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What happened when they installed ChatGPT on a nuclear supercomputer

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If there’s anything that makes people more uncomfortable than highly advanced AI or nuclear weapons technology, it’s the combination of the two. But there’s been a symbiotic relationship between cutting-edge computing and America’s nuclear weapons program since the very beginning.

In the fall of 1943, Nicholas Metropolis and Richard Feynman, two physicists working on the top-secret atomic bomb project at Los Alamos, decided to set up a contest between humans and machines.

  • Los Alamos National Laboratory recently partnered with OpenAI to install its flagship ChatGPT AI model on the supercomputers used to process nuclear weapons testing data. It’s the latest in a long history of symbiosis between America’s nuclear program and cutting edge computing.
  • AI tools are already revolutionizing the way scientists are conducting research at Los Alamos, part of a larger program called Genesis Mission that aims to harness the technology to accelerate scientific research at America’s national labs.
  • Comparisons of AI to the early days of nuclear weapons abound, both among critics and proponents, but Vox’s reporting trip to the lab found little evidence of the kind of doomsday fears the permeate conversations about AI elsewhere.

In the early days of the Manhattan Project, the only “computers” on site were humans, many of them the wives of scientists working on the project, performing thousands of equations on bulky analog desk calculators. It was painstaking and exhausting work, and the calculators were constantly breaking down under the demands of the lab, so the researchers began to experiment with using IBM punch-card machines — the cutting edge of computer technology at the time. Metropolis and Feynman set up a trial, giving the IBMs and the human computers the same complex problem to solve.

As the Los Alamos physicist Herbert Anderson later recalled, “For the first two days the two teams were neck and neck — the hand-calculators were very good. But it turned out that they tired and couldn’t keep up their fast pace. The punched-card machines didn’t tire, and in the next day or two they forged ahead. Finally everyone had to concede that the new system was an improvement.”

Today, at Los Alamos, a similar dynamic is taking place, as scientists at the lab increasingly rely on artificial intelligence tools for their most ambitious research. Like their punch-card ancestors, today’s AI models have a leg up on human researchers simply by virtue of not having to eat, sleep, or take breaks. Scientists say they’re also approaching tough problems in entirely new and unexpected ways, changing how research is conducted at one of America’s largest scientific institutions.

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In recent weeks, in the wake of the feud between the Pentagon and Anthropic, as well as the reported use of AI software for targeting during the war in Iran, the partnership between the US military and leading AI companies has become a highly charged political topic. Less discussed has been the already extensive cooperation between these firms and the country’s nuclear weapons complex, under the supervision of the Department of Energy.

Last year, the Los Alamos National Lab (LANL) entered a partnership with OpenAI allowing it to install the company’s popular ChatGPT AI system on Venado, one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. As of August, Venado was placed on a classified network, meaning that the AI chatbot now has access to some of the country’s most sensitive scientific data on nuclear weapons.

a supercomputer with a brightly-colored exterior that reads “Venado.” The surrounding area looks like a typical office setting

Supercomputers at Los Alamos’s high-performance computing center.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

Supercomputers at Los Alamos’s high-performance computing center.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

Supercomputers at Los Alamos’s high-performance computing center.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

That wasn’t all. Later last year, the Department of Energy, which oversees Los Alamos and the country’s 16 other national laboratories, announced a $320 million initiative known as the Genesis Mission, which aims to “harness the current AI and advanced computing revolution to double the productivity and impact of American science and engineering within a decade.”

Few people are in a better position to think about the upsides and downsides of revolutionary new technologies than the people who today populate the mesa once occupied by Robert Oppenheimer, Feynman, and the other pioneers of the nuclear age. But when I visited the lab in January, I found that the researchers there were remarkably sanguine about the more existential risks that often come up in conversation about AI, even as they worked on the production of the world’s most dangerous weapons.

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“They think we’re building Skynet; that’s not what’s going on here at all,” LANL’s deputy director of weapons, Bob Webster, said, referring to the superintelligent system from the Terminator movies. Geoff Fairchild, deputy director for the National Security AI Office, volunteered that he does not have a “p(doom),” the Silicon Valley shorthand for how likely one believes it is that AI will lead to globally catastrophic outcomes, and doesn’t believe most of his colleagues do either. “We don’t talk about it. I don’t think I’ve ever had that conversation,” he added.

For Alex Scheinker, a physicist who uses AI for the maintenance and operation of LANL’s massive particle accelerator, AI is an extraordinarily useful tool, but a tool nonetheless. “It’s just more math,” he said. “I don’t like to think about it like it’s magic.”

Still, the nuclear-AI comparison is unavoidable. Given the technology’s transformative potential, the dangers it could pose to humanity, and the potential for an innovation “arms race” between the United States and its international rivals, the current state of AI has frequently been compared to the early days of the nuclear age. And how people feel about the Manhattan Project — a triumphant union between the national security state and scientific visionaries? Or humanity opening Pandora’s box? — likely has a lot to do with how they view their work now.

Those making the comparison include OpenAI CEO Sam Altman who is fond of quoting Oppenheimer, and expressed disappointment that the 2023 biopic of the Los Alamos founder wasn’t the kind of movie that “would inspire a generation of kids to be physicists.” One of the film’s central conflicts is how a guilt-stricken Oppenheimer spent much of the second half of his life in an unsuccessful quest to control the spread of his creation. (Disclosure: Vox Media is one of several publishers that have signed partnership agreements with OpenAI. Our reporting remains editorially independent.)

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The Trump administration has been explicit about the comparison. In the executive order announcing the mission, the White House invoked the creation of the atomic bomb, writing, “In this pivotal moment, the challenges we face require a historic national effort, comparable in urgency and ambition to the Manhattan Project that was instrumental to our victory in World War II.”

But if we really are in a new “Manhattan Project” moment, you wouldn’t know it in the place where the original Manhattan Project took place.

“The world’s nuclear information is right in there. You’re looking at it,” LANL’s director for high performance computing, Gary Grider, told me during my visit to Los Alamos in January.

We were staring through a glass window at a densely packed shelf of magnetic tapes, each of which could be accessed and read via a robotic system that resembled a high-end vending machine more than a hyperintelligent doomsday computer. The machine we were staring into contained nuclear data so sensitive it’s kept on physical drives rather than an accessible network, not that any of the data stored in the room I was standing in is exactly open source.

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Magnetic tapes organized in a dark, narrow passage

Magnetic tapes containing nuclear testing information at Los Alamos’s high-performance computing center.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

I was in Los Alamos’s high-performance computing complex, a vast, brightly lit, 44,000-square-foot room in a building named for Nicholas Metropolis, containing six supercomputers with space cleared out for two more. The first thing that strikes visitors to the computing center, the refrigerator-like temperature and the roar of the overhead fans, both evidence of the gargantuan effort, in money and megawatts, that it takes to keep these machines cool. “Going into high-performance computing, I never thought that I’d be spending this much of my time thinking about power and water,” Grider told me. Computing at Los Alamos is an insatiable beast: The average lifespan of a supercomputer, the cost of which can run into the hundreds of millions of dollars, was once around five to six years. Now it’s around three to five.

Cutting-edge computing has been intertwined with the American nuclear enterprise from the beginning. Los Alamos scientists used the world’s first digital computer, ENIAC, to test the feasibility of a thermonuclear weapon. The lab got its own purpose-built cutting-edge computer, MANIAC, in the early ’50s. In addition to playing a role in the development of the hydrogen bomb, MANIAC was the first computer to beat a human at chess…sort of. It played on a 6×6 board without bishops and took around 20 minutes to make a move. In 1976, the Cray-1, one of the earliest supercomputers, was installed at Los Alamos. Weighing more than 10,000 pounds, it was the fastest and most powerful computer in the world at the time, though it would be no match for a modern iPhone.

signatures seen on the exterier of a bright orange supercomputer

Signatures of lab officials and executives, including Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, on the Venado Supercomputer.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

I had visited Los Alamos to see MANIAC and Cray’s descendant, Venado, comprised of dozens of quietly humming 8-foot tall cabinets. Currently ranked as the 22nd most powerful computer in the world, Venado was built in collaboration with the supercomputer builder HPE Cray and chip giant Nvidia, which provided some 3,480 of its superchips for the system. It is capable of around 10 exaflops of computing — about 10 quintillion calculations per second. The signatures of executives, including Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, adorn one of the cabinets.

Last May, OpenAI representative, accompanied by armed security, arrived at Los Alamos bearing locked metal briefcases containing the “model weights” — the parameters used by AI systems to process training data — for its ChatGPT 03 model, for installation on Venado. It was the first time this type of reasoning model had been applied to national security problems on a system of this kind.

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LANL’s computers are a closed system not connected to the wider internet, but the OpenAI software installed on Venado brings with it learning it has acquired since the company started developing it. Officials at the lab were not about to let a visiting reporter start asking the AI itself questions, but from all accounts, its users interface with it from their desktop computers essentially the same way the rest of us have learned to talk to ChatGPT or other chatbots when we’re generating memes or brainstorming weeknight recipes.

Those users include scientists at LANL itself as well as the country’s other main nuclear labs — Sandia, in nearby Albuquerque, and Lawrence Livermore, near San Francisco. Grider says demand for the new tool was immediately overwhelming. “I was surprised how fast people became dependent on it,” he told me.

Initially, the system was used for a wide array of scientific research, but in August, Venado was moved onto a secure network so it could be used on weapons research, in the hope that it can become an invaluable part of the effort to maintain America’s nuclear arsenal.

Whatever your attitude toward nuclear weapons, Los Alamos researchers argue that as long as we have them, we want to make sure they work.

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Since the 1990s, the United States — along with every other country other than North Korea, has been out of the live nuclear testing business, notwithstanding Trump’s recent social media posts on the subject. But between the original Trinity detonation in 1945 and the most recent blast in an underground site in 1992, the United States conducted more than 1,000 nuclear tests, acquiring vast stores of information in the process. That information is now training data for artificial intelligence that can help the lab ensure that America’s nukes work without actually blowing one up.

Venado is effectively a massive simulation machine to test how a weapon would respond to being put under unique forms of stress in real-world conditions. We can “take a weapon and give it the disease that we want and then blow it up 1000 different ways,” as Grider puts it.

In some ways this fulfills the vision of Los Alamos’s founder Robert Oppenheimer, who opposed further nuclear tests after Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the grounds that we already knew these weapons worked and any other questions could be answered by “simple laboratory methods.”

Those methods are not so simple today. When Webster, the LANL deputy director of weapons, first got involved in nuclear testing in the 1980s, the “state of computing that we had was extremely primitive,” he said, and not a viable substitute for gathering new data. Today, he says, “we’re doing calculations I could only dream of doing” before.

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Mike Lang, director of the lab’s National Security AI Office, suggested that using AI tools to analyze the data kept “behind the fence” could not only ensure the weapons work, but also improve them. “We’re using [the same] materials that we’ve been using for a very long time,” he said. “Could we make a new high explosive that is less reactive, so you can drop it, and nothing happens? [Or] that’s not made with toxic chemicals, so people handling it would be safer from exposures? We can go through and look at some of the components of our nuclear deterrence, and see how we can make it cheaper to manufacture, easier to manufacture, safer to manufacture.”

Whatever your attitude toward nuclear weapons, Los Alamos researchers argue that as long as we have them, we want to make sure they work.

“We don’t build the weapons to do something stupid,” Webster said. “We build them not to do something stupid.”

The Los Alamos lab’s mesa location, an oasis of pines in the midst of a stark desert landscape, is known to locals as “the Hill.” About 45 minutes north of Santa Fe (on today’s roads, that is), it was chosen during World War II for its remoteness, defensibility, and natural beauty. Oppenheimer, who had traveled in the region since his youth, had long expressed a desire to combine his two main loves, “physics and desert country.”

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Eight decades after the days of Oppenheimer, the sprawling fenced-off Los Alamos campus feels a bit like a university town without the young people. Los Alamos County is the wealthiest in New Mexico and has the highest number of PhDs per capita in the country. The lab has around 18,000 employees and the population has boomed since the lab resumed production of plutonium pits — the explosive cores of nuclear weapons — as part of America’s ongoing $1.7 trillion nuclear modernization program. Federal officials recently adopted a plan for a significant expansion of the lab, including an additional supercomputing complex, which critics say fails to take account of the environmental impact of the facility’s electricity and water use as well as the hazardous waste caused by pit production.

the snowy exterior of a windowless, concrete building backed up to forest

“Gun site, the facility when the “Little Boy” bomb dropped on Hiroshima was assembled.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

Officials at Los Alamos are quick to point out that despite what the lab is best known for, scientists there are working on more than just weapons of mass destruction. During my tour, I met with chemists using AI to design new targeted radiation therapies to improve cancer treatment and visited the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, a kilometer-long particle accelerator that, in addition to weapons research, produces isotopes for medical research and pure physics experiments.

Critics point out that the vast majority of its budget is still devoted to weapons research, but still, Los Alamos is one of the best places in the world to observe the seismic impact AI is having on how scientific research is conducted. When the decision was made to move Venado onto a secure network, it cut off a number of ongoing scientific research projects, which is one big reason why two new supercomputers, known as Mission and Vision, are planned to debut this summer. Both are designed specifically for AI applications — one for weapons research, one for less classified scientific work.

AI projects, including at Los Alamos, are often criticized for their power use, but scientists at the lab say their work could ultimately result in safer and more abundant energy. There’s a long-running joke that nuclear fusion technology, which could deliver clean power in vast quantities, is perpetually 20 years away. LANL scientists are hopeful that AI could help crack the remaining scientific breakthroughs needed to get it off the ground. Several researchers mentioned the potential use of AI tools to design heat-resistant materials for use in nuclear fusion reactors. Scientists at LANL’s sister lab, Livermore, achieved the world’s first fusion ignition reaction a few years ago, though it lasted only a few billionths of a second. “The thing that excites me…is the notion that we can move out of this computational world and start interacting with these experimental facilities,” said Earl Lawrence, chief scientist at the National Security AI Office.

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Researchers increasingly use AI for “hypothesis generation,” devising new potential compounds or materials for testing. But the main feature of AI that excited the Los Alamos scientists I spoke with the most harkens back to what Metropolis and Feynman discovered about using early computers 80 years ago: It can do more work, faster, and without breaks than any human. Increasingly, it can do the sort of physical real-world experiments that post-docs and junior researchers were responsible for as well.

Asked about how he envisioned the future of scientific research in a world of AI, Lawrence quipped, “I hope it’s more coffee shops and walks in the woods.” Grider, a career computer programmer, said, “I hope to hell we can get out of the code business.”

There are downsides to that ease, as well. The sort of grunt work that AI can now do more efficiently is how scientists once learned their craft, assisting senior scientists with research. As in other fields, the pathways to those careers could narrow.

“We need to be intentional about how we train the next generation of scientists,” Lawrence said.

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From the atomic age to the AI age

Reminders of Los Alamos’s history are everywhere on the Mesa. During my visit to the lab, I toured the sites, now eerie abandoned historical monuments maintained by the National Parks Service, where the bomb detonated by Oppenheimer and company in the 1945 Trinity test, and Little Boy, dropped on Hiroshima, were assembled. They’re possibly the only US National Parks locations where visiting involves a safety briefing on radiation and nearby live explosives testing.

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Industrial boilers used in the original Manhattan Project.
Provided by Los Alamos National Laboratory/Joey Montoya, photographer

But the heirs to Oppenheimer and Feynman have mixed feelings about the Manhattan Project metaphor when it comes to AI.

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Lang felt it was a mistake to characterize AI as a weapon, or frame development as an arms race, with China the main competitor this time instead of Germany. He preferred to think of today’s research as continuing the Manhattan Project’s model of “giving a bunch of multidisciplined scientists a goal to really go after and try to make progress on.” Others pointed to the scientists who were concerned at the time about the risk of a nuclear explosion igniting the earth’s atmosphere as somewhat equivalent to today’s AI “doomers.”

There’s also a fundamental difference between the two in how knowledge is disseminated. “In the very early days of nuclear energy, there were only a handful of people who had the knowledge and understanding to even know what was going on,” said Fairchild, the deputy director for LANL’s National Security AI Office. Plus, supplies of uranium and plutonium could be tightly controlled. “These days, everybody knows what’s going on…and much of it is happening in open source.”

AI is also developing in a very different way from previous technologies with national security implications. In the past, the government and military have often dictated academic research into futuristic tech to meet their own needs, with commercial applications only being found later: The internet may be the prime example. Now, as LANL’s partnership with OpenAI shows, it’s the government and military racing to react to cutting-edge applications developed first by private industry for commercial use.

“For the very first time, I would argue, on a really big scale, we find ourselves not in a leadership role here,” said Aric Hagberg, leader of LANL’s computational sciences division.

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There may also be an AI-atomic parallel in the sheer size of investment proponents should be devoted to the advancement of the technology. Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI’s former chief scientist once remarked (maybe jokingly) that in a world of superintelligent AI “it’s pretty likely the entire surface of the Earth will be covered with solar panels and data centers.” The remark brings to mind another one by the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Niels Bohr, who had been skeptical that the United States would be able to build an atomic bomb “without turning the whole country into a factory.” When Bohr first visited Los Alamos, he felt, stunned, that the Americans had “done just that.”

The majority of the Manhattan Project was not the work done on chalkboards on the Hill by physicists, but the industrial scale efforts to enrich uranium and produce plutonium in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and Hanford, Washington. The latter site, carried out in large part by chemical firm Dupont — a “public-private partnership” of its era — produced radioactive waste that is still being cleaned up today. Likewise, the work of producing the AI future is as much or if not more about a massive build-out of data centers and the power needed to keep them cool and humming as it is the cutting edge research coming out of Silicon Valley or government labs.

When you visit Los Alamos, it’s hard not to be struck by the amount of ingenuity — in everything from nuclear physics, to explosive design, to revolutionary new techniques in high-speed photography — as well as the sheer industrial output that turned theoretical physics into a workable bomb in just three years.

You can still see the raw intellectual talent and can-do spirit that built the most advanced civilization the world has ever seen at Los Alamos today, and can easily imagine how it might build an even better one tomorrow. But it’s also impossible not to wonder if you’re seeing something else: Humanity’s thirst for power over the material world meeting with its instincts toward fear and aggression to engineer new nightmares. Perhaps we’ll get an answer soon.

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This story was produced in partnership with Outrider Foundation and Journalism Funding Partners.

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Man admits to locking thousands of Windows devices in extortion plot

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Hacker

A former core infrastructure engineer has pleaded guilty to locking Windows admins out of 254 servers as part of a failed extortion plot targeting his employer, an industrial company headquartered in Somerset County, New Jersey.

According to court documents, 57-year-old Daniel Rhyne from Kansas City, Missouri, remotely accessed the company’s network without authorization using an administrator account between November 9 and November 25.

Throughout this time, he allegedly scheduled tasks on the company’s Windows domain controller to delete network admin accounts and to change the passwords for 13 domain admin accounts and 301 domain user accounts to “TheFr0zenCrew!”.

The prosecutors also accused Rhyne of scheduling tasks to change the passwords for two local admin accounts, which would affect 3,284 workstations, and for two more local admin accounts, which would impact 254 servers on his employer’s network. He also scheduled some tasks to shut down random servers and workstations on the network over multiple days in December 2023.

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Subsequently, on November 25, Rhyne emailed a number of his coworkers a ransom email titled “Your Network Has Been Penetrated,” saying that all IT administrators had been locked out of their accounts and that server backups had been deleted to make data recovery impossible.

Additionally, the emails threatened to shut down 40 random servers daily over the next ten days unless the company paid a ransom of 20 bitcoin (worth roughly $750,000 at the time).

“On or about November 25, 2023, at approximately 4:00 p.m. EST, network administrators employed at Victim-1 began receiving password reset notifications for a Victim-1 domain administrator account, as well as hundreds of Victim-1 user accounts,” the criminal complaint reads.

“Shortly thereafter, the Victim-1 network administrators discovered that all other Victim-1 domain administrator accounts were deleted, thereby denying domain administrator access to Victim-1’s computer networks.”

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Forensic investigators found that on November 22, Rhyne used a hidden virtual machine and his account to search the web for information on clearing Windows logs, changing domain user passwords, and deleting domain accounts as he planned his extortion plot.

One week earlier, Rhyne made similar web searches on his laptop, including “command line to remotely change local administrator password” and “command line to change local administrator password.”

Rhyne was arrested in Missouri on Tuesday, August 27, and released after his initial appearance in federal court. The hacking and extortion charges to which he pleaded guilty carry a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

Earlier this month, a North Carolina data analyst contractor was found guilty of extorting his employer, Brightly Software (a Software-as-a-Service company previously known as SchoolDude), for $2.5 million.

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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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What impact might Medtronic’s new lab have on Galway’s medtech ecosystem?

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Ronan Rogers and Ruth Callanan discuss innovation in the west of Ireland and the evolution of Ireland’s STEM careers.

Ireland’s medtech sector is moving beyond traditional biomedical engineering, according to Ronan Rogers, the senior R&D director for cardiac ablation solutions at Medtronic. He explained the region has built “real depth”, not just in medtech, but across key areas such as pharmaceutical science, advanced analytics and digital technology. Areas that are now “increasingly converging”.

“That diversity of opportunity is a huge strength for Ireland,” he told SiliconRepublic.com. “It allows people from different professional backgrounds to find meaningful, high‑impact careers in healthcare, while helping Ireland move further up the value chain as a centre for complex, globally relevant innovation.”

Having recently expanded its Galway-based pharmaceutical laboratory, the Medtronic facility now serves as a west of Ireland hub for high-tech innovation and the evolving needs of the global healthcare space. Rogers is of the opinion that this is reflective of the convergence of the country’s medtech divisions.

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Noting that the primary purpose of the lab “is to integrate pharmaceutical, engineering and analytical expertise under one roof to address the complex challenges of combination products, [that is] where a medical device and a medicine work together”.

“We see that convergence very clearly in this laboratory and there is a wide range of career paths in our industry, whether that’s a pharmacist drawn to the faster innovation cycles and applied science of medtech, or a software developer who wants to use their skills to solve real healthcare challenges and code with a deeper sense of purpose.”

What opportunities exist?

With the expansion comes the opportunity for students and professionals to consider a new role, either as part of Medtronic or within Galway’s thriving life science and medtech spaces.  

“Galway offers a unique innovation ecosystem where infrastructure, academic partnerships and a significant medtech footprint all provide a strong foundation for sustaining Ireland’s leadership in the life sciences sector,” said Ruth Callanan, Medtronic’s director of site quality. 

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With the investment focused on significantly expanding R&D capability and technical depth within a critical space in the Irish medtech sector, Medtronic has increased lab space by almost a half and introduced analytical technologies that didn’t exist there before.

Callanan said: “This creates the conditions for future high‑value work as programmes grow. It strengthens Galway’s ability to attract and retain highly specialised talent, pharmaceutical scientists, chemical and materials engineers and it allows work that was previously outsourced internationally to be done here in Ireland.

“Over time, as demand and activity scale, we do expect this capability to support additional specialist roles, phased in over the coming years. Importantly, it reinforces Ireland’s position at the forefront of advanced medtech R&D and reflects a broader industry trend toward self-sufficiency in high-tech analytical testing.”

Step into the future

She explained the new lab will enable experts to integrate processes as the facility will be responsible for the entire life cycle of product development, from early phase R&D through to post-market oversight.

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She added: “The laboratory utilises advanced LCMS [liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry] and GCMS [gas chromatography-mass spectrometry] technologies, which act as ‘molecular microscopes’. This allows our scientists to identify unknown compounds or impurities at extremely precise levels.”

According to Rogers, the new lab has a role to play in what he believes to be the reshaping of how STEM careers in Ireland are perceived and pursued, with Callanan noting this creates for students and professionals opportunities to engage with careers that bridge the gap between various scientific disciplines. 

“A laboratory of this size and complexity requires students and professionals with a wide range of skills and experience across multiple disciplines,” she said. 

“Just as importantly,” added Rogers, “we’re sending a clear signal to pharmacists, chemists and analytical scientists that medtech offers deep, intellectually challenging career paths that go well beyond traditional manufacturing or even classical biomedical engineering.”

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Colorado’s New Speed Camera System Makes Waze Nearly Useless

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Colorado is rolling out an average-speed camera system that tracks vehicles across multiple points instead of catching them at a single camera, making it much harder for drivers to dodge tickets with apps like Waze and Radarbot. Motor1 reports: The state’s new automated vehicle identification systems (AVIS) use several cameras to calculate your average speed between them, and if it is 10 miles per hour or more over the limit, you get a ticket. No longer will you be able to slow down as you approach a camera and speed back up after passing it, not that you should be speeding on public roads in the first place.

Colorado began deploying this new camera system after legislators changed the law in 2023, allowing AVIS for law enforcement use. The systems, installed on various roads and highways throughout the state, first began issuing warnings, but police began issuing tickets late last year.

The most recent section of road to fall under surveillance is a stretch of I-25 north of Denver, which brought the state’s growing panopticon to our attention. It began issuing tickets on April 2. The Colorado Department of Transportation installed the cameras along a construction zone. The fine is $75 and zero points for exceeding the speed limit, and the police issue it to the vehicle’s owner, regardless of who is driving.

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Oracle cuts 491 jobs in Washington state as it embraces AI-led engineering

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Oracle’s Cloud Experience Center in downtown Seattle. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

Oracle is laying off 491 employees in Washington state, according to a filing Tuesday from the state Employment Security Department.

The cuts impact workers at two Seattle offices as well as remote employees and take effect June 1. The cloud and database giant stated in its WARN letter that the offices will not be closing.

Earlier this month, Bloomberg and others reported that Oracle was planning to cut thousands of jobs across the company as it tries to fund the high-cost deployment of new data centers. The reductions are also the result of AI-driven efficiencies within the organization, according to comments by Mike Sicilia, Oracle’s co-chief executive, in an earnings call March 10.

“The use of AI coding tools inside Oracle is enabling smaller engineering teams to deliver more complete solutions to our customers more quickly,” Sicilia said, according to the publication CIO.

Oracle declined to comment on the newest job cuts.

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The Washington layoffs affect more than 230 software developers across multiple seniority levels and an additional 48 employees with the title of software development. The cuts include workers in senior director and vice president roles, as well as managers, product developers, product managers, program managers, site reliability developers, technical analysts, user experience developers and others.

The layoffs are the latest in a series of Oracle reductions. In August the company laid off 161 workers, followed by 101 employees in October. By last fall, Oracle had approximately 3,800 employees in the Seattle area, according to LinkedIn.

Oracle has grown its presence in the region over the past decade, tapping into the area’s engineering talent pool as it battled Amazon and Microsoft in the cloud. In recent years, the company has established partnerships with both Seattle-area giants.

Now all three, plus other tech companies, have been undergoing multiple rounds of job reductions, with recent Meta cuts impacting 168 Washington workers and T-Mobile confirming new layoffs last Friday.

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GeekWire Awards: Sustainable Innovation finalists tackle energy, fashion and farming

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Climate change is battering the earth with record-setting high temperatures, more powerful storms and devastating wildfires. A slate of cutting-edge sustainability companies are fighting back with technologies that aim to curb carbon emissions and help humanity navigate a change world.

This award, presented by Amazon, recognizes the Pacific Northwest’s leaders in this space. The Sustainable Innovation Award finalists this year are Helion, IUNU, OCOChem, Ravel and TerraPower.

Now in its 18th year, the GeekWire Awards is the premier event recognizing the top leaders, companies and breakthroughs in Pacific Northwest tech, bringing together hundreds of people to celebrate innovation and the entrepreneurial spirit. It takes place May 7 at the Showbox SoDo in Seattle.

Carbon Robotics, an ag-tech company building weed-killing machines that use artificial intelligence and computer vision to recognize and zap unwanted plants, won the category last year.

Continue reading for information on this year’s finalists, which were chosen by a panel of independent judges from community nominations. You can help pick the winner: Cast your ballot here or in the embedded form at the bottom of this story. Voting runs through April 16.

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Helion Energy has spent 13 years working to replicate the physics that power the sun and stars — pursuing nearly limitless clean energy for the grid. The Everett, Wash.-based company is currently developing its seventh-generation prototype while simultaneously building what it hopes will be the world’s first commercial fusion plant, in Eastern Washington.

Backers include OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, and Microsoft has signed a deal to purchase power from that first facility. Helion has raised more than $1 billion toward its goal — though whether it can deliver remains an unanswered question.

The Seattle ag tech startup IUNU wants to bring computer vision and AI to the commercial greenhouse — deploying autonomous rail-mounted cameras and canopy-level sensors that can spot early signs of disease, track plant growth, and tell growers exactly what to do about it.

Pronounced “you-knew,” IUNU was founded in 2013 by CEO Adam Greenberg, the son of a botanist and co-founder of a clean water startup called Pure Blue Technologies. The company has deployed its technology across six countries, has additional offices in Canada and Netherlands, and has raised $60 million.

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Unwanted carbon dioxide has a higher purpose thanks to OCOchem. The Richland, Wash., startup is taking water and captured industrial CO2 and turning them into chemicals that can be converted into clean-burning hydrogen fuel, used in aviation deicers, or fed to microorganisms that biosynthesize proteins.

The company has raised $11.2 million from investors plus additional grant dollars, and has multiple pilot projects underway as it scales up production. Todd Brix launched OCOchem in 2017 after a nearly two-decade career at Microsoft.

Seattle’s Ravel has developed a proprietary, planet friendly technology that unwinds the components of fabric blends through a process it calls “purification recycling.” Ravel’s target is elastane, which is known as spandex or Lycra and added to essentially every category of apparel.

The startup recovers the elastane, turning it into cost-competitive, recycled plastic pellets that serve as the raw material for making polyester fabrics. Ravel launched in 2019 and last year announced a pre-seed funding round.

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In March, TerraPower became the first next-generation nuclear company in the U.S. to receive federal construction approval — a milestone for the Bill Gates-backed startup, which is engineering smaller, modular reactors designed to be assembled from factory-built components. Each reactor generates 345 megawatts and pairs with a molten salt energy storage system that can supply additional power.

The Bellevue, Wash., company broke ground on a demonstration plant in Kemmerer, Wyo., in 2024 and aims to start splitting atoms there by the end of 2030. TerraPower has raised $1.66 billion from investors and secured a $2 billion federal grant.

Astound Business Solutions is the presenting sponsor of the 2026 GeekWire Awards. Thanks also to gold sponsors Amazon Sustainability, BairdBECU, JLLFirst Tech and Wilson Sonsini, and silver sponsors Prime Team Partners.

The event will feature a VIP reception, sit-down dinner and fun entertainment mixed in. Tickets go fast. A limited number of half-table and full-table sponsorships available. Contact events@geekwire.com to reserve a spot for your team today.

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This $8 Harbor Freight Gadget Should Be The First Thing You Pack For Hotel Stays

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Although many of us associate hotels with cushy business trips or relaxing holiday getaways, frequent travelers will know that it does come with its own set of issues. While some minor annoyances, like not being able to stream your content, can be solved by bringing a fire TV stick, other problems, such as bed bugs, are harder to solve.

Despite being around for millions of years, bed bug infestations are still a recurring problem, even for expensive hotel chains. And, as anyone who has to deal with them can tell you, you may need to hire professional help if they ever reach your home. Because of this, it’s best to follow the standard bed bug prevention protocol, such as using suitcase stands and inspecting the room with tools like UV flashlights. If you’re looking for one such tool that is affordable, Harbor Freight sells a UV flashlight for under $8 that might be perfect for your next business trip. 

Harbor Freight has been known to sell well-rated flashlights, with most of them under the Braun label. Priced at $7.99, the Braun UV Leak Detector LED Flashlight can generate 395 nM UV light and is the cheapest UV flashlight on offer at Harbor Freight as of March 2026. Apart from helping you spot pests, UV flashlights can also be used to detect all kinds of stains, leaks, and even counterfeit currency, which could all be valuable uses when you’re on the road or at home. Here’s what else you should know.

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The Braun UV flashlight is rated highly by those who have bought it

Running on three AAA batteries, Harbor Freight says this flashlight has a 5.5-hour total run time, so it can be convenient when traveling to locations with no sockets or portable chargers. For an improved grip, this flashlight has both a knurled body as well as a ridged collar. It has a 10-foot range, but this model can’t be used as as normal flashlight and it doesn’t have the standard white light. 

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As of this writing, the Braun UV Leak Detector does not have a significant number of reviews, so it’s hard to say what customers think of it. For what it’s worth, however, the four buyers who have left reviews all rated it 5 stars, with one reviewer saying it was “not super bright but gets the job done.” If you want a tool that has both UV and white lights, Braun sells a more compact UV flashlight that can also double as a normal flashlight. For $24.99, the Braun 400 Lumen Rechargeable Penlight with UV Light is highly rated and can run an extra half hour more than the $8 UV model. Of course, these extra features are going to cost you.



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Livestream FA Cup Soccer: Watch Man City vs. Liverpool From Anywhere

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When to watch Man City vs. Liverpool

  • Saturday at 7:45 a.m. ET (4:45 a.m. PT)

Where to watch Man City vs. Liverpool

  • Man City vs. Liverpool will air in the US on ESPN and ESPN Plus, and is also available via ESPN Select or ESPN Unlimited.

The pick of this weekend’s FA Cup quarterfinals sees Man City host Liverpool in a blockbuster cup clash at the Etihad Stadium. 

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Man City’s goal with this last-eight faceoff is to move a step closer to claiming the prize following last month’s Carabao Cup triumph over Arsenal. City’s route to the quarterfinals has seen it beat Exeter and Salford before easing past Premier League Newcastle 3-1 at St. James’ Park in the previous round.

Liverpool, meanwhile, comes into this cup tie looking to get back to winning following their Premier League defeat to Brighton before the international break. With the Reds out of the EPL title race and also eliminated from the Champions League, this tournament provides their final opportunity to claim the silver cup this season, as well as ease the mounting pressure on manager Arne Slot amid what has so far been a disappointing campaign. 

Manchester City takes on Liverpool at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday. Kickoff is set for 12:45 p.m. BST local time in the UK, which is 7:45 a.m. ET or 4:45 a.m. PT in the US and Canada, and 10:45 p.m. AEDT in Australia.

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Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola celebrated, with both hands lifted above his head, smiling.

Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City have won each of their last 17 home fixtures in the FA Cup. 

Adam Davy/ PA Images / Getty Images

Livestream Man City vs. Liverpool in the US

Every match from this point in the tournament will be available to stream live on ESPN Plus, which is accessible via the network’s ESPN Select or ESPN Unlimited streaming packages. ESPN Select carries ESPN Plus and is the cheaper option at $13 per month.

ESPN’s streaming platforms have been shaken up in recent months. The sports network now offers two tiers with its new direct-to-consumer setup: ESPN Select and ESPN Unlimited. ESPN Select is essentially what ESPN Plus used to be, with the same content available to subscribers, including FA Cup soccer, for $13 per month. If you want full access to ESPN’s networks and services, such as ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPNews and ESPN Deportes, as well as all of ESPN Select’s content, then ESPN Unlimited is the way to go. It costs $30 per month.

Livestream Man City vs. Liverpool in the UK

TNT Sports and the BBC are sharing duties for the FA Cup this season, with this Sunday afternoon game set to be shown on TNT Sports 1.

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TNT Sports

You can access TNT Sports via Sky Q, Virgin Media and EE TV as part of a TV package.

Alternatively,TNT Sports has a new streaming home with the launch of HBO Max in the UK. It costs £31 either way and comes in a package that includes Discovery Plus’ library of documentary content.

A bundle including HBO Max’s entertainment plan alongside TNT Sports currently costs £31 per month. 

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Livestream Man City vs. Liverpool in Canada

Canadian soccer fans looking to watch this FA Cup fixture can watch all the action live via Sportsnet.

Sportsnet

Sportsnet is available via most cable operators, but cord-cutters can subscribe to the standalone streaming service Sportsnet Plus instead, with prices starting at CA$30 per month or CA$250 per year for the standard plan.

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Livestream Man City vs. Liverpool in Australia

Football fans in Australia can watch FA Cup matches live on the streaming service Stan Sport.

Stan

Stan Sport will set you back AU$20 a month, on top of a Stan subscription, which starts at AU$12. It is worth noting the streaming service is offering a seven-day free trial. On top of select FA Cup matches, a subscription gives you access to Premier League, Champions League and Europa League action, along with international rugby and Formula E.

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Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for April 4

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Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? When you solve it, the puzzle makes a colorful shape and spells out a very California phrase. Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.

If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

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Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword

Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.

completed-nyt-mini-crossword-puzzle-for-april-4-2026.png

The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for April 4, 2026.

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NYT/Screenshot by CNET

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Like this lyric: “My heart is yours to fill or burst / To break or bury or wear as jewelry”
Answer: EMO

4A clue: Scrooge’s cry before “humbug”
Answer: BAH

7A clue: “___ appetit!”
Answer: BON

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8A clue: “Te ___” (“I love you,” in Spanish)
Answer: AMO

9A clue: Use camouflage
Answer: BLENDIN

11A clue: Big name in fluorescent paint
Answer: DAYGLO

12A clue: Transmission setting for a steep hill, maybe
Answer: LOWGEAR

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13A clue: Egg cells
Answer: OVA

14A clue: GPS suggestion: Abbr.
Answer: RTE

15A clue: Like many Grindr users
Answer: GAY

16A clue: Go on dates with
Answer: SEE

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Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Recede, as the tide
Answer: EBB

2D clue: Country between Ukraine and Romania
Answer: MOLDOVA

3D clue: Message in Connections when you almost get the category, but not quite
Answer: ONEAWAY

4D clue: Mammals whose name is a synonym of “pesters”
Answer: BADGERS

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5D clue: “Sorry, has the meeting started already?”
Answer: AMILATE

6D clue: Award recipient
Answer: HONOREE

10D clue: The N.F.L.’s Giants, on scoreboards
Answer: NYG

12D clue: Makeshift seat at a campfire
Answer: LOG

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Mercedes brings steer-by-wire to production cars, and it’s a big shift

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Mercedes-Benz is about to change something fundamental about how cars feel to drive, and it’s not just another software update. The company is bringing steer-by-wire tech to a production vehicle for the first time, starting with the refreshed EQS, and it’s a pretty big departure from how steering has worked for over a century.

And yes, this is the same kind of tech that’s been used in aircraft for years, and was even showcased on the Mercedes-Benz Vision Iconic. Now, it’s finally making its way into a luxury sedan.

What does “steer-by-wire” actually mean here?

In simple terms, Mercedes is removing the physical connection between the steering wheel and the front wheels. Instead of a mechanical linkage, your inputs are sent electronically to actuators that turn the wheels.

That might sound a bit unnerving at first, but Mercedes says it has built in multiple redundancies, sensors, and control systems to ensure safety. In fact, the company has already tested the setup for over a million kilometers before bringing it to production. There are also some real advantages here. Because everything is software-controlled, the steering ratio can change dynamically depending on speed, making parking easier while keeping things stable at highway speeds.

And then there’s the design twist. Since there’s no need for a traditional steering column, Mercedes is pairing this system with a yoke-style steering wheel. It’s flatter, more futuristic, and designed to improve visibility of the instrument cluster.

Why this could be a turning point for cars

With steer-by-wire, carmakers get far more flexibility in how steering behaves, how interiors are designed, and even how future autonomous features are integrated. It also opens the door to a more “software-defined” driving experience. Things like steering feel, responsiveness, and feedback can be tuned digitally, rather than being locked in by hardware.

Of course, there’s still a trust factor to overcome. Removing a direct mechanical link between driver and wheels is a bold move, and not everyone will be comfortable with it right away. But if Mercedes gets the balance right, this could end up being one of those changes that feels strange at first… and completely normal a few years down the line.

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Arlo Pro 6 2K Review

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Verdict

With a denser battery the Arlo Pro 6 adds more battery life over the previous iteration, while maintaining the excellent 2K image quality and flexible installation. With an Arlo Secure subscription you get very powerful object detection, with the highest tier offering person and vehicle recognition into the mix, plus a custom AI detection where you can spot an open gate, missing wheelie bin or pretty much anything else you can think of. All of this together makes the Arlo Pro 6 one of the best and most comprehensive security cameras, but subscriptions are also very expensive and have relatively short video history periods compared to the competition.

  • Excellent video quality

  • Flexible and powerful app

  • Hugely flexible object detection (with subscription)

  • Arlo subscriptions are expensive

Key Features

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    Battery powered

    Run for up to eight months on a single charge

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    Wi-Fi

    Connects to your home network via Wi-Fi

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    Needs a subscription for the main features

    You need Arlo Secure for cloud storage and object detection

Introduction

The Arlo Pro 6 2k+ is a somewhat familiar-looking device.

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In fact, it looks pretty much like every Arlo camera back to the Arlo Pro 3. Don’t judge this camera on its external looks, as there are enough internal changes that make it a worthy successor to the previous generation (the Arlo Pro 5), including easier setup and a denser battery.

With a more powerful cloud subscription service behind the camera, the Pro 6 can form part of a very capable security system, just don’t expect it to be cheap.

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Design and Installation

  • USB-C Charging
  • Wall mountable
  • Can connect to Wi-Fi or a Smart Hub

You can buy the Arlo Pro 6 2K in packs of one, two, three or four, with more expensive kits working out cheaper per camera.

Take a look at the Arlo Pro 5, and the Pro 6 doesn’t seem that different: both look the same, have the same resolution, have a spotlight and are controlled via the same app and cloud service.

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But, look a little more closely, and there are some clear changes. First, the camera has a USB-C port, rather than the old magnetic connector of the previous model. That’s a good change, as any USB-C cable can be used, and you don’t have to worry about losing the proprietary connector. In my experience, the USB-C cable seems to charge the battery slightly faster, too.

Arlo Pro 6 2K USB-C portArlo Pro 6 2K USB-C port
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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Talking of the battery, the new version has a higher-density pack, with 15% more battery life. That should help reduce how often you have to take the camera down for charging, although where it’s pointed and how often recording is triggered.

Arlo Pro 6 2K out of caseArlo Pro 6 2K out of case
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Bluetooth is a new addition to the camera, too, which speeds up discovery time when installing the camera. Guaranteed, you only need that the once, but I’ll take anything that makes life easier.

This camera can be connected to Wi-Fi directly or to a Smart Hub, if you have one. A Smart Hub also provides offline recording, although you do lose many of the camera’s best features if doing so. 

If you want to go offline and avoid paying for a cloud subscription, something like the EufyCam S4 might make more sense.

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Arlo Pro 6 2K mountArlo Pro 6 2K mount
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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The Arlo Pro 6 comes with a fully adjustable wall mount, which is the same as the one the company has used for years. That’s handy, as you can unscrew and older camera and fit the new one if you need to.

If starting from scratch, the mount is easy to attach to a wall and gives plenty of flexibility to point the camera where you want it.

Features

  • Needs a subscription to get the most out of the camera
  • Custom AI detection with the highest subscription tier
  • Flexible object detection

The Arlo Pro 6 slots into the Arlo app alongside any other cameras you might have. It remains one of my favourite security apps, as it’s so configurable. There’s a home screen that lets me select the location’s modes: Arm Away, Arm Home and Standby. 

Just like with a security system, such as the Ring Alarm, these modes let me choose which cameras are active at any time. For example, I have my outdoor cameras record when set to Arm Home, and everything turned on when set to Arm Away.

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This page also has customisable widgets, so you can have shortcuts to any camera you want, but you don’t have to have previous of all cameras.

As mentioned above, if you have a Smart Hub you can record offline, but you lose out on all of the smart features. Realistically, then, you need to have an Arlo Secure plan, just be prepared to pay a lot for it.

Arlo Secure gives you cloud recording for one camera at a resolution of up to 2K, with just seven days of history (very stingy), plus Person, Animal, Vehicle and Package Detection.

Upgrade to Secure Multi-Cam and you get cloud storage for four cameras, but otherwise the same features as the single camera package. This costs £11.99 a month, which is still expensive but better overall value than the single camera option if you have more than one camera.

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The most advanced features come with the Arlo Secure Plus subscription, which upgrades recording to a maximum of 4K (not relevant here, but it is if you have an Ultra camera), 14 days of cloud history and the new AI detection features, which I’ll get into shortly. This costs £19.99 a month, making it very expensive.

With the more basic package, I can easily cut down on alerts by using motion zones to focus the camera on important areas, and then the excellent people, animal and vehicle detection. Get the right mix, and the number of alerts plummets. 

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Arlo Pro 6 2K detection settingsArlo Pro 6 2K detection settings
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Pay for the more expensive package and you get person recognition (facial recognition, as most people would call it). You can let the camera pick up people and name them, or feed in photos from your photo library to give the Pro 6 a head start.

Arlo Pro 6 2K person recognitionArlo Pro 6 2K person recognition
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Oddly, people detection is only available on a single camera in your home, so pick the one that makes most sense; most other systems that I’ve tested run facial recognition across all devices.

Vehicle recognition is another new feature. It’s like facial recognition for cars, in that you can tell the camera to spot certain vehicles. This can run on all cameras.

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There’s also Custom Detection, which involves taking two snapshots with something different between them: a gate open or a wheelie bin missing, for example. You can then get alerts when the action is detected, either through motion being triggered, by firing the rule at a set time, or when the mode changes.

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I set up one to watch for the back door opening, but this proved to be not very reliable, often triggering when there was any motion. I think that the glass doors, and the distance from the camera, confused the system, so Custom Detection might work better with bigger, more obvious changes.

It’s all very clever, and the system is virtually limitless, provided you can train the system, but it’s a very expensive option to have.

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All video is recorded to the cloud (assuming you have a subscription), and is available in the Feed section. This can be filtered by date, by device, and then by event type, of which there are far too many to name here. There’s enough granularity to quickly find a clip, although Arlo doesn’t have the fancy AI search that Ring now has.

Arlo Pro 6 2K feedArlo Pro 6 2K feed
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Performance

  • Sharp 2K video
  • Excellent night vision

Arlo has long been towards the top of the quality tables, and the Pro 6 keeps that record up. Footage is very similar to that from the Pro 5, which isn’t a criticism. 

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During the day, the footage is exceptionally sharp, and detailed through the frame, with the 160° lens capturing a lot of what’s going on. Colours are excellent and there’s detail through the frame. This is about as good as you can expect from a 2K video camera.

Arlo Pro 6 day sampleArlo Pro 6 day sample
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

At night, the Pro 6 can use its spotlight to shoot in full colour, and the results are impressive, with almost as much detail as during the day. The only real change is that motion gets a bit blurry, so it takes a bit of hunting to find a clip where someone’s face is clear; those frames do exist. Again, I’ve not seen better from a 2K camera.

Arlo Pro 6 night sampleArlo Pro 6 night sample
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Arlo says that the battery can last up to eight months on a single charge, although how that pans out will depend on where the camera’s pointing. I recommend angling any battery powered security camera away from high activity areas, such as a main road, to increase battery life. 

Based on initial testing, I think that I’d get a good five months between charging, if not longer.

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Should you buy it?

You want excellent quality and flexibility

Brilliant 2K footage day and night, flexible placement and long battery life all make this camera a winner whether it’s inside or out.

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You want something cheaper to run

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This camera works best with an Arlo Secure subscription, which is very expensive compared to the competition, even though it is very good.

Final Thoughts

The overall Arlo system and app remain one of the best available, and the new AI features let you do more than with any other camera, thanks to the training mode. But you have to be prepared to pay for the luxury, and Arlo Secure is expensive and has limited video history compared to the competition.

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If you’ve got Arlo Pro 5 cameras, there’s very little here to make it worth the upgrade, but if you’ve got older cameras or are starting from scratch, the Arlo Pro 6 is a brilliant, high-quality camera. If you’d rather have something with cheaper running costs, then read my guide to the best outdoor security cameras.

How we test

Unlike other sites, we test every security camera we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

  • Used as our main security camera for the review period
  • We test compatibility with the main smart systems (HomeKit, Alexa, Google Assistant, SmartThings, IFTTT and more) to see how easy each camera is to automate.
  • We take samples during the day and night to see how clear each camera’s video is.

FAQs

Do you need a cloud subscription to use the Arlo Pro 6 2K?
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Without a subscription you can view the live feed and get basic notifications, and record to a hub; you need a subscription for cloud storage and for the more advanced detection options.

What’s the difference between the Arlo Pro 6 2K and the Arlo Pro 5?

The Pro 6 has a higher density battery, USB-C charging and it has Bluetooth for faster setup.

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Test Data

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Full Specs

  Arlo Pro 6 2K Review
Manufacturer
Size (Dimensions) 52 x 78 x 89 MM
Release Date 2026
First Reviewed Date 17/03/2026
Model Number Arlo Pro 6 2K
Resolution 2560 x 1440
Battery Length 8 months
Smart assistants Yes
App Control Yes
Camera Type Indoor/outdoor wireless
Mounting option Wall
View Field 160 degrees
Recording option Cloud (with subscription), offline (requires hub)
Two-way audio Yes
Night vision Yes (full colour)
Light Spotlight
Motion detection Yes
Activity zones Yes
Object detection People, vehicles, animals, custom
Audio detection Alarms
Power source Battery

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