of ENIAC, an historic computer celebrating its 80th anniversary this year.
Across several industries, the United States has been moving toward limiting the use of sensitive technology made in China. Now, legislation has been introduced to extend the trend to ground robots, including humanoids, dogs, and crawlers. This could benefit some U.S.-based robotics firms—but many of these companies still rely on Chinese-made components. “The U.S. robotics industry is in a pickle,” writes Spectrum tech policy editor Lucas Laursen.
Legora is already hiring to fill its new offices, with plans to grow its combined EMEA headcount to 700.
Swedish legal AI start-up Legora is expanding its footprint with a new engineering hub in London alongside new offices in Madrid, Milan and Paris. The expansion comes just months after the company raised $550m in a Series D round which valued Legora at $5.5bn.
Founded as Leya in 2023, Legora is an agentic AI platform supporting legal professionals with research, review and document drafting. It is used by more than 100,000 legal professionals at more than 1,200 law firms and in-house legal teams across more than 50 markets, according to the company.
The Madrid, Milan, and Paris offices will serve as regional hubs for customer success, go to market functions and legal engineering, while the new London engineering hub will be co-located with Legora’s existing presence in the city.
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The new offices will open during Q3 this year and represent Legora’s most concentrated Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) investment to date, the company said.
Legora is already hiring for positions to fill the new offices, with plans to grow its combined EMEA headcount to 700 within the next year. According to its website, Legora currently employs more than 400.
“Our customers in these countries have built Legora into the way they work,” said Max Junestrand, the CEO and co-founder of Legora. “Opening offices in Madrid, Milan and Paris means we can be genuinely close to them as we build the future of the platform together.
“Engineers who understand how AI applies in professional contexts are disproportionately concentrated in London,” said Junestrand added. “People here have built things that have to perform under real legal and regulatory constraints. That’s a different problem from building a consumer product, and it’s precisely the problem we’re solving.”
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The new offices will bring Legora’s global footprint to 16 cities including Munich, Chicago, Houston, San Francisco, Toronto, Bengaluru and Sydney, as well as the recently announced offices in Singapore and Tokyo, the company said. Legora also has existing engineering hubs in Stockholm and New York.
Legora’s March Series D round was led by Accel, with participation from the likes of Benchmark, general Catalyst, Y Combinator, Menlo Ventures and Salesforce Ventures – taking the legal-tech’s total raise to date to $815m.
The company, at the time, said it planned to use the newly raised funds to further expand across the US, including with new offices in Texas and Illinois, as well as new local hubs. Legora plans to expand its US headcount to more than 300 by the end of 2026.
Engineering teams building agentic coding pipelines now have a concrete open-source alternative to managed models like Claude Fable 5 — one that runs on a single H100. The tradeoff: Cohere’s North Mini Code, which launched Tuesday, generated three times the output tokens of comparable models in independent testing, a verbosity cost that compounds in high-volume production workloads.
The new open-source model is a 30 billion parameter mixture-of-experts (MoE) model with 3 billion parameters active per token, built for agentic software engineering including sub-agent orchestration, architecture mapping, code review and terminal work. The model supports a 256,000 token context window with a 64,000 token maximum generation length, and is available on Hugging Face under an Apache 2.0 license.
What North Mini Code can do
North Mini Code targets the full agentic coding stack. Here is what the model does and what it runs on.
Software engineering. Cohere built North Mini Code specifically for agentic software engineering, not adapted from a general-purpose base. It has integrated tool-use capabilities and supports interleaved thinking, which Cohere says improves performance across multi-step agentic work.
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Architecture mapping and code review. North Mini Code can analyze and map systems architecture, surface dependencies and perform code review across large codebases. With a 256,000 token context window, it can hold substantial multi-file projects in a single context pass.
Terminal-based agentic tasks. The model is trained for terminal environments, handling shell interactions, package scripts and command-line tooling. Cohere benchmarked it on Terminal-Bench v2, which tests agents in real terminal environments rather than synthetic code generation tasks.
How it was built
North Mini Code is a sparse mixture-of-experts model with 128 experts, of which 8 activate per token. The compute requirement at inference time is closer to a 3 billion parameter model despite 30 billion total parameters. Nick Frosst, co-founder of Cohere, demoed it running on a Mac Studio via MLX at around 20 gigabytes of RAM, the same machine he uses for his own local coding work.
Cohere trained the model through two stages of supervised fine-tuning followed by reinforcement learning with verifiable rewards across more than 70,000 verifiable tasks spanning approximately 5,000 repositories, deduplicated against SWE-Bench.
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Rather than optimizing against a single agent scaffold, Cohere trained across three. SWE-Agent uses a rich CLI with specialized commands. Mini-SWE-Agent uses a single bash tool with raw shell output. OpenCode uses individually typed tools returning structured JSON. Cohere reports a 10 percentage point gain on OpenCode evaluation from the multi-harness approach while maintaining SWE-Agent performance.
Where it fits
North Mini Code enters a market that now includes Mistral Devstral Small 2, GitHub Copilot, Cursor, and Claude Fable 5 — each with distinct cost and deployment tradeoffs.
Cohere’s primary benchmark comparison is against Mistral Devstral Small 2, a 24 billion parameter dense model. In vendor-reported internal tests, Cohere claims 2.8x higher output throughput and a 30% inter-token latency advantage over Devstral Small 2 in internal tests under identical hardware configurations. Cohere also claims, in its Hugging Face technical post, that North Mini Code outperforms open-source models up to four times its parameter count on its reported benchmarks, including models at 120 billion parameters.
Artificial Analysis independently ranks it eighth of 127 comparable open-weight models on output speed at 210 tokens per second, with a time to first token of 0.25 second against a class median of 1.95 seconds. It places 18th of 127 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index. One flag from the same data: the model generated 75 million output tokens to complete the Intelligence Index against a class median of 25 million. In high-volume agentic pipelines, that verbosity compounds into inference cost and latency.
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“Suddenly people are thinking like hey, am I getting enough economic value out of the tokens from a model?” Frosst said during the launch video. “Local deployment is one way of empowering people and making AI really something that works for them.”
GitHub Copilot, Cursor and Claude Code operate on per-usage or subscription pricing with no on-premises option. Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5, now the most capable publicly available managed coding model, runs at $50 per million output tokens. For Frosst, the model is the polar opposite of Fable.
“Its small, cost effective, apache 2.0, and locally deployable. This is the way LLMs should go. small, open source, transparent and sovereign, vs large, expensive, proprietary and hegemonic,” Frosst wrote in a post on X.
What this means for enterprises
For teams building production agentic coding pipelines, North Mini Code’s release clarifies a set of decisions that have been forming for months.
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Purpose-built agentic training is now a baseline to evaluate against. The distinction between models fine-tuned for code and models trained specifically for agentic workflows, with verified tool calls and multi-harness robustness, is now a material factor in pipeline decisions. Any model vendor claiming agentic coding capability should be able to answer whether its training used verifiable agentic tasks or was adapted from a general-purpose base.
Verbosity is a hidden pipeline cost that benchmarks do not surface. Artificial Analysis measured North Mini Code generating three times the output tokens of comparable models. That verbosity compounds across inference cost and latency in high-volume pipelines. Throughput testing against actual workload volume is the evaluation step the benchmark rankings skip.
The frontier pricing split is now a real architectural decision. Fable 5 at $50 per million output tokens and North Mini Code on a single H100 represent a genuine tradeoff between cost control and data residency on one side, and managed infrastructure overhead on the other. Teams running high-volume agentic coding pipelines should model both cost paths against their actual workload before committing to either.
AI is rapidly expanding across finance, but most agentic offerings have yet to reach core production systems. Only 10% of enterprises are using AI tools in a meaningful, production-grade way. Not because of a lack of interest, but because connecting AI to core systems to trade capture, risk, and surveillance is still a work in progress.
These systems offer the greatest opportunity for AI to simplify finance operations through efficient workflows and live trading queries. Yet, legacy systems force this technology to operate in isolation. The volume of architecture connected to traditional platforms often creates this constraint.
Andrew George
Managing Director and Solutions Architect at 3forge.
The financial services industry has forced firms to adapt core architecture rather than replace it, preserving operations, but limiting AI compatibility. Now, the challenge is incorporating AI into these existing systems without forcing an infrastructure replacement that would cause platforms to pause or fail.
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To bridge the gap between existing systems and modern demands, firms need an architectural layer to help bridge legacy access, implement a governed AI gateway, and introduce AI-native workflows within trusted guardrails. With the right foundation, firms can extend these capabilities directly into production systems and utilize the full value of AI.
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Taming the legacy stack without rewiring it
Years of regulations, acquisitions, asset-class specialization, and incremental development without a shared core have created an extensive stack of internal software required to keep operations running – a stack that was never designed to support responsive, AI-driven interaction.
Rather than rebuilding these systems, financial institutions are introducing an architectural layer that unifies access across fragmented infrastructure. This virtualized approach eliminates the need for costly rewiring while allowing organizations to consolidate access to both static and streaming data.
Instead of adding complexity, it creates a simpler path to deploying AI within existing environments.
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IT teams can start this process by establishing a single abstraction layer across fragmented systems, allowing technology integration while applying entitlements at the data layer. In practice, this would allow:
Natural-language interrogation: Organization-specific data through chatbots and AI assistants.
Virtualization of systems: Abstraction of all systems behind a permission-aware access point.
Safe interaction: AI accessible touchpoints within operational infrastructures.
When organizations effectively apply abstraction layers to existing legacy architecture, AI can improve functions while interacting with internal systems through a controlled, permission-aware layer.
A controlled gateway for AI interaction
Abstraction layers are most effective when financial institutions apply them with gateways for AI access. When organizations apply these models together, this infrastructure creates a controlled AI interaction layer that provides a deliberate medium for producing deterministic, repeatable outputs.
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Agents can then access data exclusively through the created pathway. This architecture creates transparency and provides for the application of a consistent set of data and functional access controls.
Ultimately, it allows stakeholders to gain confidence and trust, allowing agentic solutions to migrate from an assistive layer to an operational one capable of coordinating workflows, executing logic, and interacting with live systems.
Through this channel, agents can operate within defined policies and fully log all outputs, verifying repeatability and providing compliance teams with unified oversight of operations. A single control plane can grant permissions, log events, and instantly kill defective outputs, assuaging regulatory concerns.
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These capabilities allow AI to expand financial institution growth in production-ready technological environments.
Accelerating development inside trusted boundaries
Once these foundations are in place, AI development can accelerate inside trusted boundaries. By doing so, organizations can reduce code surface area and shorten audit cycles.
Within these types of environments:
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AI is equipped with proper boundaries for successful development.
Agents can generate layouts, workflows, and full applications.
AI can operate inside transparent and fully auditable runtimes.
Advanced coding can often power this controlled scale, offering development workflows that promote multimodal interaction, including voice, visual, and text. These capabilities further facilitate AI to fully operationalize efficient workflows across financial organizations.
However, when implementing AI adoption pathways, many organizations are now working through how to scale these capabilities consistently across systems. Financial firms facing this dilemma should follow the example of other industries.
The shift from rebuilding to building on top
Other industries have already solved a similar challenge of rebuilding their technology stacks much earlier in the development process. When this issue arose, they standardized their foundation across their industry, focusing on differentiated delivery rather than excessive rebuilding.
This often meant establishing application engines, a feature now used in gaming (Unity/Unreal), E-Commerce (Shopify), and general CRM (Salesforce).
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If IT teams adopted these systems, purpose-built for finance, financial firms could focus primarily on delivery.
An engine could lay the foundation for virtualized legacy access, AI-governed gateways, and AI-native development within trusted guardrails, avoiding a full infrastructure replacement and establishing a safe way to integrate technology that reduces manual reconciliation.
A new foundation in financial systems
As AI moves deeper into core financial systems, the opportunity is not just in deploying models but rethinking how software is built and operated. Application engines provide a path forward by allowing firms to integrate AI into live systems, scale workflows, and generate new functionality from human intent, all within a governed environment.
This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives, our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.
The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit
NASA has named Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio, and Andre Douglas as the crew for Artemis III, which has been reworked from a moon-landing mission into a roughly two-week Earth-orbit test of lunar landers being built by SpaceX and Blue Origin. NBC News reports: Randy Bresnik, Luca Parmitano, Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas are expected to launch into Earth orbit next year, with the goal of testing two commercially developed lunar landers that are slated to carry astronauts to the surface of the moon during the Artemis IV mission in 2028. Bresnik will be the mission’s commander, with Parmitano, an Italian astronaut with the European Space Agency, serving as the pilot. Douglas and Rubio will be mission specialists, and Bob Hines will train with the crew as a backup member. “This test flight will enable us to prove we can carry out highly choreographed operations with our partners across hardware interfaces, software propulsion systems and life support elements with crew in the high-stakes space environment,” Jeremy Parsons, NASA’s Artemis program manager, said during NASA’s announcement on Tuesday.
Bresnik has been to the International Space Station twice, most recently as commander of an expedition in 2017. A retired U.S. Marine colonel, he was selected as a NASA astronaut in 2004. Bresnik has helped oversee development and testing of spacecraft for the Artemis program as an assistant to the chief of the Astronaut Office, which manages astronaut training and operations. Parmitano has also done two stints on the ISS and served as commander of an expedition in 2019. He has completed a total of six spacewalks and also performed the first live DJ set in orbit. Before becoming an astronaut, Parmitano was a test pilot for the Italian air force.
For Rubio, a physician with 28 years of service in the Army, Artemis III will be his second trip to space. From 2022 to 2023, he spent 371 days on the space station, breaking the record for longest-duration spaceflight by an American, according to NASA. Douglas is the only crew member making his spaceflight debut. An engineer who previously worked on space exploration and robotics at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab, he became a NASA astronaut in 2022. Douglas was the backup crew member for the Artemis II mission around the moon earlier this year. He told NBC News in an interview after Tuesday’s announcement that the role had at times been a challenge. “It was hard to figure out how do you balance getting ready to go, not go, all that stuff,” he said. “But to go now is just fantastic.”
Back in January of this year, RFK Jr. clearly strong armed the CDC into changing the childhood vaccination schedules in America to mimic those of Denmark. The public messaging was crafted to sound as reasonable as possible and amounted to a claim that America was going to revise vaccination schedules to match those of another successful, industrialized, peer country. There were a couple of problems with the move.
For starters, Kennedy did his usual move of trying to make this change completely outside of the normal process for such things. There was no indication that any of this was done at the behest of his reformed ACIP panel. It didn’t go through the normal scientific checks and balances. And even if it had, the courts later put a stay on all such changes, because Kennedy didn’t follow the American Procedure Act in either those revised schedules or even the formation of ACIP itself. The Trump administration has appealed that decision.
The other main issue with the change was the obvious one: America is not Denmark. Calling Denmark a peer nation to America is laughable for many reasons. As one Danish official pointed out at the time: Denmark has a homogeneous population, universal free healthcare, lower serious outcomes from infectious diseases that they don’t vaccinate for, and a population that actually largely trusts government institutions. America doesn’t have any of that, in large part because the party of Trump doesn’t want us to have it.
Donald Trump doesn’t know how to take an “L”, though, so of course he simply picked up a pen recently and is attempting to executive order his way to trying to change those same vaccination schedules.
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While the federal government is appealing that injunction, the new executive order on Friday reaffirms Kennedy’s plans to adopt Denmark’s strategy, calling for “realigning” US vaccine policy with “best practices from peer, developed countries.”It states that the scientific assessment written by Høeg and Kulldorff is a “guiding resource for the Federal Government” and that the CDC shall ” take any appropriate steps to update the United States childhood and adolescent vaccine schedule.”
As before, the AMA is strongly against the unilateral change made without backing from scientific evidence.
“Altering [the vaccine schedule] without clear, evidence-based justification risks continued confusion for parents and patients, undermining trust in vaccines, and ultimately lowering vaccination rates,” Mukkamala said. “That would put more children and communities at risk of preventable illness.”
The American Medical Association (AMA) wasn’t the only one to come out against this top-down edict. The American College of Physicians (ACP) likewise pushed back on the EO publicly, stating unequivocally that it must not be implemented or there would be severe negative health outcomes for American children.
As did, hilariously, scientists in Denmark itself.
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Anders Hviid, who leads research on vaccine safety and effectiveness at the Statens Serum Institut, Denmark’s equivalent of the CDC, told The New York Times in December that it did not make sense to compare the US to Denmark. “It’s not at all fair to say look at Denmark unless you can match the other characteristics of Denmark,” he said.
Hviid also told the Times that the US public health policies under Kennedy “get crazier and crazier” by the month. “It is surreal, and it is difficult, from a Danish perspective, to understand what’s going on.”
Trust me, dear Anders, it’s difficult to understand from within the American borders, too.
Now, neither Trump nor Kennedy give a flying damn about Denmark, of course. That much is obvious to anyone with a working frontal cortex. The country’s vaccination schedules are merely being used as a prop to reduce the vaccination schedules for American children because that’s all Kennedy really wants. Over the objections, it turns out, of Danish scientists themselves.
I’m sure the AMA, ACP, or the American Academy of Pediatricians (AAP) will be filing lawsuits over this Executive Order. And I see no reason why the courts shouldn’t put a hold on its implementation, as it did to Kennedy.
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But the real mystery is why the do-nothings in Congress just can’t be bothered to push back directly on all of this.
MSP says it is ‘absolutely devastated’ as woman arrested on suspicion of murder
Neil Muller, newly appointed Group CEO of managed service provider Node4, has died after an alleged stabbing at his home. He was 54.
Muller, a well-respected and long-serving figure in Britain’s tech supply chain, was found with chest wounds at his residence in Claverdon, Warwickshire, in the early hours of June 7.
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Warwickshire Police said in a statement: “We received a report from ambulance services at 6.15am about a man in his 50s who required emergency medical care following a stab wound in his chest. Sadly, he was declared deceased at the scene at 6.37am.”
A 55-year-old woman from Birmingham was arrested on suspicion of murder at 7.33am and has since been released on bail. Police confirmed an investigation is underway and said there is “no wider risk to the public.”
Muller had only taken on the Group CEO role at Node4 this month, tasked with refining its strategy and expanding its AI-augmented managed services platform. The MSP said it was “absolutely devastated” by his death, adding: “Although Neil only recently joined Node4, he made a meaningful impact in a short space of time. Our thoughts are with Neil’s family at this very difficult time.”
Before Node4, Muller led Digital Space for seven years, and prior to that he was chief exec at telecoms biz Daisy Group, whose B2B ops merged with Virgin Media O2 last year. Muller started his career at Computacenter – one of Europe’s largest services-based resellers – rising through sales and operations to become UK and Ireland managing director during a 21-year tenure.
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Mike Norris, Group CEO at Computacenter and a close friend of Muller, told The Register that he was “deeply saddened from a personal point of view.”
Norris was not alone: many in Britain’s tech business community expressed shock. Charles Bligh, former TalkTalk chief operating officer, wrote on LinkedIn: “Just so shocked to hear this terrible news. Neil was a class act and he filled the room with his energy and leadership. My condolences to his family and his children should know their father was a respected, liked and thought leader in the business community. I know this is cold comfort. Neil you will be missed terribly and RIP.”
Muller is survived by his wife and two children. ®
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