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Trinity’s maritime monitoring Sea-Scan team wins Defence Innovation Challenge

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The Sea-Scan research team from Trinity College Dublin has been awarded the Defence Innovation Challenge top prize, for its AI-enhanced real-time vessel detection system.

Given the growing threats to subsea communications and energy infrastructure, the need for continuous, reliable monitoring of Ireland’s maritime environment has come to the fore in recent years. This was reflected in the winning project at today’s announcement.

This morning (25 February), Irish Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science James Lawless, TD and Minister for Defence Helen McEntee, TD announced more than €1.8m in prize phase funding under the co-funded Research Ireland – Defence Innovation Challenge, with Trinity College Dublin-based project Sea-Scan winning the top award.

The Sea-Scan research team is working on a next-generation maritime situational awareness project to strengthen Ireland’s naval security. The Mash – Mobile Adaptable Shelter – team, led by Dr Daniel McCrum and Dr Kevin Roche from University College Dublin and Defence Forces liaison Captain Dave McKenna, was awarded runner-up funding.

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Ireland’s ability to monitor maritime activity, including the detection of so-called “dark” vessels, has been much in the headlines in recent year, with fears over our ability to adequately protect the subsea cables that are the backbone of our international communications.

Sea-Scan will develop an AI-enhanced real-time vessel detection system to support early warning and improved situational awareness, while it also offers potential applications in environmental monitoring. The Sea-Scan team is led by Prof Marco Ruffini and Dr John Kennedy from Trinity College Dublin and Defence Forces liaison Commander Cathal Power. The prize funding was awarded under the Maritime Situational Awareness Challenge.

“Challenge-based research funding encourages researchers to work directly with those most affected by the problems they seek to address,” said Dr Diarmuid O’Brien, CEO of Research Ireland. “The teams being funded today have developed their solutions through close collaboration with Defence Forces personnel. The Sea-Scan team are developing a high-quality solution to a complex problem that will deliver a transformational capability for the Irish Defence Forces.”

“Maintaining strong awareness of activity in Ireland’s maritime domain is essential, particularly given the country’s role as an island nation and a key Atlantic gateway for digital connectivity,” said Ruffini.

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“As subsea communications and energy infrastructure continue to grow in strategic importance, so too does the need for continuous, reliable monitoring of the surrounding maritime environment.”

Ruffini says the Sea-Scan team has demonstrated the potential to detect and characterise vessel activity using existing subsea fibre infrastructure, “showcasing a robust sensing capability embedded within operational communications assets and enabling effective vessel monitoring and subsea infrastructure protection”.

“The prize‑winning projects demonstrate how cutting‑edge research can deliver practical, real‑world solutions that strengthen national security while driving technological innovation,” said Lawless.

“Innovation is critical to ensuring our Defence Forces have the tools they need to operate effectively in an increasingly complex environment,” said McEntee. “This investment reflects our commitment to modernising defence capabilities and embracing innovative solutions for the future.”

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Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G Review

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Verdict

The Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is a reasonable mid-range Android phone in terms of decently zippy performance, a large and sharp OLED screen and a detailed 200MP snapper. Battery life is a strong point, too, although you can get more power and a less cluttered operating system for similar money.


  • Excellent battery life

  • Reasonable price to performance

  • Vivid, detailed OLED screen

  • Ad-riddled OS leaves a sour taste

  • Much more expensive than its predecessor

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Key Features


  • Trusted Reviews IconTrusted Reviews Icon


    Review Price: £429

  • 6.83-inch 120Hz OLED screen


    The Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G has a slightly larger OLED screen before that can get super bright.

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  • 6500mAh battery


    It’s also got a huge battery inside that can keep it going for several days on a charge.


  • Very robust


    This Xiaomi phone is drop-proof from up to 2.5m and has full water and dust resistance that’s more flagship quality than mid-ranger.

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Introduction

Xiaomi has become synonymous with budget-centred phones that punch above their weight into the mid-range, and the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is the brand’s latest and greatest for 2026.

This new model has seen upgrades over the previous Note 14 Pro Plus 5G, such as a bigger AMOLED screen, improved IP rating, a new Snapdragon SoC and a lighter frame that seeks to make it the most complete Xiaomi Note phone yet.

The £429 starting price for this model is a bump over the previous one, and over the step-down Xiaomi Redmi Note 14 Pro from 2025. Other key Android players also enter the fold at this price, such as the Google Pixel 9a, Motorola Edge 60 Neo, and Honor Magic 8 Lite, giving Xiaomi some stiff competition.

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I’ve been putting the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G through its paces for the last few weeks to see if this is truly one of the best Android phones in its price class.

Design

  • Polycarbonate frame makes it lighter than the older model
  • Curved edges may date it a little
  • Excellent dust and water resistance

The Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G builds on the previous model’s successes by making some small, but noteworthy changes, to make this the sleekest Pro Plus model Xiaomi has made.

For instance, the chassis has moved to a polycarbonate material to shave some weight, meaning this phone weighs just 207g in the black colourway I have. Opt for the faux leather-backed Mocha Brown model, and it adds an extra gram. Either way, it makes this Xiaomi handset one of the lightest at its price point.

The Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is available in other colours besides black and brown, with Xiaomi also offering Glacier Blue if you’d prefer a more defined splash of colour.

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Cameras - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GCameras - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
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There are curved edges on the front and back, unlike the other models in the Note 15 lineup, which isn’t as on-trend as it used to be. Nonetheless, I’ve always liked curved edges from the point of comfort, and this Xiaomi phone isn’t tiresome to hold.

Ports are standard fare for a modern phone, with a USB-C port for charging and a SIM slot off to the left. Gone are the days of cheaper phones still coming with things such as a headphone jack or expandable storage.

Ports - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GPorts - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Where the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G really punches above its weight is with its improved water and dust resistance over its predecessor, with full IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K certification that’s up there with flagship devices. 

There is also Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2 for added durability on the display, a pre-applied plastic screen protector, and a TPU case in the box so you’re ready to go as soon as you get the phone.

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Screen

  • 6.83-inch 120Hz 1280×2772 OLED
  • Dolby Vision and HDR10+ support
  • 3200 nits peak brightness

The screen size on the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G has been upped from 6.67 inches to 6.83 inches, making its 1280×2772 resolution AMOLED panel one of the largest Xiaomi has fitted to a handset yet. It seems to be the same screen that was present on the more premium Xiaomi 15T, proving some components can trickle down to more affordable models.

Xiaomi promises up to 1800 nits of panel-wide brightness and up to 3200 nits peak, which would be seriously impressive for a more mid-range device. In real-world use, I didn’t feel any reason to doubt the brand’s claims, as displayed images in video and games were sharp and vibrant, indoors and out. The panel also benefits from HDR10+ and Dolby Vision HDR support for increased vibrancy in supported content for even greater vibrancy.

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Screen - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GScreen - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
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It’s up to 120Hz of refresh rate here, which gives an added slickness against the 60Hz we were stuck at for a long time, although the screen here lacks the more advanced LTPO tech we see in dearer phones, meaning the variable refresh rate works in a blockier manner. For the most part, the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G’s panel sticks at 120Hz, which isn’t much of a hardship.

Xiaomi has also included an optical under-display fingerprint sensor for this phone, mounted quite low down on the panel. It’s fine to use, although not quite as good as the ultrasonic ones seen on higher-end devices.

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Cameras

  • 200MP main sensor provides natural images
  • No telephoto lens meaning zoom isn’t too brilliant
  • Good 4K video from rear camera

In spite of Xiaomi’s long-running partnership with Leica, tech from that collaboration hasn’t worked its way down to the brand’s more affordable handsets just yet. Instead, the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is bestowed with a dual camera setup, with an 8MP ultrawide and a 200MP 1/1.4-inch main sensor doing most of the heavy lifting.

It’s a similar setup to the previous model, and the same advice applies – stick to the main 200MP snapper as much as possible. That’s because it resolves the most detail, provides the most natural colours and pleasing imagery for a mid-range camera.

Sample Images - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GSample Images - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

General wide photography yields a natural image that doesn’t have the saturation cranked up for unrealistic, poppy colours, with sharp detail and great dynamic range in my walkabout in London a few weeks’ back. The larger sensor size helps with this, with a 1/1.4-inch size surprisingly large for a more modest handset.

The main sensor does reasonably well in the dark, although let things get too dark, such as in the case of the beef sandwich image, and things begin to look a little fuzzy in places as detail retention drops.

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Sample Images - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GSample Images - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
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The lack of a dedicated telephoto lens means Xiaomi is left to crop in on the 200MP sensor to offer an artificial form of zoom via pixel binning, and a choice of focal lengths in the phone’s camera app. At anything up to 4x, detail is still reasonably sharp and well-preserved, although go fully into a digital zoom range of 10x or more and it falls off a cliff in terms of sharpness, detail preservation and more besides.

The 32MP front selfie snapper on the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is reasonable, although there isn’t any autofocus here to make sure you remain the star of the show. It’s still reasonable for vain photos of yourself, and the dedicated Portrait mode can add some pleasant bokeh, but images can come out a little soft.

Sample Images - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GSample Images - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

We’ve got up to 4K/30fps video supported on the rear camera with good detail and smooth zoom action, although the front camera’s 1080p/60fps feels comparably limiting in both general performance and overall sharpness.

Performance

  • Newer Snapdragon chip inside
  • Middling performance for the price
  • Decent for gaming, although there are limitations

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As expected for the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G, Xiaomi has opted to use a newer version of the Qualcomm chip found in last year’s model. Here, we’ve got an eight-core Snapdragon 7S Gen 4 SoC, against the Gen 3 model found in the 14 Pro+, along with 12GB of RAM and 512GB of storage in my sample.

The performance in the Geekbench 6 benchmark isn’t groundbreaking by any means, with as much performance as a flagship from a few years ago, and a modest boost over its predecessor. It’s largely in line with rivals, such as the Motorola Edge 60 Neo, although the OnePlus Nord 5 remains the standout for pure power at this price.

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General use proves the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G doesn’t feel sluggish, in spite of the middling numbers. Navigating around Android felt zippy, as did my general workflow of using my phone for using social media, streaming music from Tidal and playing the odd game.

Cameras - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GCameras - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

More serious multi-tasking can lead to some minor lags or stutters, although that’s perhaps more due to the middling LPDDR4X RAM and UFS 2.2 storage arrangement than the outright raw grunt of the processor.

Gaming is possible with the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G, and with the Game Boost features that spring into life when you open one, it’s possible to optimise your experience as much as possible. It’s possible to clear RAM and enable a faster performance profile to eke out more oomph, and there’s a decently competent GPU inside to allow for 60fps in the likes of Call of Duty Mobile. 

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For more prolonged intensive loads, expect this Xiaomi phone to get a little on the warm side, although it seems the phone’s vapour chamber cooling solution does its job well to prevent things from getting too warm.

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Software & AI

  • HyperOS isn’t as polished as its rivals
  • More ad-riddled than previous versions
  • Middling OS and security upgrade commitments

I’ve had a couple of run-ins with Xiaomi’s HyperOS skin of choice in the past, and to be truthful, it’s never been my favourite Android skin against the likes of One UI or the Stock Pixel Launcher due to a lack of polish and the presence of pre-installed guff I didn’t ask for.

It borrows a lot of cues from Apple’s iOS, which become particularly noticeable with the OS’ quick settings menu that’s accessed by swiping on the right side of the screen and has a very Apple feel in terms of brightness and volume control. It’s the same as Honor’s MagicOS, so I’ve been quite used to it, but if you’re moving from other Android variants, it can take some getting used to.

Profile - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GProfile - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

There are also Google’s latest AI additions, such as Circle to Search and utilising Gemini as an assistant. There are Xiaomi-specific AI gubbins here, which mostly feature in the gallery app when editing images, such as object removal and portrait blurring with an artificial bokeh effect. There are also a few more advanced options, like the ability to remove backgrounds, FOV expansion and AI-powered automatic video editing.

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What I dislike about HyperOS is the amount of bloatware that comes pre-installed, such as Xiaomi’s own MI app store, as well as OneDrive, the Opera browser, and the Booking.com app. Honor is guilty of this, too, and I wish more brands would opt for a cleaner approach to their Android skins. 

Screen - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5GScreen - Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The big problem here is the prevalence of ads at virtually every turn – most of them are for Temu – and it majorly cheapens the feel of the operating system.

Xiaomi promises more modest updates and software longevity for the Redmi Note 15 Plus 5G, with four years of OS and six years of security updates. It’s okay, if not class-leading.

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Battery Life

  • 6500 mAh battery
  • 100W wired charging
  • No charger in the box

The Redmi Note 15 Plus 5G comes with a hefty 6500mAh battery, which is one of the largest available on a phone at this price, and I could comfortably get through a working day without so much as even thinking about battery life. Only a small top-up was needed with a charger before I went to bed to keep it ticking over without worrying for a second day.

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This phone supports up to 100W wired fast charging, but unfortunately the proprietary Xiaomi charger isn’t included in the box. For my testing, I used a more modest 66W 6A charger that wasn’t as brisk in its speeds, taking 75 minutes to get to 50 percent and well in excess of two and a half hours for a full charge. It isn’t the quickest to get back to full.

Moreover, this phone doesn’t support any form of wireless charging, which feels like quite a misstep in 2026, as many of its rivals do.

SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10208272

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Should you buy it?

You want a dazzling screen

The Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus excels with its bright, large OLED screen that’s one of the sharpest you’ll find on a phone at its price.

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The letdown with this phone is its ad-riddled version of Android that leaves quite the sour taste against rivals.

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Final Thoughts

The Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is a reasonable mid-range Android phone in terms of decently zippy performance, a large and sharp OLED screen and a detailed 200MP snapper.  Battery life is a strong point, too, although you can get more power and a less cluttered operating system for similar money.

The likes of the Google Pixel 9a and OnePlus Nord 5 can outperform Xiaomi’s choice in terms of grunt, for instance, while Google’s own version of Android is much cleaner and easier to live with, and its camera is also a strong performer. The Nord 5 isn’t as strong on battery life as Xiaomi’s choice, though, but its OxygenOS skin is much less in your face with AI or any ads compared to HyperOS.

With this in mind, there’s still a fair bit to like about the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G, and it’s a cromulent Android handset for the price. For more options, check out our list of the best Android phones we’ve tested.

How We Test

We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product.

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  • Used as a main phone for over a week
  • Thorough camera testing in a variety of conditions
  • Tested and benchmarked using respected industry tests and real-world data

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FAQs

Does the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G come with a charger?

No, the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G doesn’t come with its own charger, so you’ll need to supply your own.

Is the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G water-resistant?
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Yes, the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G is fully dust and water-resistant and comes with full IP66/IP68/IP69/IP69K certification.

How many upgrades will the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G get?

Xiaomi has committed to four years of OS updates and six years of security updates with the Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus.

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Test Data

  Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G
Geekbench 6 single core 1252
Geekbench 6 multi core 3278
Geekbench 6 GPU 3552
AI performance 2229
Max brightness 3200 nits
1 hour video playback (Netflix, HDR) 3 %
Time from 0-100% charge 162 min
Weight via scales 207 grams
Time from 0-50% charge 75 Min
30-min recharge (no charger included) 20 %
3D Mark – Wild Life 1135
3D Mark – Wild Life Stress Test 98.9 %

Full Specs

  Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro Plus 5G Review
UK RRP £429
Manufacturer Xiaomi
Screen Size 6.83 inches
Storage Capacity 512GB
Rear Camera 200MP wide, 8MP ultrawide
Front Camera 32MP selfie
Video Recording Yes
IP rating IP69K
Battery 6500 mAh
Fast Charging Yes
Size (Dimensions) 78.3 x 163.3 x 8.2 MM
Weight 207 G
Operating System Android 15
Release Date 2026
First Reviewed Date 18/02/2026
Resolution 1280 x 2772
HDR Yes
Refresh Rate 120 Hz
Ports USB-C, SIM
Chipset Qualcomm Snapdragon 7s Gen 4
RAM 12GB
Colours Black, Blue, Brown

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AI Math Benchmarks: AI’s Growing Capabilities

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Mathematics is often regarded as the ideal domain for measuring AI progress effectively. Math’s step-by-step logic is easy to track, and its definitive automatically verifiable answers remove any human or subjective factors. But AI systems are improving at such a pace that math benchmarks are struggling to keep up.

Way back in November 2024, non-profit research organization Epoch AI quietly released FrontierMath. A standardized, rigorous benchmark, Frontier Math was designed to measure the mathematical reasoning capabilities of the latest AI tools.

“It’s a bunch of really hard math problems,” explains Greg Burnham, Epoch AI Senior Researcher. “Originally, it was 300 problems that we now call tiers 1–3, but having seen AI capabilities really speed up, there was a feeling that we had to run to stay ahead, so now there’s a special challenge set of extra carefully constructed problems that we call tier 4.”

To a rough approximation, tiers 1–4 go from advanced undergraduate through to early postdoc level mathematics. When introduced, state-of-the-art AI models were unable to solve more than 2% of the problems FrontierMath contained. Fast forward to today and the best publicly available AI models, such as GPT-5.2 and Claude Opus 4.6, are solving over 40% of FrontierMath’s 300 tiers 1–3 problems, and over 30% of the 50 tier 4 problems.

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AI takes on PhD level mathematics

And this dizzying pace of advancement is showing no signs of abating. For example, just recently Google DeepMind announced that Aletheia, an experimental AI system derived from Gemini Deep Think, achieved publishable PhD level research results. Though obscure mathematically—calculating certain structure constants in arithmetic geometry called eigenweights—the result is significant in terms of AI development.

“They’re claiming it was essentially autonomous, meaning a human wasn’t guiding the work, and it’s publishable,” Burnham says. “It’s definitely at the lower end of the spectrum of work that would get a mathematician excited, but it’s new—it’s something we truly haven’t really seen before.”

To place this achievement in context, every FrontierMath problem has a known answer that a human has derived. Though a human could probably have achieved Aletheia’s result “if they sat down and steeled themselves for a week,” says Burnham, no human had ever done so.

Aletheia’s results and other recent achievements by AI mathematicians point to new, tougher benchmarks being needed to understand AI capabilities, and fast, because existing ones will soon become irrelevant. “There are easier math benchmarks that are already obsolete, several generations of them,” says Burnham. “FrontierMath will probably saturate [meaning state-of-the-art AI models score 100%] within the next two years; could be faster.”

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The First Proof challenge

To begin to address this problem, on February 6, a group of 11 highly distinguished mathematicians proposed the First Proof challenge, a set of 10 extremely difficult math questions which arose naturally in the authors’ research processes, and whose proofs are roughly five pages or less and had not been shared with anyone. The First Proof challenge was a preliminary effort to assess the capabilities of AI systems in solving research-level math questions on their own.

Generating serious buzz in the math community, professional and amateur mathematicians, and teams including OpenAI, all stepped up to the challenge. But by the time the authors posted the proofs on February 14, no one had submitted correct solutions to all 10 problems.

In fact, far from it. The authors themselves only solved two of the 10 problems using Gemini 3.0 Deep Think and ChatGPT 5.2 Pro. And most outside submissions fared little better, apart from OpenAI and a small Aletheia team at Google DeepMind. With “limited human supervision” OpenAI’s most advanced internal AI system solved five of the 10 problems, with Aletheia achieving similar outcomes—results met with a spectrum of emotions by different members of the mathematics community, from awe to disappointment. The team behind First Proof plans an even tougher second round on March 14.

A new frontier for AI

“I think First Proof is terrific: it’s as close as you could realistically get to putting an AI system in the shoes of a mathematician,” says Burnham. Though he admires how First Proof tests AI’s mathematical utility for a wide range of mathematics and mathematicians, Epoch AI has its own new approach to testing—FrontierMath: Open Problems. Uniquely, the pilot benchmark consists of 16 open problems (with more to follow) from research mathematics that professional mathematicians have tried and failed to solve. Since Open Problems’ release on January 27, none have been solved by an AI.

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“With Open Problems, we’ve tried to make it more challenging,” says Burnham. “The baseline on its own would be publishable, at least in a specialty journal.” What’s more, each question is designed so that it can be automatically graded. “This is a bit counterintuitive,” Burnham adds. “No one knows the answers, but we have a computer program that will be able to judge whether the answer is right or not.”

Burnham sees First Proof and Open Problems as being complementary. “I would say understanding AI capabilities is a more-the-merrier situation,” he adds. “AI has gotten to the point where it’s, in some ways, better than most PhD students, so we need to pose problems where the answer would be at least moderately interesting to some human mathematicians, not because AI was doing it, but because it’s mathematics that human mathematicians care about.”

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There’s a sneaky way to watch Survivor 50 for free

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Survivor 50 is about to play the biggest game in Fiji history, and reality TV fans don’t have to break the bank to catch this season’s murderers’ row of castaways. Here’s the play:

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Equinix to create 200 jobs in Louth, investing up to $700m

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The new skilled roles will be created as part of an initial five-year $350m investment.

AI infrastructure provider Equinix will create 200 jobs in Dundalk, Co Louth through an investment of up to $700m in a new facility that will be built by local company Hanley Energy.

New roles at the facility will be in technical fields such as precision engineering, quality assurance and lean manufacturing. Hiring has already begun, and there are plans for the facility to engage locally with apprenticeship and training programmes.

The deal guarantees an initial $350m across five years and is extendable to 10 years. The new facility will be used exclusively to build specialised power equipment for Equinix’s data centres worldwide.

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Adaire Fox-Martin, the CEO and president of Equinix, said: “This investment builds upon Equinix’s longtime presence in Ireland and reflects the strategically important role the country plays in the global technology ecosystem.

“Our expansion in Dundalk further strengthens our ability to meet growing customer demand while creating local jobs and supporting the community.”

Equinix said that by centralising its production of components such as low-voltage switchgear, power distribution units and remote power panels at the new 150,000 sq ft facility, it expects to achieve up to 15pc faster lead times when compared to traditional procurement methods.

Taoiseach Micheál Martin, TD said: “This significant announcement reinforces Ireland’s position as a leader in digital infrastructure and advanced manufacturing. The creation of hundreds of skilled jobs and the introduction of world-class facilities in Dundalk is a major boost for the region and for our national economy.”

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Equinix, which runs 280 data centres across six continents, works with partners such as Amazon Web Services, Nvidia, Azure and Google Cloud.

Managing director of Equinix Ireland Peter Lantry said the investment would secure the company’s supply chain locally in the Louth region and ensure its long-term presence there, while IDA Ireland CEO Michael Lohan said it would “deliver significant economic benefits and high-value jobs in Dundalk and the wider region”.

Hanley Energy, which employs around 850 worldwide, plans to build the new facility using “low-carbon materials and efficient construction practices”, according to Equinix. The facility will also feature a temperature-controlled testing laboratory – which Equinix claimed will be the only one of its kind in Ireland or the UK.

Hanley CEO John O’Driscoll said: “Partnering with Equinix on this transformative project highlights the strength of Irish engineering and innovation. Our advanced testing facilities and expertise will ensure that the equipment produced here meets the highest global standards, supporting data centres worldwide.”

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At the end of last year, Hanley was acquired by US engineering and manufacturing company Jabil for around $725m.

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Remote Work: Thrive With Communication Skills

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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!

Standing Out as a Remote Worker Takes a Different Strategy

My first experience as a remote worker was a disaster.

Before I joined a San Francisco-based team with a lead developer in Connecticut, I had worked in person, five days a week. I thought success was simple: write good code, solve hard problems, deliver results. So I put my head down and worked harder than ever.

Twelve-hour days became normal as the boundary between work and personal life disappeared. My kitchen table became my office.

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I rarely asked for help because I didn’t want to seem incompetent. I stayed quiet in team Slack channels because I wasn’t sure what to say.

Despite working some of the longest hours of my career, I made the slowest progress. I felt disconnected from the team. I had no idea if my work mattered or if anyone noticed what I was doing. I was burning out.

Eventually, I realized the real problem: I was invisible.

The Office Advantage You Lose When Remote

In an office, visibility happens naturally. Colleagues see you arrive early or stay late. They notice when you are stuck on a problem. They hear about your work in hallway conversations and over lunch. Physical presence creates recognition with almost no effort.

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Remote work removes those signals. Your manager cannot see you at your desk. Your teammates don’t know you’ve hit a roadblock unless you say so. You can work long days and still appear less engaged than someone in the office.

That is the shift many people miss: Remote work requires execution plus deliberate communication.

What Actually Works

By my second remote role, I knew I had to change to protect my sanity and still succeed.

Here are five things I did that made a real difference.

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1. Over-communicating

I began sharing updates in team channels regularly, not just when asked. “Working on the payment integration today; ready for review tomorrow.” “Hit a blocker with API rate limits; investigating options.” These took seconds but made my work visible and invited help sooner.

2. Setting limits

When your home is also your office, overwork becomes the default. I started ending most days at 5 p.m. and transitioning out of work mode with a walk or gym session. That ritual helped prevent burnout.

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3. Volunteering for presentations

Presenting remotely felt less intimidating than standing in front of a room. I started volunteering for demos and lunch-and-learns. This increased my visibility beyond my immediate team and improved my communication skills.

4. Promoting others publicly

When someone helped me, I thanked them in a public channel. When a teammate shipped something impressive, I called it out. This builds goodwill and signals collaboration. In remote environments, gratitude is visible and memorable.

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5. Building relationships deliberately

In an office, relationships form naturally. Remotely, you have to create those moments. I started an engineering book club that met every other week to discuss a technical book. It became a low-pressure way to connect with people across the organization.

The Counterintuitive Reality

With these habits, I got promoted faster in this remote job than I ever did in an office. I moved from senior engineer to engineering manager in under two years, while maintaining a better work-life balance.

Remote work offers flexibility and freedom, but it comes with a tax. You are easier to overlook and more likely to burn out unless you are intentional in your actions.

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So, succeeding remotely takes deliberate effort in communication, relationships, and boundaries. If you do that well, remote work can unlock more opportunities than you might expect.

—Brian

Despite its critical role in maintaining a secure network, authentication software often goes unnoticed by users. Alan DeKok now runs one of the most widely used remote authentication servers in the world—but he didn’t initially set out to work in cybersecurity. DeKok studied nuclear physics before starting the side project that eventually turned into a three-decade-long career.

Read more here.

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We’re just two months into 2026, and layoffs in the tech industry are already ramping up. According to data compiled by RationalFX, more than half of the 30,700 layoffs this year have come from Amazon, which announced that it would be cutting the roles of 16,000 employees in late January. Will the trend continue through 2026?

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Recent research suggests that a majority of organizations have a significant gap when it comes to AI skills among leadership. To help fill the gap, IEEE has partnered with the Rutgers Business School to offer an online “mini-MBA” program, combining business strategy and deep AI literacy. The program spans 12 weeks and 10 modules that teach students how to implement AI strategies in their own organizations.

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Riley Walz, the Jester of Silicon Valley, Is Joining OpenAI

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Riley Walz, a software engineer famous for his online stunts, is joining OpenAI to research and develop new ways for humans to interact with AI, WIRED has learned. An OpenAI spokesperson confirmed the hire.

Walz built a reputation as Silicon Valley’s jester and has created a series of viral web projects that double as social commentary. His most recent initiative, Jmail, lets users search Jeffrey Epstein’s emails as if they’re accessing his personal Gmail inbox. Another project, Find My Parking Cops, used publicly available data to reverse engineer San Francisco’s parking ticket system to show people exactly where each parking enforcement officer last wrote a ticket.

Now, Walz’s skills creating novel web experiences will be put to use in OAI Labs, a relatively new team led by research leader Joanne Jang. The team is secretive about what it’s been working on but has been tasked with “inventing and prototyping new interfaces for how people collaborate with AI,” according to Jang.

OpenAI has spent the past several years racing with Google and Anthropic to create new, compelling ways for people to use its AI models. While ChatGPT has been a hit with consumers, now reaching more than 800 million people every week, the company is eyeing new interfaces to improve these experiences. The move comes as millions of developers have started using coding agents such as Claude Code as their main interface to access AI models. With hires like Walz, OpenAI hopes to get ahead of the next big AI product.

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Walz’s online stunts have landed him in hot water from time to time. The Find My Parking Cops website lasted just four hours before San Francisco city officials shut down the live data feed Walz’s tool relied on. A San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency representative said at the time that it shut down the tool to ensure “employees are able to do their jobs safely and without disruption.”

It’s not always city officials giving him a hard time, though. After the CEO of UnitedHealthcare was shot dead in New York City, and police said the killer had fled on a CitiBike, Walz tried to analyze trip data he had previously scraped for a separate project to help with the search. Walz told The New York Times that people online called him a “bootlicker” for helping authorities and threatened his safety.

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Stop Ironing 3D Prints | Hackaday

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If you want smooth top surfaces on your 3D printed parts, a common technique is to turn on ironing in your slicer. This causes the head to drag through the top of the part, emitting a small amount of plastic to smooth the surface. [Make Wonderful Things] asserts that you don’t need to do this time-consuming step. Instead, he proposes using statistical analysis to identify the optimal settings to place the top layer correctly the first time, as shown in the video below.

The parameters he thinks make a difference are line width, flow ratio, and print speed. Picking reasonable step sizes suggested that there were 19,200 combinations of settings to test. Obviously, that’s too many, so he picked up techniques from famous mathematician [George E. P. Box] and also used Bayesian analysis to reduce the amount of printing required to converge on the perfect settings.

Did it work? Judging from the video, it appears to have done so. The best test pieces looked as good as the one that used traditional ironing. Compared to ironing, the non-ironed parts saved about 34% of print time. Not bad.

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Of course, there are variations on traditional ironing, so your results may vary.

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Skate’s developer is laying off staff before the game leaves early access

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Full Circle, the developer behind the new Skate game, has announced that it is restructuring and laying off staff. It’s not yet clear how many roles will be impacted by the changes, but the restructuring is happening less than six months after skate. launched in early access on September 15, 2025.

“We’re reshaping Full Circle to better support skate.’s long-term future,” Full Circle says. “These shifts mean making changes to our team structure, and some roles will be impacted. The teammates affected are talented colleagues and friends who helped build the foundation of skate. Their creativity and dedication are deeply ingrained in what players experience today. This decision is not a reflection of their impact and we’re committed to supporting them through this transition.”

Engadget has contacted Full Circle’s owner EA for more information about the layoffs. We’ll update this article if we hear back.

EA originally formed Full Circle in 2021 with a staff of development talent from the original Skate team. Skate was often positioned as a more realistic competitor to the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater series, but the new studio has ultimately taken the franchise in a slightly different direction than fans may have expected. Previous Skate games were paid experiences with single-player and multiplayer modes, while skate. is a free-to-play live-service game supported with microtransactions.

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Recent history, both the failure of Concord and the ongoing struggles of Highguard, serves as a testament to how hard it is to launch a live service game in the 2020s. Full Circle’s announcement notes the “tens of millions” of players that have tried the new game, but it’s possible a struggle to keep players interested and spending on microtransactions could be why it’s restructuring.

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Richard Hammond Meets BYD Yangwang U9 Xtreme, the Fastest Production Car on Earth, and Survives

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Richard Hammond BYD Yangwang U9 Xtreme Fastest Car
Richard Hammond slid into the driver’s seat of BYD’s Yangwang U9 Xtreme with a good mix of caution and exhilaration. With a top speed of 308 miles per hour, this Chinese hypercar had already broken the manufacturing speed record. Its four electric motors together produced an astounding nearly 3,000 horsepower. He was well-versed in the specification sheet, which included a 1,200-volt battery system, torque vectoring, adaptive suspension capable of lifting the vehicle over obstacles, and much more.



Without a wind-up or crescendo, the hypercar went from being motionless to warp speed in an instant. The strange thing was that the 200 mph didn’t even feel that significant. With such great power, you would think the U9 Xtreme would be a monster, but instead it just drove smoothly without any hiccups.


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Richard Hammond BYD Yangwang U9 Xtreme Fastest Car
Hammond was surprised when a new aspect of the vehicle emerged in the cornering arena. The U9 Xtreme was quite sharp and kept its body flat in the turns, contrary to his belief that it would be best suited for driving in a straight line. He questioned his function in operating the vehicle because the active systems handled the weight transfer and grip so efficiently. Was he pushing something that could already handle the tough sections, or merely directing the car? Even under some very harsh corners, the chassis refused to roll or pitch too much.

Richard Hammond BYD Yangwang U9 Xtreme Fastest Car
Every time he floored it, the pull and response were immediate and unrelenting, making the power addictive in a positive way. He was thrilled by the car’s accuracy and composed application of force, yet he was constantly on edge due to its immense power. He acknowledged that he was afraid, which was probably rather common. There’s a problem if you’re not a little afraid in a car like this.

Richard Hammond BYD Yangwang U9 Xtreme Fastest Car
Ultimately, the U9 Xtreme left him both unnerved by its potential and genuinely impressed by its ingenuity. The fastest production automobile in the world is made in China, and it’s actually rather astonishing how confidently they’ve done it. The U9 Xtreme quietly gave its unadulterated performance instead of being all show and no substance. After everything was said and done, Hammond left with a smile on his face, his nerves unharmed, and a fresh appreciation for what BYD had accomplished.

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Everyone Speaks Incel Now | WIRED

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At the beginning of the year, The Cut kicked off a brief discourse cycle by declaring a new lifestyle trend: “friction-maxxing.”

The idea, in a nutshell, is that people have overconvenienced themselves with apps, AI, and other means of near-instant gratification—and would be better off with increased friction in their daily lives, which is to say those mundane challenges that ask some minor effort of them.

Whatever your feelings on that philosophy, the use of “maxxing” as a suffix assumed to be familiar or at least intelligible to most readers of a mainstream news outlet is evidence of another trend: the assimilation of incel terminology across the broader internet. The online ecosystem of incels, or “involuntarily celibate” men, is saturated with this sort of clinical jargon; its aggrieved participants insulate, isolate, and identify themselves through in-group codespeak that is meant to baffle and repel outsiders. So how did non-incels (“normies,” as incels would label them) end up adopting and recontextualizing these loaded words?

Slang, no matter its origins, has a viral nature. It tends to break containment and mutate. The buzzword “woke,” as it pertains to our current politics, comes from African American Vernacular English and once referred to an awareness of racial and social injustice—this usage dates to the middle of the 20th century, preceding even the civil rights movement. But the culture wars of this century have turned “woke” into a favorite pejorative of right-wingers, who wield it as a catchall term for anything that threatens their ideology, such as Black pilots or gender-neutral pronouns.

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Back in 2014, the eruption of the Gamergate harassment campaign set the stage for a different linguistic realignment. An organized backlash to women working in the video game industry, and eventually any sort of diversity or progressivism within the medium, it exposed a vein of reactionary anger that would gain a fuller voice during Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. This was a period when many in the digital mainstream got their first taste of the trollish nihilism and invective that fuels toxic message boards such as 4chan and gave rise to a network of anti-feminist manosphere sites collectively known as the “PSL” community: PUAHate (a board for venting about pickup artists, it was shut down soon after the 2014 Isla Vista killing spree carried out by Elliot Rodger, who frequented the forum), SlutHate (a straightforward misogyny hub), and Lookism (where incels viciously critique each other’s appearance).

Lookism, named for the idea that prejudice against the less attractive is as common and pernicious as sexism or racism, is the only forum of the PSL trifecta that survives today, and while we don’t know who coined the “maxxing” idiom, it’s the likeliest source for the first verb with this construction. “Looksmaxxing,” which borrows from the role-playing game concept of “min-maxing,” or elevating a character’s strengths while limiting weaknesses, became the preferred expression for attempts to improve one’s appearance in pursuit of sex. This could mean something as simple as a style makeover or as extreme as “bonesmashing,” a supposed technique of achieving a more defined jaw by tapping it with a hammer.

If the 2000s introduced people to pickup lingo like “game” and “negging,” the 2010s ushered in language that extended the Darwinian vision of the dating pool as a cutthroat and strictly hierarchical marketplace. “AMOG,” an initialism for “alpha male of the group,” gave us “mogging,” a display where one man flexes his physical superiority over a rival. An ideally masculine specimen might also be recognized as a “Chad,” who allegedly enjoys his pick of attractive partners, while a Chad among Chads is, of course, a “Gigachad.” Women were disparaged as “female humanoids,” then “femoids,” and finally just “foids.”

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