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She turned her knitting hobby into a hand-dyed yarn biz, winning US & Canada fans.

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Parkour Kitties Fibers claims to be one of the first hand-dyed yarn businesses in Singapore

Mentioning “parkour” to anyone generally evokes a mental image of a particularly athletic individual, overcoming barriers and obstacles with ease. Or, maybe that specific scene from The Office may come to mind.

For 55-year-old Lois Teo, however, parkour is simply what her three relentlessly playful rescue cats were constantly up to. Their states of perpetual motion led Lois to label her felines as “parkour kitties”.

As an homage, Lois decided to name her business Parkour Kitties Fibers. Like the kittens, the brand would come to embody curiosity and a refusal to stay within rigid boundaries. Today, Parkour Kitties Fibers is recognised as one of Singapore’s earliest hand-dyed yarn businesses, operating in a niche that barely existed locally previously.

We spoke with indie yarn dyer Lois to find out what it means to be one of Singapore’s first hand-dyers.

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Stitching through recovery

lois teo cat parkour kitties fibers knittinglois teo cat parkour kitties fibers knitting
Lois and her cats./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

Since her teenage years, Lois had knitted and crocheted, learning from a knitting book she inherited from her sister. Over time, knitting became a quiet ritual—something she returned to whenever she needed calm.

In 2016, Lois took a one-year sabbatical from a stressful corporate job after suffering from a medical emergency during a business trip. During this period, knitting shifted from hobby to therapy. The repetitive motions, textures, and focus offered comfort at a time when her body and life felt uncertain.

When the overseas posting she was slated for offered no possibility of a part-time arrangement, Lois made the difficult decision to leave her corporate role entirely in 2017.

The following year was spent recovering, knitting, and learning to live at a slower pace. It was during this limbo that Parkour Kitties Fibres began to take shape—long before it had a name or customers.

During her usual shopping for yarns online, Lois discovered art of hand-dyed yarn, where the fibres saturated with layered colours, speckles, and gradients that felt alive. 

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“I realised a lot of them dye the yarn at home, in a home studio or garage,” Lois said. “I was like, ‘Oh, I can do that at home too’ and started converting my kitchen into a home studio!”

The founder shared that previously, there was only one other person hand-dyeing yarn in Singapore at that time, and it was limited to a hobby.

Lois began researching the process, watching YouTube tutorials and learning about acid dyes—how they work, and how they can be safely used on natural fibres. Through much practice, what started as curiosity quickly turned into passion and eventually a business.

Learning the ropes and rinses

lois teo cat parkour kitties fibers knitting dyeing processlois teo cat parkour kitties fibers knitting dyeing process
The dyeing process./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

In 2019, Lois officially began dyeing yarn and selling it online. The earliest offerings were simple, basic colourways that were listed on Etsy. Unexpectedly, there were many customers from the US and Canada, who were willing to pay international shipping for yarn hand-dyed halfway across the world. 

Her strong Etsy presence caught the attention of a local Etsy team, who encouraged Lois to take part in her first pop-up at its annual Etsy Craftivist, a crafter’s market held at Esplanade in 2019.

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That moment marked Parkour Kitties Fibers’ transition from a quiet online presence into a visible part of Singapore’s small but passionate yarn scene.

Today, Lois has expanded into novelty yarns, including bases embellished with sequins and beads. When dyed black, these yarns can become garments that feel classy and semi-formal.

Lois had also noticed that many customers treat her yarn as a “special occasion” material due to its uniqueness in colourways compared to mass-dyed yarn. 

“I’ve observed that many customers don’t use my yarn immediately but save it for more intricate projects,” Lois shared. 

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Years later, customers would reach out to Lois with their finished projects, proudly sharing sweaters, shawls, and cardigans made from Parkour Kitties yarn. Sometimes, these posts spark renewed demand for past colourways, which Lois happily accommodates.

A single skein starts at S$32, a price point Lois maintains to reflect the reality of local production costs. 

However, Lois is persistent in making natural fibre, especially hand-dyed ones, more accessible and affordable.

To lower the barrier of entry, she also produces mini-skeins, allowing customers to experiment with smaller projects like headscarves and socks. These smaller quantities also let people feel the difference in texture and quality when knitting or crocheting with natural fibre, compared to synthetic ones.

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Lois is also part of knitting groups where she and other knitters share their love, inspirations, and techniques for creating new works. 

The craft behind the colours

parkour kitties fibers headscarves mini regular skeinsparkour kitties fibers headscarves mini regular skeins
Mini and regular skeins, alongside headscarves knitted by Lois./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

Lois works primarily with animal fibres such as merino wool and cashmere, while synthetic fibres like polyester are avoided as much as possible. Such synthetic materials may be cheaper, but they do not retain warmth and durability over time in the same way natural fibres do, Lois emphasised.

“If you buy synthetic, it’s $10 compared to $20 for a natural fibre. It depends on whether you are looking for value or quality.” Lois said.

While knitting with natural fibre is undeniably more expensive than synthetic ones, Lois believes natural yarn is worth it for its craftsmanship and longevity. A store-bought knitted sweater made from natural fibre, she estimated, would retail for S$500 to S$600.

Outside of formal collections, Lois draws inspiration from the world around her: the colours and patterns of insects, birds, and flowers, as well as visual culture such as animations. These influences have even been translated into one to two colourways released a month, and even bundled skein colourways, where multiple colours tell a cohesive story. 

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parkour kitties fibers studio ghibli parkour kitties fibers studio ghibli
(L to R) Studio Ghibli collection, which includes the Swimming with Ponyo colourway./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

“My Studio Ghibli-inspired skeins have surprisingly sold quite well and usually sell out as fast as I can produce them.” Lois reflected.

Each dye batch usually yields around six skeins in five different yarn weights per colourway. The full dyeing process—cooking the yarn with acid dye, allowing it to cool, rinsing, and drying—takes about two days. During rainy periods, drying time can stretch even longer, depending on the yarn weights involved.

Occasionally, the final hue turns out differently than expected because various yarn bases absorb the dye in diverse ways—a natural quirk of hand-dyeing that always offers Lois a fresh lesson in her art.

“No two skeins are identical, that’s the beauty of hand-dyed yarn,” Lois reflected on her craft.

Binding off Etsy

parkour kitties fibers craft atelier geylang seraiparkour kitties fibers craft atelier geylang serai
(L to R) Parkour Kitties Fibers’ stocks at Craft Atelier; colourway inspired by Geylang Serai./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

As Etsy grew more expensive and prone to imitators, Parkour Kitties moved fully to sell on her website through Shopify in 2024. 

Later that year, a customer-turned-friend opened a knitting shop, Cast On Yarn Shop, which gave Parkour Kitties Fibers a physical retail spot to stock yarn regularly. Lois now drops by often, functioning almost like an in-house dyer. 

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As part of her love for knitting and the community, she also spends considerable time helping customers estimate how much yarn is needed for their projects, like sweaters—typically three to four skeins for a small to medium size, depending on yarn weight.

Moreover, that year, as part of a collaboration with the National Heritage Board and weaving and fibrecraft studio Craft Atelier, Lois created a yarn featuring a vibrant orange, green, and purple palette inspired by the culture and history of Geylang Serai. The yarn was offered in several blends, including merino and mulberry silk.

Besides stocking at Cast On Yarn Shop and Craft Atelier, Parkour Kitties Fibers has also found international stockists in Australia, Indonesia, and Japan, driven by interest in Lois’ novelty yarns—particularly her bold offerings like neon colourways amongst her other creations. Lois noticed that her core customers tend to be working adults ranging from their 20s to 60s, most of whom knit garments such as sweaters and cardigans.

At pop-ups, Lois offers ready-made products alongside her hand-dyed skeins, and the offerings shift according to the audience. High-end events like Boutique Fair feature large shawls, while festivals aimed at younger, budget-conscious crowds, such as Mercury Festival, will see Lois’ smaller bandanas, beanies and headscarves for sale. 

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Custom dye requests are increasingly common. One recent order involved “chill colours” in blues and greens for a very large shawl, beginning with five skeins and later asked for an additional three skeins to complete the piece.

The pressure behind the palette

parkour kitties fibers Peranakan Heritage 2025 Advent Calendarparkour kitties fibers Peranakan Heritage 2025 Advent Calendar
(L to R) Fidelity colourway inspired by butterflies, and pink lotus colourway of the Peranakan Heritage 2025 Advent Calendar./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

Among the usual creative challenges Lois has faced, the latest Peranakan Heritage 2025 Advent Calendar stands out as the most demanding, but also one of the most fulfilling ones. 

Her friend from Cast On Yarn Shop asked Lois to come up with 24 entirely new colourways. Lois got to work and decided on a Peranakan culture theme, where some colourways were inspired by butterflies and pink lotus in Peranakan motifs.

Initially hesitant, Lois only decided to go ahead with it later and had two weeks ahead of a Dec 1 delivery deadline to deliver the colourways. Nonetheless, she managed to do it with intense discipline, research and trial-and-error.  Moreover, Lois visited the Peranakan Museum to ensure the heritage-inspired colourways were accurate and respectfully represented.

Operational challenges have also emerged, particularly in international shipping. Severe restrictions and high flat fees introduced by SingPost for US-bound parcels has forced Lois to find slightly more affordable shipping companies.

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To manage still high shipping costs, Parkour Kitties lists shipping fees transparently on its website and offers refunds for any difference. 

“Despite the higher shipping prices, US customers continue to place orders and are willing to pay for it!” Lois shared.

Picking up the next stitch

parkour kitties fibers 2025 Peranakan Kebaya Collectionparkour kitties fibers 2025 Peranakan Kebaya Collection
(L to R) 2025 Peranakan Kebaya Collection./ Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

Besides personal milestones in launching the Peranakan Heritage 2025 Advent Calendar, popular Studio Ghibli bundles and becoming a near-resident dyer at a friend’s yarn shop, Lois’ SG60-themed colourways inspired by Peranakan Kebaya prints also marked a new phase of visibility and collaboration.

Looking ahead, Lois hopes to develop more kits and curated sets. New colourways frequently sell out upon release—sometimes before they even reach physical shelves—necessitating frequent dyeing sessions.

In terms of scale, Lois has been increasingly receiving a rising number of custom requests, apart from creating over 100 colourways so far.

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One of the most ambitious ideas on the horizon emerged from a conversation with her yarn shop–owning friend: the possibility of opening a yarn shop in the airport. Lois believes tourists would be drawn to locally hand-dyed yarn as a meaningful gift or a portable souvenir.

For others considering turning their love for craft into a business, Lois offered a firm piece of advice: “Do not under-sell your craft just because everybody’s doing it. Do not under-sell the time you spend on your craft.”

In every skein of Parkour Kitties Fibers’ yarn lies not just colour, but care, labour, and the conviction that slow, intentional making is worth every effort in this fast-paced world.

  • Learn more about Parkour Kitties Fibers here.
  • Read more stories we’ve written on Singaporean businesses here.

Featured Image Credit: Parkour Kitties Fibers

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Oracle layoffs could reach 30,000 as company doubles down on AI

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The company declined to comment on the total scope of the layoffs, though some estimates suggest they could affect as many as 20,000 to 30,000 workers. Oracle employed about 162,000 people worldwide as of the end of May.
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80% of jobs in Singapore don’t look at your degree anymore

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S’pore employers are moving towards skills-based hiring

The Ministry of Manpower released its 2025 jobs report on Mar 20, and the numbers tell a story that would have seemed improbable just a decade ago. 

Academic qualifications were not the main determinant in hiring for 79.6% of job vacancies last year, up from 78.8% in 2024 and 74.9% in 2023. The movement is slow enough to miss if you’re not looking, but steady enough to reshape who gets hired in Singapore.

Employers who have made the shift to skills-based hiring report faster recruitment, access to a broader talent pool, and improved employee performance.

Specifically, the change is taking hold in software development, data analytics, and AI-enabled roles across technology, finance, and engineering—the very positions where Singapore is concentrating its growth, and can see some of the highest pay.

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A shift driven by tech giants

google office californiagoogle office california
Image Credit: Framalicious via Shutterstock

This movement did not begin with Singaporean startups going out of the ordinary to see beyond academic qualifications. It actually started with multinational corporations that had the data and scale to test what actually predicted job performance.  

Between 2017 and 2022, the share of Google job postings requiring a college degree dropped from 93% to 77%, according to analysis by the Burning Glass Institute

Google co-founder Sergey Brin noted in early 2026 that the company hires “tons of people who don’t have bachelor’s degrees.” They would rather employ individuals who “just figure things out on their own in some weird corner.” 

Google isn’t alone in this approach.

IBM built an apprenticeship program explicitly marketed with the tagline “No Degree? No Problem!” in 2017. It went even further and stripped bachelor’s degree requirements from half of its job openings in 2021.

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Today, IBM’s share of United States hires without degrees approaches 20%. The company has proven that capability can precede credentials—and that the door opens wider when employers look at what candidates can do, not where they studied.

Firms in S’pore are starting to follow, particularly in the age of AI

singapore jobs hiringsingapore jobs hiring
Image Credit: Freepik

Now, firms in Singapore across finance, logistics, and retail are starting to follow.

Beyond academic degrees, companies now look for curiosity, problem-solving, and the ability to learn. This is skills-based hiring—and it’s becoming the default, particularly in the age of artificial intelligence.

More companies are adopting AI into digital workflows, and the tech is rewriting what “entry-level” and “job-ready” mean.

A Sept 2025 report from Morgan Stanley predicts that AI could impact 90% of occupations to some extent. This shift means hiring teams must focus on candidates whose skills align with long-term company goals, many of which will increasingly involve AI.

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Thus, what matters is not what someone learned five years ago, but their capacity to learn what is needed five years from now.

Singaporeans are increasingly embracing this mindset, with growing numbers tapping into lifelong learning initiatives like SkillsFuture to stay relevant in a rapidly changing job market.

Over 606,000 Singaporeans tapped into SkillsFuture-supported training in 2025, up from 555,000 in 2024. Of these, 458,000 used their SkillsFuture Credits—a sharp increase from 260,000 the year before. 

Nearly 123,000 mid-career individuals specifically chose courses designed to boost employability, up from 112,000 in 2024. These are not hobbyists killing time, but workers betting that skills, not credentials, will be the currency of the next decade.

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The results suggest they are not wrong. 73% of respondents to SkillsFuture surveys reported that training improved their work performance, up from 69% in 2024. Moreover, two in three respondents attributed career advancements directly to their courses. 

The door is still there, but it is no longer the only way in

It’s no longer about where you went to school. The pathway to hiring has become more flexible, as seen from how a portfolio can open doors that a transcript cannot.

singapore jobssingapore jobs
2p2play via Shutterstock

But here comes the uncomfortable reality: Singapore’s education system and its labour market are running on slightly different timelines.

The system still sorts students by qualifications. The market increasingly sorts them by capabilities. The firms now following, in finance, logistics, and retail, are playing catch-up in a game where the rules are still being written.

But that doesn’t mean your degree is useless—it’s just insufficient, as nearly 80% of job vacancies don’t consider your educational qualification when hiring.

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What you can do is starting to matter more than what you studied. The workers who understand this distinction—and who invest accordingly in skills that demonstrably transfer to the work itself—are the ones who will define the next decade of Singapore’s economy.

The door is still there, but it is no longer the only way in.

  • Read other articles we’ve written on Singaporean businesses here.

Also Read: ⁠GDP is growing—so why does it feel like there are “no jobs everywhere” in Singapore?

Featured Image Credit: iStock

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Tesla admits that remote humans can sometimes take control of its robotaxis

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The revelation comes from a March 26 response to Markey’s investigation into how autonomous vehicle companies use remote assistance operators.
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Bang & Olufsen Unveils Beolab 90 Zenith and Monarch Editions: Ultra-Luxury Anniversary Speakers Push Design and Price Into the Stratosphere

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To close out its 100th anniversary in appropriately over-the-top fashion, Bang & Olufsen has introduced the final two models in its five-part Beolab 90 Special Edition series: the Zenith and Monarch. They join the previously released Phantom, Mirage, and Titan variants, all built around the company’s flagship Beolab 90 loudspeaker, which remains in regular production. These aren’t incremental updates or lightly tweaked finishes.

They are ultra-limited, design-forward statements aimed at buyers who treat six-figure audio purchases the way most people treat a weekend Costco run. If you’re weighing one of these against a Bentley SUV and Porsche 911 Turbo on a random Monday and still have enough left over to feed an entire girls soccer team Chick-fil- A and imported herring, Bang & Olufsen knows exactly who you are and would like to have a word.  

Peter Bang and Svend Olufsen Founders
Peter Bang and Svend Olufsen, Founders

Founded in 1925 by Peter Bang and Svend Olufsen, the company didn’t just shape the look of modern audio gear—it built its reputation on turning serious engineering into functional art. A century later, Bang & Olufsen is marking the milestone the only way it knows how: by leaning harder into statement products that remind everyone why the brand still commands attention 100 years on.

The Original Beolab 90 

Bang & Olufsen Beolab 90
Bang & Olufsen Beolab 90 (original)

The original Beolab 90 landed in 2015 as Bang & Olufsen’s 90th anniversary statement, and it wasn’t subtle. It hit like a controlled detonation. I was there for the debut, and the reaction hasn’t changed since: this thing is a brute, but a smart one. The engineering is serious, the power is borderline absurd, and the design doesn’t ask for your attention—it takes it. You don’t forget hearing a Beolab 90. Not the first time, not the tenth.

Each speaker packs 8,200 watts of built-in amplification driving 18 Scan-Speak drivers, powered by 14 ICEpower amps and four additional Class D units. It’s a ridiculous amount of hardware, housed inside an angular, multi-faceted enclosure that sits on a curved wooden base. The whole thing looks less like a loudspeaker and more like something pulled from a modern architecture exhibit.

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And it’s not just brute force. The Beolab 90 backs it up with real flexibility: extensive wired and wireless connectivity, including WiSA, plus a deep toolkit of calibration and room optimization technologies to shape how it performs in your space. This isn’t a flagship that leans on looks alone. It earns it.

Active Room Compensation: Adjusts for room acoustics, furniture placement, and speaker positioning to deliver a more precise soundstage with clearer spatial cues.

Beam Width Control: Lets you dial in how focused or wide the sound dispersion is, shifting from a tight sweet spot to broader room coverage for more relaxed listening.

Beam Direction Control: Enables selection of one of five acoustic “front” positions, allowing the system to redirect the primary listening focus based on your room layout.

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Active Bass Linearization (ABL): Dynamically manages bass output relative to volume and available power, enhancing low-end presence at lower levels while protecting the drivers from overload.

Now that the fundamentals of the Beolab 90 are clear, Bang & Olufsen is marking both its 100th anniversary and the speaker’s 10-year milestone with five limited releases: the Beolab 90 Titan Edition, Phantom (Shadow), Mirage, and the new Monarch and Zenith editions, all developed through B&O’s Atelier program.

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Beolab 90 Monarch Edition

beolab-90-monarch

The Beolab 90 Monarch Edition leans into textural sophistication and Danish furniture design heritage, but compared to its sibling, this is the “restrained” one—if anything in this price range can be called that. It’s still sculptural, still a little intimidating, but at least it doesn’t look like it’s about to wake up in the middle of the night and make a decision about your family or dog.

Wood in Motion: Angled and curved rosewood lamellas follow the contours of the aluminium cabinet, creating a 360-degree visual rhythm that nods to classic fabric covers while adding real texture and tactility.

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Dynamic Knots: Six wooden knots connect the lamellas, with the front knot incorporating a subtle light-through-wood stripe that adds depth without screaming for attention.

Architectural Flow: A rosewood top ring frames the speaker, while the lower base panels continue the lamella pattern, tying the entire structure together in a cohesive, sculptural form.

Material Dialogue: The interplay between rosewood and ochre-coloured aluminium feels deliberate and balanced, blending natural warmth with precision engineering.

Textured Acoustics: Semi-transparent fabric sections reveal glimpses of the drivers beneath, reinforcing that this is still a serious piece of audio equipment—just dressed like high-end furniture instead of a sci-fi prop.

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Beolab 90 Zenith Edition

beolab-90-zenith

The Beolab 90 Zenith Edition takes a very different path with less restraint, and more spectacle. It’s a study in textural precision and sculptural excess, the kind of design that makes you stop and wonder if it’s genius, madness, or both. We’re honestly torn. Is this Rick James with metal cornrows, or something a high priest would wear in Dune? Either way, subtlety didn’t get an invite.

Pearl Architecture: Six panels feature 289 anodized aluminium spheres each, arranged in seven pearl-inspired finishes that shimmer and shift with the light. It’s mesmerizing—and just a little confrontational.

Facemask Precision: The machined aluminium facemask is pearl blasted and anodized in dark grey, giving it an oyster shell vibe that feels both organic and slightly armored.

Top Lid Inlay: A circular mother-of-pearl inlay crowns the speaker, matching the sphere dimensions and adding a luminous focal point that draws your eye whether you want it to or not.

Sculptural Flow: Curved panels follow the cabinet’s contours, integrating the layered textures into the overall architectural form without completely taming the visual chaos.

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Material Harmony: Polished aluminium elements and semi-transparent fabric attempt to balance the design, blending acoustic function with a tactile, almost ceremonial aesthetic that you’re either going to admire—or quietly question.

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Specifications

Pro Tip: As of now, all Beolab 90 variants; including the Monarch, Zenith, Titan, Phantom (Shadow), and Mirage Editions, share the same internal architecture and specifications. If Bang & Olufsen indicates otherwise, we’ll update the chart accordingly.

beolab-90-anniversary-edition-loudspeakers
Bang & Olufsen Model Beolab 90
Product Type Wireless Powered Speaker
Price (pair) From $211,800 (base model) Special Editions priced higher – refer to Availability and Price section
Designer Noto GmbH
Construction Materials Aluminium Fabric Wood
Recommended Room Size 30-200 m²
300-2000 ft²
Driver Configuration (per speaker) 7 x 1″ Scan-Speak Illuminator tweeter
7 x 4 ½” Scan-Speak Illuminator mid-range
3 x 10″ Scan-Speak Discovery woofer
1 x 13″ Scan-Speak Revelator front woofer
Amplification (per speaker) 7 x Bang & Olufsen ICEpower AM300-X for tweeter
7 x Bang & Olufsen ICEpower AM300-X for mid-range
3 x Heliox AM1000-1 for woofer
1 x Heliox AM1000-1 for front woofer
Frequency Range <12 – >43,000 Hz
Maximum Sound Pressure Level (SPL) @1m 126 dB SPL
Bass Capability (per pair) 118 dB SPL
Advanced Sound Features Adaptive Bass Linearization
Advanced Active Room Compensation
Beam Direction Control (5 sides)
Beam Width Control
Thermal Protection Yes
Wireless Connections Wireless Power Link (24-bit/48kHz)
WiSA (24-bit/96kHz)
Physical Connections (Primary Speaker) 1 x RCA (L/R)
1 x MIC / IR
1 x Power Link (RJ45)
1 x S/P DIF (24 bit / 192 kHz) 
1 x XLR (L/R) (fully balanced)
1 x Optical (24 bit / 96 kHz) 
1 x USB-B (Audio) (24 bit / 192 kHz)
1 x USB-A
2 x Digital Power Link
1 x Digital Power Link / Ethernet
1 x Power
Physical Connections (Secondary Speaker) 1 x USB-B (Audio)
1 x USB-A
3 x Digital Power Link
1 x Power
Dimensions per speaker
(WxHxD)
73.5  x 125.3 x 74.7 cm
(28.94 x 49.33 x 29.41 inches)
Weight (per speaker) 137 kg / 302 lbs

The Bottom Line

Bang & Olufsen is not chasing volume here. The Monarch and Zenith editions exist to reinforce a point. The Beolab 90 remains one of the most technically ambitious loudspeakers ever built, and B&O can still wrap that engineering in designs that feel closer to gallery pieces than traditional hi-fi.

What is unique? The performance has not changed, and that is intentional. You still get the full Beolab 90 platform with 8,200 watts of amplification, beamforming, room compensation, and one of the most adaptable active speaker systems available. The premium is in the materials, finish, and exclusivity.

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What is great is that B&O left the core alone. The Beolab 90 remains a reference level system that can adapt to real rooms in ways most speakers at this level cannot. What is not so great is the price and the design risk. These sit in the middle of the six figure range, and the Zenith in particular will divide opinion and raise some questions from your therapist.

Who are these for? Not anyone chasing value. These are for buyers who want top tier performance and a visual statement that makes everything else in the room feel ordinary. In the context of ultra high-end Danish audio, that price almost feels reasonable when you look at what Børresen is asking for its top models.

beolab-90-zenith-monarch-loudspeakers
Beolab 90 Zenith Edition (left) | Monarch Edition (right)

Pricing & Availability

Following the debut of the Phantom (Shadow) and Mirage Editions at Bang & Olufsen’s San Francisco Culture Store in December 2025, the Beolab 90 Monarch and Zenith Editions are set to make their first public appearance at the same location before heading out on a global tour. Prospective buyers will have a chance to see them up close and hear them in a more controlled setting than the usual trade show chaos. Only 10 pairs of each edition will be produced, which tells you everything you need to know about who these are really for.

Each pair includes a certificate of authenticity, and buyers will also receive a miniature aluminum Beolab 90 sculpture in the matching finish, packaged in a custom aluminum case. It’s equal parts accessory and reminder that you didn’t just buy speakers, you bought into the mythology.

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U.S. pricing has not been officially confirmed, but estimates put both the Monarch and Zenith at around $520,000 per pair. In the UK, pricing is reported at £410,000, with EU pricing at €480,000 per pair. For context, the original Beolab 90 launched in 2015 at roughly $78,000, climbed to $135,000 in 2023, and now sits at $211,800 per pair in 2025. Inflation is one thing. This is something else entirely.

The Monarch and Zenith can be ordered from bang-olufsen.com.

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KitchenAid just added 3 smart new features to its iconic stand mixer

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KitchenAid is giving its classic stand mixer a thoughtful refresh, as the new Artisan Plus adds three practical upgrades aimed at making everyday baking a little smoother.

At the top of the list is a built-in LED bowl light, which automatically switches on when the tilt-head is lowered. It’s a small but useful addition, as it allows you to keep an eye on texture or consistency without stopping mid-mix.

In addition, KitchenAid has introduced precision speed control and a soft-start function. The latter gradually ramps up mixing speed to avoid the all-too-familiar flour explosion. At the same time, the refined controls give you a bit more accuracy when working with delicate ingredients.

Those changes build on what’s already a well-established formula. The Artisan Plus keeps the familiar tilt-head design but adds a double-flex edge beater that scrapes the bowl as it mixes. It also comes with a secure-fit pouring shield and stainless steel accessories, although existing attachments still work here too. As a result, long-time KitchenAid users won’t need to start from scratch.

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KitchenAid Artisan PlusKitchenAid Artisan Plus

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There’s also a bit more flexibility in how you use it day to day. The mixer offers 11 speeds, including a new half-fold setting designed for gently combining lighter mixtures, preventing you from knocking the air out of them.

Design-wise, KitchenAid hasn’t strayed far from what made the mixer iconic in the first place. You’ll still get that classic silhouette, now paired with 15 colour options including exclusive finishes like a fetching Sun Dried Tomato, Wild Blueberry and Feather Pink.

It’s a relatively modest update on paper, but that’s arguably the point. Rather than reinventing the mixer, KitchenAid is refining it, adding small, genuinely useful features while keeping the core experience intact.

The Artisan Plus Stand Mixer is available now for $600. This positions it as the brand’s most premium take on a design that’s already stood the test of time.

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Gmail finally lets you change your cringey old usernames

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Google is finally doing the thing Gmail users have been begging for years, which is letting them change the actual username in their Gmail address. This is no longer just an early rollout, as Google says the feature is now available for all Google Account users in the US. So it’s still a limited release, […]

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Volvo’s parent just revealed a $15,000 extended-range EV, and it shows how wide the US value gap has become

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Geely, the Chinese automotive giant that owns Volvo, has just unveiled the Boyue EREV in China with a limited-time price of 107,900 Yuan, or roughly about $14,900. This price is worth noting, considering it’s not a stripped-down city car, but an extended-range SUV. It further highlights the value gulf between China and the US looks even wider.

This isn’t some tiny -range compromise either. Geely says the Boyue EREV offers up to 375 km of CLTC electric range and as much as 1,525 km of combined range, depending on the variant. It uses a 1.5 liter range extender, a 160kW electric motor, and either a 28.3 kWh or 50.4 kWh LFP battery pack. The larger battery also supports 3C fast charging, which claims to hit 80% charge from 30% in just about 15 minutes.

What else does it offer?

The Boyue EREV also doesn’t cut corners for the price, offering a 14.6-inch central display, an 8.8-inch instrument cluster, Flyme Auto, and support for both Carlink and Huawei HiCar. Keeping up with other high-tech Chinese EVs, you also get 50W wireless charging, an optional 16-speaker audio, an optional HUD, and L2-level driver assistance. It is also a real family SUV too, measuring 4,680mm long with a 2,778mm wheelbase.

Why this is such a big deal

The bigger story here is not just Geely’s new SUV. It is what this kind of product says about the market split. Reuters reported earlier this week on Geely’s broader importance to Volvo as the Swedish brand navigates a tough car market. It also underlines just how central the Chinese parent has become. And despite US buyers wanting to buy Chinese EVs, they remain largely shut out of this kind of value.

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European Union wants to ban AI-created images and video in official messaging

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  • EU reckons it could assert trust and authenticity by removing AI-generated content
  • The bloc is also drafting a code of practice to protect citizens
  • Blocking AI altogether might not be the best move, though

The European Union is reportedly considering a ban on AI-generated images and videos – otherwise known as deepfakes – in official communications.

According to new Politico reporting, with ongoing geopolitical tensions rising, elections running their courses and further public announcements, it’s believed the focus would be to protect trust in government messaging.

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Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro review: a super thin slab with a glorious display

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Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro: Two-minute review

The Samsung Galaxy Book6 Pro is a laptop in the ultrabook class, featuring a sublime design that keeps bulk to a minimum.

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Google fixes fourth Chrome zero-day exploited in attacks in 2026

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Google Chrome

Google released emergency updates to fix another Chrome zero-day vulnerability exploited in attacks, marking the fourth such security flaw patched since the start of the year.

“Google is aware that an exploit for CVE-2026-5281 exists in the wild,” Google said in a security advisory issued on Tuesday.

As detailed in the Chromium commit history, this vulnerability stems from a use-after-free weakness in Dawn, the underlying cross-platform implementation of the WebGPU standard used by the Chromium project.

Attackers can exploit this Dawn security flaw to trigger web browser crashes, data corruption, rendering issues, or other abnormal behavior.

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While Google has found evidence that threat actors were exploiting this zero-day flaw in the wild, it did not share details about these incidents.

“Access to bug details and links may be kept restricted until a majority of users are updated with a fix. We will also retain restrictions if the bug exists in a third party library that other projects similarly depend on, but haven’t yet fixed,” the company noted.

Google Chrome 146.0.7680.178

​Google has now fixed the zero-day for users in the Stable Desktop channel, with new versions rolling out to Windows, macOS (146.0.7680.177/178), and Linux users (146.0.7680.177). While Google says that this out-of-band update could take days or weeks to reach all users, it was immediately available when BleepingComputer checked for updates today.

If you don’t want to update the browser manually, you can also have it check for updates at the next launch and install them automatically.

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This is the fourth actively exploited Chrome zero-day patched since the start of the year. The first (CVE-2026-2441) was an iterator invalidation bug in CSSFontFeatureValuesMap (Chrome’s implementation of CSS font feature values), which Google addressed in mid-February.

Google patched two other Chrome zero-day bugs exploited in attacks earlier this month: the first is an out-of-bounds write weakness in the Skia 2D graphics library (CVE-2026-3909), and the second is an inappropriate implementation vulnerability in the V8 JavaScript and WebAssembly engine (CVE-2026-3910).

In 2025, Google fixed a total of eight zero-days exploited in the wild, many of which were discovered and reported by Google’s Threat Analysis Group (TAG), which is known for tracking and identifying zero-day exploits used in spyware attacks.

Automated pentesting proves the path exists. BAS proves whether your controls stop it. Most teams run one without the other.

This whitepaper maps six validation surfaces, shows where coverage ends, and provides practitioners with three diagnostic questions for any tool evaluation.

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