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Although numerous gadgets are deemed must-haves, you can’t forget about the humble microwave – no kitchen is complete without one partially due to their impressive versatility. 

Traditionally, microwaves were just used to quickly heat and reheat food but recently they’ve taken on a whole new status, boasting even more additional features for hassle-free cooking, defrosting and even grilling. 

As some microwaves can go well past the £100 mark, it’s worth assessing your needs before making an investment. If you know you’ll solely use your microwave to reheat leftovers, then you probably don’t need a more premium pick with multiple mod-cons. 

If, however, you’re looking for an appliance that can do a bit more, then a combination microwave would be a better investment for you. A combi microwave can boast features including individual cooking programmes for different foods, convection ovens and even grill modes, so you can truly do everything with just one appliance. 

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You should also consider power levels, program settings and the size of the physical microwave to make sure it’ll fit comfortably in your space. You also should ensure that the internal capacity of your microwave is big enough to fit your widest plates and tallest containers. 

To help you decide, we’ve tested multiple microwaves, from the budget-friendly to more premium models, and compiled the highest-rated options into this handy list. 

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All microwaves we review are rigorously tested by our experts. We inspect every aspect from the design and capacity to the cooking functions, performance and power. We then ensure that each microwave is built for purpose, putting them through real-world tests such as defrosting bread, reheating cooked rice and cooking jacket potatoes. 

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If you want to add more to your kitchen beyond a new microwave, you might be interested in our other numerous review guides including best air fryer guide, best toastersbest kettles and best coffee machine.

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Learn more about how we test microwaves

We test microwaves to see how good they are at their main job. For that, we start with tests designed for the microwave mode only. These include reheating rice and toasting bread, using a thermal camera to see exactly how well (and how evenly) the microwave heats.

We also cook a baked potato, using a microwave-only mode if that’s available, but we’ll use a combi mode, adding convection oven or grill, to see how this works.

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Where microwaves have a grill, we test them with bread and see how even the grilling is across as many slices as we can fit into a product.

We’ll also test convection oven settings by heating a baking tray full of ceramic cooking beads, and then using a thermal camera to view how evenly the oven heats.

If there are other key functions, such as air frying, steaming or crisping, we try these out following suggestions in the manual.

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  • Easy to use

  • Versatile

  • Powerful and fast

Much more than just a basic microwave, the Sage Combi Wave 3-in-1 also works as an oven, air fryer and even sports a grilling feature too.

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Although its height and width are typical of a microwave, with its whopping 32-litre capacity, the depth is excessive at 490mm – and that’s without factoring in the handle which adds another 23mm.

On the front of the appliance is a generous viewing window which allows you to keep an eye on your food, alongside six clearly labelled function buttons and two dials.

The six function buttons include Fast Combi, From Frozen, Air Fry, Oven, Microwave and Food Menu with the latter acting as a selection of smart cook options for various ingredients such as meat and vegetables.

Although Food Menu is useful, there are notable limitations specifically regarding weight limits, so just be sure to check the manual before cooking.

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Open the soft-close door and you’ll see a series of labelled shortcut buttons which allow you to quickly select the optimum time and power levels for tasks such as softening butter, melting chocolate or to enable the grill function.

Although the latter is undoubtedly a useful addition, it’s worth noting that the grill is quite gentle and therefore requires ingredients to be propped up closer to the heating element at the top.

During our testing, we found that the Sage Combi Wave performed admirably across the majority of its functions, from defrosting bread to cooking a jacket potato impressively quickly at under seven minutes.

We also found that not only does air fry mode result in evenly browned and crispy chips but the Combi Wave conveniently alerts half-way through cooking to remind you to stir the contents for the best possible results.

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The Sage Combi even took cooking a 1.6kg chicken in its stride, as it made use of the microwave, oven and grill functions for a perfectly cooked roast.

Even so, if you’re looking for a microwave that can double as an air fryer and oven then you’d be hard pressed to find a better option than the Sage Combi Wave 3-in-1.

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  • Modern, seamless design

  • Consistent cooking

  • Extra-large capacity

  • Only basic functionality

  • Quite expensive

With a 32-litre capacity, sleek design and impressive performance, the Samsung MS32DG4504ATE3 is perfect for larger households with lots of mouths to feed.

Keep in mind though that with such a large capacity, which Samsung claims is enough to cook 5kg of potatoes, comes mammoth dimensions. Measuring at 517 x 423 x 295 MM, ensure you have enough counter space to house this comfortably.

Although it’s undeniably huge, the Samsung MS32DG4504ATE3 has a stylish design thanks to its brushed metal finish which integrates nicely into a modern kitchen space. While the glossy finish on the door can attract fingerprints and grime, the cleverly placed handle on the top side of the door helps to minimise this.

Its control panel is easy-to-use and equipped with a digital display which allows you to see what function you’re selecting and provides readouts for time, weight and more.

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The MS32DG4504ATE3 is also fitted with multiple functions alongside its conventional microwave mode, including Auto Cook, Home Dessert and Keep Warm. There’s even a useful Deodorisation programme which removes any lingering cooking smells from the appliance.

We were seriously impressed by the MS32DG4504ATE3’s results, both as a conventional microwave and for more difficult tasks like defrosting and cooking. We found defrosting chicken took around 10 minutes, while defrosting salmon took just seven and a half minutes.

We then used the Auto Cook function for the defrosted chicken and found it cooked perfectly, although it did take slightly longer than the manual suggested.

Of course, the main function of a microwave is to warm foods up and, fortunately, we were very pleased with the results. Cooked bacon took just 45 seconds to become piping hot while day-old bread only took 70 seconds.

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If you need a larger microwave that looks stylish, is easy-to-use and performs consistently well throughout all its functions then the Samsung MS32DG4504ATE3 Solo Microwave Oven is one for you.


  • Versatile

  • Spacious

  • Self cleaning

  • Expensive

  • Not very intuitive

  • Some uneven results

With its drop-down door, the spacious Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ looks more like an oven than a microwave, but its real shining point are the plentiful auto programmes, covering defrosting, steaming, grilling, roasting and baking.

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The oven space is the most generous we’ve seen thanks to the flatbed design and the three tray slots, which allow several items to be cooked at the same time on different levels, further emphasised by the auto programmes’ ability to cook as much as 2kg of meat.

The accessories include a wire shelf, enamel and glass trays as well as a plastic trivet meant specifically for steaming tasks.

One highlight is a humidity-measuring auto sensor combi programme that adjusts the power level and cooking time accordingly and delivers a jacket potato with crispy skin and fluffy texture.

For the steam function, a water tank and a drip tray are located at the bottom of the appliance. The drip tray handily stops water from running onto your worktop when the oven door is opened.

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Very conveniently, the NN-CS89LBBPQ is also self-cleaning, with four steam function-based cleaning settings, including deodorisation and cavity cleaning to remove grease build-up inside the oven.

While navigating its touch-sensitive controls and deciphering the various programmes isn’t always intuitive, a thick instruction manual is provided, also featuring some 40 pages of recipes.

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  • Very easy to use

  • Automated cooking programmes work brilliantly

  • Can do many jobs that an oven can do

  • Need space for all the accessories

If there’s one problem with microwaves, it’s trying to work out how to choose the right setting for the right dish. The Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS makes this easier, with some very clever automated programmes.

The smartest mode is the Sensor cooking. In this mode, the microwave can cook a range of different ingredients, including jacket potatoes, cauliflower and chilled soup. Measuring the gasses released from foods, the microwave can stop cooking at the optimal point: I found it made my jacket potato perfect: fluffy on the inside, cooked all the way through and not shrivelled up.

HotBlast modes can be used with the baking tray to cook common foods, such as oven chips, using the convection oven feature and blasting air down from the top element. Here, we found the results good, although we did find that an air fryer will give crispier results.

We love the automatic defrost programmes: select the food type and weight, and the microwave handles the rest. Our test bread slices were cool to the touch but not frozen, and leaving them for just a couple of minutes had them ready for sandwiches.

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More than just a microwave, the Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS is a handy convection oven, too. With its very smart automated programmes, it can cook food beautifully with virtually no hassle.


  • Auto-cook programmes

  • Affordable

  • Good cooking results

  • Fits smaller plates only

  • Not the most intuitive

The Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave stands out among its affordable peer group due to the addition of a couple of simple auto-cook programmes that calculate the cooking time according to the food’s weight. It’s also not as small as a 17-litre capacity may lead you to believe. However, with a 245mm turntable, it doesn’t fit larger dinner plates.

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While the combination of shiny glass, plastic and metal with walnut-imitation wood is a very particular look, likely to have a Marmite effect, the Scandi Digital is available in black, grey, and white to suit different colour schemes.

Its auto-cook menu has eight programmes, for reheating food and microwaving popcorn, beverages, pizza, sliced potatoes, vegetables, meat, and fish. Using the reheat programme, cold, cooked rice came out evenly heated. And a raw jacket potato had a decent texture after just 8mins of microwaving.

This is a handy appliance for anyone looking for some microwaving shortcuts.

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  • Flatbed design

  • Excellent value

  • Wide range of cooking options

  • Fiddly to use

  • Grill wasn’t that even

Fed up with wrestling larger and odd-sized dishes into your microwave? A flatbed model like the CASO MCG 25 Ceramic Chef might just be one for you.

With a 25-litre capacity, the MCG 25 Ceramic Chef is the average size for a countertop microwave and sports familiar controls on its front, like the door eject button. However, it also doubles as a working grill and a convection oven too, and comes equipped with useful accessories such as a wire shelf and a round baking tray.

Operating the MCG 25 Ceramic Chef is a bit confusing at first, so make sure you keep the manual handy when you’re getting started. While it’s undoubtedly a feature packed device, with preset programmes for certain foods, grilling options and multi-stage cooking, actually selecting the modes isn’t particularly straightforward. Although the user interface isn’t terrible, we did find ourselves pressing the wrong buttons and hearing error beeps while we got used to it.

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Even so, we found the MCG 25 Ceramic Chef to be a solid performer during our tests. At our most simple tests of heating food up, we found the microwave offered event results with no cold spots.

Things are a bit more hit and miss when it comes to using the more advanced modes. For example, we were a bit disappointed with the grill option and found the overall result wasn’t particularly even. Having said that, it’s worth remembering you should keep turning food during this to ensure even results.

We also found that although some of the preset programmes weren’t too convincing, using the combination grill and microwave mode worked much better. Not only that, but the convection oven setting worked brilliantly too. While it may not rival the best air fryers, it still performed admirably.

Although it might take some getting used to, if you want a flatbed microwave that doubles as a decent enough grill and convection oven, then the MCG 25 Ceramic Chef is a great choice.

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FAQs

Do I need additional features in a microwave?

The answer depends on whether you’d use them or not. A grill or convection oven combined with a microwave can give you additional cooking space, or the ability to combine programmes, say grilling and microwaving at the same time, to speed up cooking.

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Is there any point in buying higher power microwaves?

The more power, the faster the microwave will cook, but that can be a double-edged sword. Warming up your dinner with the 1000W setting may be overkill and leave you with burnt bits. However, heating water in a jar to sterilize it may benefit from higher settings.

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Should I buy a flatbed or turntable microwave?

Flatbed microwaves often need food to be turned manually to get even results but you get more space in them and can use irregular-sized pots and containers; turntable microwaves cook more evenly but you’ve got less room and are restricted in the size of container you can use.

How much attention should I pay to internal size?
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Measured in litres, the internal size tells you how big the cavity is. The bigger the household, the larger the microwave you’ll want. Also consider use; if you occasionally heat some pasta sauce or reheat the occasional left-overs, then a smaller microwave will do you.

Integrated or freestanding, which is better?

Neither’s better, but integrated models are neater as they’re permanently installed and often have larger capacities. They’re a good choice if you’re having a new kitchen and have place to permanently put a microwave, although seriously consider a combi model that can act as a second oven, as this gives you more cooking options.

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Freestanding models are generally cheaper and come in a wider range of sizes. As they just plug in, they’re easier to change if something goes wrong, and you can take them with you if you move house. Freestanding models are a good upgrade if you’ve got all of your integrated appliances already, or only have room for a single integrated oven.

Test Data

  Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 Samsung MS32DG4504ATE3 Large Capacity Solo Microwave Oven Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ Combination Microwave Oven Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave Caso MCG 25 Ceramic Chef Microwave

Full Specs

  Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 Review Samsung MS32DG4504ATE3 Large Capacity Solo Microwave Oven Review Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ Combination Microwave Oven Review Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS Review Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave Review Caso MCG 25 Ceramic Chef Microwave Review
UK RRP £399.95 £168 £519.99 £219 £84.99
Manufacturer Sage Samsung Panasonic Samsung Russell Hobbs
Size (Dimensions) 519 x 513 x 316 MM 517 x 423 x 295 MM 500 x 480 x 541 MM 517 x 463 x 310 MM 451 x 353 x 256 MM 490 x 285 x 480 MM
Weight 14.6 KG 24.5 KG -1 G 10.7 G 16.65 KG
ASIN B079T8NPBV B07YF69D9Q
Release Date 2021 2024 2021 2023 2021 2025
First Reviewed Date 05/01/2022 20/08/2024 05/01/2022 04/04/2023 18/02/2022 22/07/2025
Model Number Sage Combi Wave 3 in 1 Panasonic NN-CS89LBBPQ Combination Microwave Oven Samsung Easy View Convection Oven with HotBlast Technology MC28M6075CS Russell Hobbs Scandi Digital Microwave CASO MCG 25 Ceramic Chef Microwave
Model Variants White or grey
Stated Power 1550 W 1000 W 1300 W 1400 W 700 W 2050 W
Special features Smart Cook, Smart Defrost, Smart Reheat, Fast Combi, Cook From Frozen, Air Fry, Oven, Microwave, Grill, A Bit More, Child Lock,+30 Instant Start, Turntable Off, Shortcuts Panel 12 combi cooking options and 36 auto programmes Automatic cooking Eight auto-cook programmes Grill, convection oven
Oven type Combi Microwave Combi Combi Microwave Combi
Appliance type Freestanding Freestanding Freestanding Freestanding Freestanding Freestanding
Number of ovens 1 1 1 1 1 1
Oven description Combi microwave, grill, convection oven and air fryer 4-in-1 combination steam oven (microwave, oven, steam and grill) Combination microwave convection oven Freestanding microwave Freestanding microwave, oven and grill
Oven grill Yes Yes Yes
Oven microwave Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Oven steam Yes
Microwave bed type Rotating Rotating Flat Rotating Rotating Flat
Microwave max power 1100 W 1000 W 1000 W 900 W 699 W 900 W
Oven capcity 32 litres 32 litres 31 litres 27 litres 17 litres 25 litres

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Boston Dynamics’ Spot Robot Gets a Google Gemini Upgrade for Smarter Inspections

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Boston Dynamics Spot Robot Google Gemini
Boston Dynamics’ Spot, a four-legged machine that has been making its way through factories, warehouses, and power plants on its own for years, can now connect to the Orbit platform and the AIVI-Learning tool. This Google Gemini-powered program uses the photos to provide reports on safety, equipment health, and cleanliness. The system has done well with easy tasks, but when scenarios become cluttered, things become a little hazy.



That all changed with Google Gemini Robotics ER 1.6. This new model brings some high-level thinking to the party, allowing Spot to assess its surroundings, plan its next step, and determine whether or not it has completed the task. It captures photographs from numerous viewpoints at simultaneously, even if the illumination changes or anything obscures the view. It can point to anything on the screen and precisely count them, and it can even avoid producing results that do not exist.


Unitree Go2 Robot Dog Quadruped Robotics for Adults Embodied AI (Go2 X) Built for Developers
  • 【Next-Generation Robotic Companion: Meet the Unitree Go2 Robotic Dog】 The Unitree Go2 X is a powerful and intelligent quadruped robot designed for…
  • 【Intelligent Navigation with 3D LiDAR & Obstacle Avoidance】 Featuring ultra-wide 3D LiDAR with 360°x96° perception, the Go2 X detects obstacles…
  • 【High-Definition Vision & Seamless App Integration】 A front HD camera streams 1280×720 video to the app. Control the robot, view real-time data…

Pressure gauges are an excellent example of how all of this new technology adds up. Spot moves up to a dial, zooms in if necessary, and then reports the exact reading. It can even manage camera angle distortions and check numerous needles at once if there are more than one to deal with. Sight glasses operate similarly, allowing the robot to estimate liquid levels from empty to full in plain old percentage terms, and those digital displays that used to give it a headache due to glare or bad typefaces. They now work much more consistently.

Boston Dynamics Spot Robot Google Gemini
Spot can also address the bigger picture, as it performs 5S compliance audits without issue, detecting misplaced tools or clutter that violates housekeeping guidelines. If it sees a puddle of liquid, it’s now clever enough to recognize it as a hazard rather than a harmless reflection. Conveyor belts, valves, and other equipment are all thoroughly inspected to detect any minor damage or leaks before they cause major problems.

Boston Dynamics Spot Robot Google Gemini
Every inspection includes a step-by-step analysis of how the robot reached its decision, allowing customers to understand exactly what steps the AI performed rather than receiving a black box response. When the stakes are high and someone will be penalized or the business will be shut down due to unanticipated downtime, that transparency truly creates confidence. The good news is that all of these changes take place completely behind the scenes, with Boston Dynamics and Google handling everything in the cloud, so your robot continues to function normally. As Spot conducts regular patrols, new photographs are fed back into the system, and the models gradually gain a sense of the unique layout, lighting, and equipment of that location.
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Sony Is Removing Many Popular Features From Its Free OTA TV Options

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Cord Cutters News: Sony has notified owners of its recent BRAVIA television models that significant changes to the built-in TV Guide for its OTA TV antenna users and related menu features will take effect starting in late May 2026. The update affects a range of premium sets released between 2023 and 2025, marking another instance of feature adjustments for older smart TV hardware as manufacturers shift focus toward newer product lines. The changes primarily target the program guide functionality for over-the-air antenna TV channels received via the ATSC tuner. After the cutoff date, program information may fail to display on certain channels, limiting the guide’s usefulness for planning viewing schedules. Users will often see listings only for channels they have recently watched, rather than a comprehensive overview of available broadcasts. Additionally, channel logos that previously appeared in the guide will disappear, and any thumbnail images accompanying program descriptions will no longer load or show.

Further modifications will appear in the television’s menu system. For users relying on connected set-top boxes, the dedicated Set Top Box menu option will be removed entirely. In its place, a simpler Control menu will surface, streamlining access but eliminating some specialized navigation previously available. Program thumbnails, which provided visual previews in various menu sections, will also cease to appear across affected interfaces. These adjustments stem from Sony’s ongoing efforts to manage backend services and data feeds that support enhanced guide features on its Google TV-powered BRAVIA lineup. As television ecosystems evolve rapidly with advancements in processing power, artificial intelligence integration, and cloud-based content delivery, companies periodically retire select capabilities on prior-generation hardware to optimize resources. The 2023 through 2025 models, while still offering excellent picture quality through advanced OLED and LCD panels with features like XR processing, now fall into the category of devices receiving scaled-back support. These are the models impacted:

2025 models: Bravia 8 II (XR80M2), Bravia 5 (XR50)
2024 models: Bravia 9 (XR90), Bravia 8 (XR80), Bravia 7 (XR70)
2023 models: Bravia A95L series

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Microsoft is removing 32GB size limit for FAT32 volumes, this time for real

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Microsoft recently released a new preview build of Windows 11 for the Windows Insider channels. Users enrolled in the Insider program can now test a somewhat historic change: a new “hard” size limit for disk volumes formatted with the FAT32 file system. This long-anticipated update may improve compatibility and flexibility…
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Godzilla goes to New York in ‘Minus Zero’ teaser trailer

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Japanese entertainment company Toho has released a teaser video for Godzilla Minus Zero, the upcoming sequel to the award-winning film Godzilla Minus One. The teaser shows the famous monster next to the Statue of Liberty as it rampages across New York. Godzilla Minus Zero is set in 1949, two years after the events of the first film, and will be a direct sequel. You’ll see familiar faces from Minus One in the short trailer, as well, namely Koichi Shikishima and Noriko Oishi, two of the first movie’s main characters.

The kaiju flick was filmed specifically for IMAX with high-definition digital cameras. Even its audio was optimized for the massive screen’s immersive cinema experience. Minus One won an Oscar for Best Visual Effects, so expectations are high for this sequel. The good news is that this movie is also helmed by Takashi Yamazaki, who wrote, directed and oversaw the visual effects for Minus One. Godzilla Minus Zero is heading to cinemas in Japan on November 3 and in the United States on November 6 this year.

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Soccer leagues are using real-time AI tools to detect illegal streams and combat piracy

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  • Soccer piracy losses estimated between $700M and $800M annually
  • Real-time AI detection cuts piracy rates across major matches
  • Traditional blocking tools struggle against large-scale streaming networks

Piracy of live football streams has grown into an industrial-scale problem, with Spanish clubs warning that illegal viewing is draining hundreds of millions of dollars from the sport each year.

LaLiga estimates piracy costs its clubs, which include Real Madrid, Barcelona, and Atlético Madrid, between $700m and $800m annually, a figure that reflects both lost subscriptions and declining broadcast value.

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Clicking "reject cookies" might not actually do anything

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California-based auditor webXray reports that tech giants have continued to use cookies to track users across the internet, even when website visitors reject them. Google, Microsoft, and Meta have all disputed the findings.
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Original PlayStation Brought Up To Date

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In a satisfying blend of classic console restoration and modern modding, [Elliot] from the Retro Future channel has transformed a broken, dirty PlayStation into what they call the “ultimate PS1.”

PicoStation ZeroWire. Note the wire.

The first step was to deal with the really grungy case. The shell was soaked in dish soap and given a good brushing before being packed and sent to a collaborator. Upon inspection of the internals, several unknown modifications to the PCB were evident. These were likely to support playing home-burned copies of pirated games, as well as an NTSC region hack (for this PAL version of the console), courtesy of a dodgy-looking crystal oscillator hanging on the end of some wires.

Luckily, the PS1 product design is highly modular, giving excellent repairability, which made reversing this a doddle. The mod wiring was removed by simply desoldering it, but the cut traces needed to be cleaned up and reconnected to return it to stock condition.

After the first round of fixes, [Elliot] plugged into the TV for a test. It was still outputting black-and-white. Something was still amiss. He had simply connected one of the repair wires to the wrong spot on the PCB. After correcting that error (and getting lucky, no damage was done), the correct colour PAL output was seen.

An unidentified Chinese 1080p HDMI upscaler mod

Next, a PicoStation ZeroWire was soldered in place. This cleverly-shaped PCB hosts one of the Pico MCU chips and allows launching games from an SD card. Using a combination of large through holes on the PCB and a few castellated edge holes, installation looks very easy. ZeroWire is a bit of an unfortunate name, as it actually requires one jumper wire to be attached, but we’re just nitpicking here. Next, there was some really precarious-looking pin lifting on the CDROM controller chip. Cleanliness is in order here for a successful soldering mod. A special ESD toothbrush (not really) was pressed into service for cleaning with IPA. Proper ESD tools are not expensive, but you can get away without them.

An Amazon-sourced PAL-to-HDMI adapter was tried to perform some 720p “upscaling”. This reduced the obvious jaggies a bit, but it was not really good enough for [Elliot]. So instead, he installed an HDMI mod board sourced from an Aliexpress store (listing now defunct). The metal shielding can was removed to reveal the video ICs. The serial port connector was removed, as this is the location for the new HDMI port. The ‘fun’ part of this particular mod is attaching the custom flex PCB to the video chip. This is quite a daunting task for those not comfortable with SMT soldering techniques. It may look hard, but it’s actually dead easy to drag-solder this, so long as you use plenty of good-quality flux and keep the heat under control. Once that was out of the way and second smaller cable was routed to the audio chip.

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The final result internals. Tidy!

Next up was to deal with the old-school wired controllers. The TechnoBit Videojuegos Re-Live BT controller board allows the use of a modern wireless controller. Its installation requires disassembling the original controller connector module. The PCB from the rear of the module is removed along with the ribbon cable connector and a through-hole Zener diode, both of which are reused and soldered to the new controller board. This seems like an unnecessary faff and could have easily been pre-installed or at least included with the PCB. Also, soldering the through-hole beeper to surface-mount pads made us cringe. That looks like someone forgot to make the correct footprint for a part that normal humans can solder.

Finally, a Robot Retro USB-C power supply was dropped in to replace the original AC power supply, bringing this build’s connectivity into the current decade. USB power, HDMI ‘1080p’ output, SD card game loading, and a BT controller. Nice! The last part of the build features a custom respray of the enclosure, a nod to the original ‘dev kit blue’ version when the PS1 was first announced all those years ago. Ah, we remember it well!

Retrogamers familiar with PS1 hacks might recall we covered the PicoStation hack some time ago. You might also remember this hack that squeezes a complete PS1 emulator into a DS cartridge. Finally, hacks can be pure software, with nary a soldering iron in sight, like this one.

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AI data center startup Fluidstack in talks for $1B round at $18B valuation months after hitting $7.5B, says report

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Fluidstack, a startup that builds specialized data centers for AI companies, is in talks to raise a $1 billion round at an $18 billion valuation, potentially led by Jane Street, Bloomberg reports.

Should this deal come to fruition, it would more than double Fluidstack’s valuation in a matter of months.

In December, the company was reportedly raising around $700 million at a $7.5 billion valuation, sources told Bloomberg at the time, although it didn’t formally announce the close of that round. That round was said to be led by Situational Awareness, an AGI-focused fund founded by former OpenAI researcher Leopold Aschenbrenner, and backed by Stripe’s Collison brothers, former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman, and the AI investor and entrepreneur Daniel Gross.

Talks were apparently still ongoing for this round in February, at least with Google, which was considering kicking in $100 million to the round, The Wall Street Journal reported.

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There’s good reason for the hype over Fluidstack. In November, Anthropic announced that it had signed a $50 billion deal with the startup to build data centers custom-designed for its needs in Texas and New York. Unlike hyperscalers like AWS, which serve all kinds of computing needs, Fluidstack’s infrastructure is built specifically for AI.

The deal was a huge vote of confidence for Fluidstack, a company that was relatively unknown in the U.S. Anthropic primarily uses AWS and Google Cloud to serve Claude (though it also has a partnership with Microsoft to supply Claude to that software giant’s customers). But just like rival OpenAI, Anthropic is growing so fast that it needs more capacity, and this deal gives Anthropic more control over its own cloud infrastructure.

This partnership is so significant to the startup that Fluidstack — which was spun out of Oxford and had been a rising star in Europe’s AI scene — relocated its headquarters from the U.K. to New York. Last month, it also pulled out of a key €10 billion AI project in France, Bloomberg reported, to focus on U.S. opportunities.

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In addition to Anthropic, it counts Meta, Poolside, Black Forest Labs, and others as customers. Prior to the deal with Anthropic, Fluidstack was probably best known for providing infrastructure to Mistral.

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Fluidstack did not respond to a request for comment.

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With 33% off, this is a more affordable way to boost your Xbox storage by 2TB

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Have you ever deleted a game you were not finished with simply because your Xbox Series X|S had run out of room, only to face a lengthy re-download the next time you wanted to play?

That frustration is exactly what the WD_BLACK C50 2TB Storage Expansion Card addresses, and it is currently down from £282.99 to £189.99 on Amazon, making this one of the better moments to fix the problem properly.

WD_Black C50 2TB on a black backgroundWD_Black C50 2TB on a black background

With a 33% discount back on the table, the WD_BLACK C50 2TB is an easy way to expand your Xbox storage before things get tight

At this price, this WD_Black C50 deal is a straightforward upgrade for anyone who has to make difficult decisions about their games storage.

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The key word is properly, because unlike plugging in an external USB drive, the C50 slots directly into the dedicated expansion port on your Xbox Series X and Series S and operates through Xbox Velocity Architecture, which means games stored on it run with the same speed and responsiveness as titles on the console’s internal SSD.

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That matters more than it might sound, because Xbox Series X|S games are designed around that architecture, and running them from a slower external drive forces them off the internal storage entirely, costing you the fast load times and Quick Resume functionality that make the console worth owning in the first place.

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Quick Resume itself is worth unpacking here, as it lets you suspend multiple games simultaneously and jump back into any of them almost instantly, but that feature depends entirely on having enough fast storage available to hold those suspended states ready to go.

At 2TB, the WD_BLACK C50 gives you room to keep a substantial library installed and ready without constant management, which changes the relationship you have with your game collection from one of rationing to one of just playing whatever you feel like.

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The card weighs just 25 grams and is officially licensed by Microsoft, so it slots in without any setup process or compatibility concerns, and the five-year limited warranty means it is built to last well beyond the current console generation.

This is a straightforward upgrade for any Xbox Series X|S owner who has started making difficult decisions about which games to keep installed, and at £189.99 the WD_BLACK C50 2TB makes that problem disappear without a complicated solution.

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Over 100 Chrome Web Store extensions steal user accounts, data

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Over 100 Chrome extensions in Web Store target users accounts and data

More than 100 malicious extensions in the official Chrome Web Store are attempting to steal Google OAuth2 Bearer tokens, deploy backdoors, and carry out ad fraud.

Researchers at application security company Socket discovered that the malicious extensions are part of a coordinated campaign that uses the same command-and-control (C2) infrastructure.

The threat actor published the extensions under five distinct publisher identities in multiple categories: Telegram sidebar clients, slot machine and Keno games, YouTube and TikTok enhancers, a text translation tool, and utilities.

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According to the researchers, the campaign uses a central backend hosted on a Contabo VPS, with multiple subdomains handling session hijacking, identity collection, command execution, and monetization operations.

Socket has found evidence indicating a Russian malware-as-a-service (MaaS) operation, based on comments in the code for authentication and session theft.

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Extensions linked to the same campaign
Extensions linked to the same campaign
Source: Socket

Harvesting data and hijacking accounts

The largest cluster, comprising 78 extensions, injects attacker-controlled HTML into the user interface via the ‘innerHTML’ property.

The second-largest group, with 54 extensions, uses ‘chrome.identity.getAuthToken’ to collect the victim’s email, name, profile picture, and Google account ID.

They also steal the Google OAuth2 Bearer token, a short-lived access token that permits applications to access a user’s data or to act on their behalf.

Google account data harvesting
Google account data harvesting
Source: Socket

A third batch of 45 extensions features a hidden function that runs on browser startup, acting as a backdoor that fetches commands from the C2 and can open arbitrary URLs. This function does not require the user to interact with the extension.

One extension highlighted by Socket as “the most severe” steals Telegram Web sessions every 15 seconds, extracts session data from ‘localStorage’ and the session token for Telegram Web, and sends the info to the C2.

“The extension also handles an inbound message (set_session_changed) that performs the reverse operation: it clears the victim’s localStorage, overwrites it with threat actor-supplied session data, and force-reloads Telegram,” describes Socket.

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“This allows the operator to swap any victim’s browser into a different Telegram account without the victim’s knowledge.”

The researchers also found three extensions that strip security headers and inject ads into YouTube and TikTok, one that proxies translation requests through a malicious server, and a non-active Telegram session theft extension that uses staged infrastructure.

Socket has notified Google about the campaign, but warns that all malicious extensions are still available on the Chrome Web Store at the time of publishing their report.

BleepingComputer confirms that many of the extensions listed in Socket’s report are still available at publishing time. We have reached out to Google for a comment on this, but we have not heard back.

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Users are recommended to search their installed extensions against the IDs Socket published, and uninstall any matches immediately.

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