News (Proprietary)
TP-Link pre-Black Friday sale brings steep discounts up to 36 percent on Wi-Fi 7 mesh, travel routers, and outdoor satellites
1+ week, 3+ day ago (520+ words) TP-Link Wi-Fi 7 gear is discounted up to 36 percent ahead of Black Friday The Deco BE63 is a great mid-range, tri-brand Wi-Fi 7 mesh router that we reviewed earlier this year. I liked it so much that I bought a two-pack for my own house and connected the two wireless nodes via a CAT6e wired backhaul. The mesh system is capable of 574 Mbps on the 2.4 GHz band, 4,324 Mbps on the 5 GHz band, and 5,188 Mbps on the 6 GHz band. The Deco BE63 is a mid-range, tri-band Wi-Fi 7 router with four 2.5 GbE ports, 10 Gbps of combined throughput, and coverage of 5,800 square feet. You can use Smart Connect, which uses a single SSID and selects the optimal band for your wireless client based on current conditions, or create a separate SSID for each band. There are also options to create MLO, Guest, and IoT networks, providing even more…...
Get more from Tom's Hardware with Premium, try your first month for $5.99 and get up to 50% off in our Black Friday offer — get expert-level analysis, hardware roadmaps, access to Bench and more
2+ day, 7+ hour ago (221+ words) Limited-time offer gives you more of the Tom's Hardware content you love. You can get up to 50% off an annual subscription, or try your first month for just $5.99 (regional pricing may vary). This offer only runs until December 2. After this period, we can't guarantee when you'll see this price again. Don't miss out on this Tom's Hardware Premium Black Friday offer with 50% off the yearly subscription, or pay only $5.99 (33% off) for a month of access. Get deeper news analysis, deep dives into specialist topics in the semiconductor industry, as well as access to Bench, the largest benchmarking database around. So, all-in-all, you get access to Bench, deeper dives into the hottest news, exclusive features, such as hardware roadmaps and architecture breakdowns, and access to our roundup newsletter, Uptime, with a letter penned by our editor-in-chief, Paul Alcorn. We've dropped a…...
N64 cartridge-playing Analogue 3D finally gets a shipping date – FPGA-powered Nintendo 64 remake with 4K, VRR to roll out starting November 18
2+ week, 2+ day ago (439+ words) Kunal Khullar is a contributing writer at Tom's Hardware." He is a long time technology journalist and reviewer specializing in PC components and peripherals, and welcomes any and every question around building a PC. After numerous delays, the Analogue 3D finally has a confirmed shipping date. The long-awaited reincarnation of the Nintendo 64 console will begin rolling out to customers on November 18. Formerly known as the Analogue 64, the ambitious remake was first teased in 2023 with an expected release in 2024. However, the company later postponed the shipment of its pre-orders to Q1 2025, followed by yet another delay, due to an unexpected increase in tariffs. Analogue's upcoming console is a 4K-ready version of the classic Nintendo 64, with support for VRR (variable refresh rate). Unlike most retro systems today, it does not rely on emulation. Rather, an FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) chip replicates the original…...
Don't miss out on up to 50% off Tom's Hardware Premium this Black Friday — unlock access to more articles, Bench, and more
4+ day, 1+ hour ago (234+ words) Save now and get more from Tom's Hardware. In case you've missed it in the flurry of the deals season, our own Tom's Hardware Premium subscription is on sale. The service builds on everything that Tom's Hardware has been known for for almost thirty years, and you can expect detailed articles on the hottest topics each week, as well as access to our our gold-standard benchmark database, Bench. For a limited time, you can get up to 50% off Tom's Hardware Premium for this holiday shopping season if you subscribe annually. You can also get a discount on the monthly subscription if you'd like to see what all of the fuss is about before committing to a full year. Don't miss out on this Tom's Hardware Premium Black Friday offer with 50% off the yearly subscription, or pay only $5.99 (33% off) for a…...
Microsoft Azure Blocks Largest DDoS Attack in History — attack equivalent to streaming 3.5 million Netflix movies at once, 15.72 Terabits per Second from 500,000 IP addresses tied to IoT botnet
1+ week, 5+ day ago (425+ words) Attack from botnet hit Azure with over 3.6 million packets per-second Microsoft's Azure has mitigated the largest botnet attack in history, with over 500,000 devices used to send up to 15.72 terabits per second to a single cloud endpoint in Australia, which is roughly equivalent to 3.5 million Netflix movies streamed simultaneously per-second. In a blog post, Microsoft claims the Azure DDoS protection was able to detect the attack and filter the traffic so customers remained unaffected, but urged organizations to validate the security on any internet-facing devices to help prevent future attacks. Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks use botnets of infected systems and devices to send unprecedented quantities of traffic to particular sites and servers in order to overwhelm them. It's a brute-force method to bring down services that can be particularly effective if safeguards aren't in place. Over the past few…...
AMD confirms security vulnerability on Zen 5-based CPUs that generates potentially predictable keys — RDSEED fix coming through an AGESA firmware update for desktop chips
3+ week, 6+ day ago (328+ words) RDSEED failures are incorrectly being flagged as correct, leading to potentially predictable encryption keys being generated by the random number generator. AMD has confirmed the existence of RDSEED failure on CPUs based on its latest Zen 5 architecture, a critical security vulnerability in its hardware-based random number generator. The company has confirmed the fault could lead to the random number generator putting out keys that aren't fully unpredictable, opening up a vulnerability to users. The failure specifically involves the RDSEED instruction on Zen 5 chips returning "0" in a non-randomized manner and signaling the failure incorrectly as a success. The 16-bit and 32-bit formats of the RDSEED instruction are affected, while the 64-bit version is reportedly not affected by the issue for reasons AMD did not specify. This is a critical issue for cryptography applications that rely on RDSEED's random number generation capabilities…...
SanDisk debuts Type-C 'Plug and Stay' flash drive that never needs to be taken out of your laptop — get up to 1TB of extra storage for just $120, with 400MB/s transfer speeds
2+ week, 5+ day ago (433+ words) SanDisk has created a new flash drive designed to be permanently integrated into your device, serving as a secondary storage solution. Finding methods to increase storage capacity, without going to the cloud, is becoming increasingly difficult as device manufacturers remove SD card readers from their devices and replace M.2 or SATA storage with embedded solutions that can't be upgraded. SanDisk has developed a new USB flash drive that is designed to permanently stay in your device. The new drive is available in 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB options starting at $26, with the 1TB flagship model going for $120 (though at the time of writing, the 512GB and 1TB variants are "temporarily" out of stock). The new drive is part of a handful of "Plug and Stay" thumb drives Sandisk has created. This latest iteration features an L-shaped form factor that keeps the drive as thin as possible when connected…...
13 bargains under $13 to improve your tech life — the best cheap tech you can grab this Black Friday
3+ day, 6+ hour ago (788+ words) Your wallet is safe, for now. Black Friday is back for 2025, and we've compiled a list of 13 cool, budget-friendly gadgets and gizmos you can still get for under $13. We've got kits to fix PCs, cleaning kits for your filthy keyboard, a network switch, adapters, cables, and many more sub-$13 products that we found on Amazon. Best of all, we have grouped them up so you can go straight to the section that you need. We all need cables for our lives. To charge our phones, laptops, headphones, etc. We also need adapters for those cables because one day we are going to be given an obscure piece of tech and asked to fix it. A full 1-meter (3.3FT) USB Type-C to USB Type-C cable that supports up to 100W is always useful. But this retractable cable from Baseus keeps things neat and…...
Samsung teases radical new modular SSD design with swappable NAND and SSD controller that can be detached independently — tiny 4TB PCIe 5.0 M.2 drive is also ready
3+ week, 1+ day ago (628+ words) Zhiye Liu is a news editor, memory reviewer, and SSD tester at Tom's Hardware. Although he loves everything that's hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM. As the year draws to a close, anticipation for CES 2026 grows. Samsung has provided a preliminary preview of its forthcoming Detachable AutoSSD (AM9C1 E1.A) and PM9E1 M.2 22x42, a 2242 variant of the OEM drive designed to rival the best SSDs in the market. The radical new modular SSD design has a swappable NAND and SSD controller that can be detached independently. The company also showed off its new tiny 4TB PCIe 5.0 SSD. Samsung introduced the original AM9C1 automotive SSD last year, a BGA drive that incorporates the company's proprietary 5nm PCIe 4.0 controller and 8th-generation V-NAND flash. The latest E1.A version of the AM9C1 maintains these components but now features a modular design. Consequently, Samsung markets the AM9C1 E1.A under the…...
Save over 30% on this 27-inch AOC gaming monitor Black Friday deal — Grab a 1440p, 240Hz IPS panel for just $170 in Best Buy bargain
3+ day, 14+ hour ago (497+ words) No-frills monitor has just about everything you might want The Q27G42ZE comes in at a great price point, considering all of the features on offer, including G-Sync compatibility. When paired with a fast 240Hz refresh rate, it'll be worlds apart from the older monitors of yore, and you'll soon become aggravated at any panel that can't match the kind of fluidity. Equipped with an $80 saving off its list price, the Q27G42ZE fulfils a sweet spot for many avid PC gamers. 27 inches is a solid size for 1440p, meaning that your PC can focus on pushing out frames to saturate that 240Hz refresh rate, instead. You don't always need the most expensive panel to get a super-solid monitor, now that higher refresh rates have become commonplace, even in productivity monitors. So, at least spec-wise, the AOC Q27G42ZE appears to fit right into that sweet spot of price-to-performance…...