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Secretlab sale: My favorite gaming office chair is 'a whole other comfort level' — now the Secretlab Titan Evo gets a price cut
By Steve Clark last updated
A true work and play upgrade and the most comfortable gaming and office chair we've ever tested.

Could Ukrainian drones replace DJI in the US?
By Efosa Udinmwen published
Ukrainian drones Shrike 10 Fiber and F10 impress Pentagon, earning contracts in a billion-dollar Drone Dominance program focused on non-Chinese components.

Kingston reveals its toughest encrypted USB Drive yet — and it can even help you try and avoid typos
By Efosa Udinmwen published
Kingston IronKey Locker+ 50 G2 delivers AES 256-bit hardware encryption, layered password protections, and physical durability for secure enterprise-grade USB storage.

Could Agentic AI be the killer app for the 40-year old PC? AMD thinks so — and wants you to jump on the Agent Computer bandwagon before it is too late
By Efosa Udinmwen published
AMD introduces Agentic AI on PCs, enabling autonomous task execution, persistent local models, and enhanced productivity for professionals and organizations.

‘We are only able to supply, for our key customers in the midterm, about 50% to two-thirds of their requirements’: Micron CEO forecasts production spend increase to meet the insane demand for memory – but the RAM crisis will only get worse
By Benedict Collins published
The RAM crisis is having a knock-on effect on the memory industry in general - but there could be an unlikely hero.

Businesses are being 'locked in' to all-in-one platforms – and its costing them growth and adaptability
By Craig Hale published
New research shows that companies are being held back by being locked into single ecosystems – but switching isn't easy.

Anycubic Kobra X 3D printer review
By Alastair Jennings published
Affordable high-speed multi-color printing on a budget.

The biggest heist of the US-China Chip War: 3 Supermicro employees charged with conspiracy to smuggle restricted Nvidia H100, H200, and B200 chips to China – dummy boxes, fake labels, and a pass-through company enabled the $2.5 billion scheme
By Benedict Collins published
Three men are facing charges of conspiracy to smuggle restricted GPUs to China.
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