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The iPhone 15 series uses only eSIM in the US, the SIM tray is still available everywhere else
6:01 pm | September 14, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: , | Comments: Off

Apple adopted eSIM for the first time with the iPhone XS/XR series, then with last year’s iPhone 14 models it dropped the traditional SIM slot altogether and went eSIM-only on phones sold in the US market. The new iPhone 15 models follow on the same path, again only in the US. There are a total of four variants. The US models support dual eSIMs and are the only ones with mmWave. Another version is sold in the rest of North America, Canada and Mexico, as well as in Japan. This one is similar to the global version in that it has one physical nano-SIM slot and and one eSIM (dual eSIM...

Huawei Watch GT4 launches in 41mm and 46mm sizes with improved health tracking and battery
5:01 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The new Huawei Watch GT4 is here with two stylish options – 41mm with a “Pendant Design” and 46mm with an “Octogonal Design” – and the upgraded TruSeen 5.5+ technology, which is a new suite of sensors and algorithms to provide more accurate and more detailed health tracking. First off, the choice between 41mm and 46mm comes down to battery life and which look you prefer – both options start at €250 (more detailed pricing in a bit). As for the battery, the larger model lasts up to 14 days, the smaller one up to 7 days. Huawei GT4 46mm Both have 20% better battery...

Motorola Moto G84, G54 Power and G54 make European debut
4:31 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Motorola just released the Moto G84, the Moto G54, and the Moto G54 Power to the European market and they feature some twists. Motorola Moto G84 The Moto G84 packs a 6.5-inch 1080p OLED display with 120 Hz refresh rate, 5,000 mAh battery with 30W wired charging, and a 6nm Snapdragon 695 chip with 12 GB of RAM. The G84 has a 50MP f/1.9 1/1.5" main camera, an 8MP autofocusing ultrawide unit, and a 16MP selfie on the front. The Moto G84 comes in PANTONE Viva Magenta (PANTONE Color of the year for 2023), as well as Marshmallow Blue and Midnight Blue. It's €299 for the single...

Motorola Edge 40 Neo in for review
3:52 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

This is our unboxing of the freshly-announced Motorola Edge 40 Neo. The phone ships with a 68W charger, a USB cable, and a robust case made from plants in Sweden. Unboxing the Edge 40 Neo The Motorola Edge 40 Neo is a Goldilocks size thanks to its 6.55-inch 144Hz pOLED display. It's a lovely panel with lightly curved sides that make using it a pleasure. Ours is the Panetone Soothing Sea color and it's a refreshing minty-teal mix. The phone's back panel is a soft-touch vegan leather. A lovely minty color Motorola's Edge series of phones stand out in a sea of samey...

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 review: something for everyone, except for the peasants
3:47 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Comments: Off

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Two-minute review

The Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 brings a lot of power to the table if that's what you're looking for, and it can also slim down on the powerful hardware and instead opt for a high-security executive workstation with always-on LTE mobile connection, making it a kind of jack-of-all-trades workstation for serious professionals on the go. 

You've got a lot of options with the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6, though you're likely going to pay through the nose for whatever you get. But, chances are, you knew that already. Starting at an eye-watering $3,609 (about £2,745 / AU$5,235) for a laptop with 8GB RAM and a 256GB SSD, you can bet more powerful configurations are going to be a very serious investment no matter what industry you're in.

Fortunately, your hardware options are plentiful with the P1 Gen 6, and much of this hardware, like the latest Intel 13th-gen processors and Nvidia RTX Ada workstation GPUs, are as powerful as the best laptops for industrial-strength power users you're going to find. Few of the best business laptops can compete. Only the best workstation PCs are going to offer more power than the P1 Gen 6 is able to bring to bear, and even then, you'll have to sacrifice portability for that extra kick of power.

For the vast majority of users though, the match between power and portability is going to make this the best mobile workstation on the market for anyone but the extremely budget-conscious.

It's not all about power though, as the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 is a slim and fairly lightweight device that looks absolutely amazing. Its keyboard is a dream to type on and its speakers are surprisingly decent, giving you plenty of oomph when rocking out under a tight work deadline.

With options for Intel vPro and secure SSDs, your company's IT security team will also breathe something of a sigh of relief, assuming that's even possibly in their business, and security measures like fingerprint reader built into the power button and IR webcam for Windows Hello log-ins are icing on the cake here.

Throw in a gorgeous 4K OLED touchscreen display and this laptop really does offer something for every professional user. Well, everything except freedom from a power outlet. The battery life on the P1 Gen 6 is about as dreadful as you'd expect from a laptop packing this much hardware, despite its 90WHr battery. It falls well short of the Apple MacBook Pro 16-inch (2023) with its downright obscene runtime or even the Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 1, which only ran a little while longer, but still wins out.

But, much like its price tag, you already knew that battery life wasn't going to be this laptop's strength, not given the kind of hardware it's packing. If you're here, you're here because you're looking for the most powerful mobile workstation around, and this is definitely at the very top of that list—so long as money isn't really an issue or you can make expensing it someone else in the finance office's problem.

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table with a purple desk mat underneath

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Price & availability

The Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 is available now in the US, UK, and Australia, starting at $3,609 (about £2,745/AU$5,235). For that price, you'll get an Intel Core i7-13700H, an Nvidia RTX A1000 GPU, 8GB DDR5-5600 RAM, a 256GB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD, and a 16-inch 1920x1200p IPS display with 100% of the sRGB color gamut running at 60Hz and 300 nits.

That sounds like an awful lot for that configuration, so it isn't the one we would recommend on its own, but this more slimmed down configuration does leave room for you to get a Fibocom LTE CAT16 mobile broadband card for always-on internet access, making it a good option for field work that doesn't require the whole barn's worth of horsepower.

The review unit I was sent, meanwhile, features a Core i7-13800H processor, Nvidia RTX 4080 graphics, 32GB DDR5-5600 RAM, 1TB SSD, and a beautiful 16-inch 3840x2400p OLED touchscreen display with 100% DCI-P3 coverage, HDR400 certification, and up to 500 nits peak brightness. It'll also cost you $5,453 (about £4,145 / AU$7,910), but it also comes with Intel vPro security and an upgraded 5MP RGB+ IR webcam, so there's that. This is much more of a creative professional's workstation, and it shows in the performance.

If you've gone mad with the company's Amex and no one can stop you, you can go all out on a $8,529 (about £6,485/AU$12,370 configuration that will get you an Intel Core i9-13900H with vPro, an Nvidia RTX 5000 Ada 16GB GPU, 96GB DDR5-5600 RAM, and 4TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD, along with the same display as my review unit.

Compared to the Asus VivoBook Pro 16X OLED's $2,000 / £1,700 / AU$3,399 for comparable specs or the MacBook Pro 16-inch with M2 Max (38-core GPU), 96GB memory, and 4TB SSD for $5,299 / £5,549 / AU$8,299, the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 looks rather outrageously priced.

Fortunately, most retailers I've seen aren't charging that much and Lenovo itself regularly runs sales with as high a discount as 42% off, making this laptop much more reasonable (relatively speaking anyway).

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Specs

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table with a purple desk mat underneath

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Design

The ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 is a gorgeous device, through and through, but it's also surprisingly portable for a mobile workstation, which are normally small but heavy cinderblocks in the form of a laptop. At just under 4 lbs (about 8.7kg), the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 is about as light and portable as you're going to find in a workstation of its kind outside of the MacBook Pro.

Aesthetically, the P1 Gen 6 sticks with the eye-catching exterior, featuring a subtle carbon fiber weave-like lid that feels smooth and almost rubbery to the touch. The 180-degree hinge design on the display panel makes it easy to collaborate with colleagues around a table as well, regardless of which display panel you go for (though I can't stress enough that you should go for the OLED).

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table with a purple desk mat underneath

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

The keydeck is fairly spacious and the keys are smooth and comfortable to type on. The mouse cursor button in the center of the keyboard isn't intrusive and it's easy to use, as is the fairly spacious trackpad. There's no separate fingerprint scanner along the side as we saw in previous generations (it's been moved to the power button), and this leaves room for upfiring speakers that provide some surprisingly decent audio.

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table with a purple desk mat underneath

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Depending on which display you go for, you'll either get a 1080p RGB IR or a 5MP RGB+ IR webcam with privacy shutter. The camera on my review unit was more than enough for video calls and the like, and the dual-array microphone read me loud and clear with little issue.

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table with a purple desk mat underneath

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Finally, the P1 Gen 6 comes with a solid selection of ports, including two USB Type-A ports and two Thunderbolt 4 ports with DisplayPort 1.4 support and power deliver. You also get a microphone combo jack, an HDMI out with 8K support, and an SD card slot, in addition to the power ports for the laptops 230W power supply.

All in all, this is one of the most functional and portable workstations I've ever used that managed to cram in this much power, rivaling anything the MacBook Pro can muster. 

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Performance

I'll say up front that your performance is going to vary widely depending on what kind of configuration you get, so my experience with the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 is only covering a small part of what's possible with this machine. Still, what I am able to report is mightily impressive.

Against the MacBook Pro 16-inch's M2 Max chip, the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 scored about even in single-core performance in Geekbench 6 (2,698 for the P1 Gen 6 and 2,686 for the MacBook Pro), though its multi core performance lags behind (12,309 to the M2 Max's 14,626), owing to the M2 Max having two additional performance cores over the i7-13800H in my review unit.

In terms of graphics, the RTX 4080 is a beast of a GPU, clobbering the MacBook Pro's M2 Max in 3DMark Wildlife Extreme, 22,470 to 13,360. However, thanks to the unified memory design in Apple's M-series chips, the 96GB MacBook Pro with M2 Max scored better in Wildlife Extreme Unlimited, 23,072 to 25,049, since the Unlimited test is tightly bound to the available video memory. With 96GB of unified memory to work with, the M2 Max MacBook Pro model I tested had a substantial advantage here.

Obviously, this is a creative's workstation more than anything, and in this regard the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 is an absolute dynamo that can do just about anything, and do it well. Easily one of the best laptops for photo editing and best video editing laptops of its class.

While the MacBook Pro 16-inch scored a resounding win over the P1 Gen 6 in PugetBench's Adobe Premiere benchmark (1,159 to the P1 Gen 6's 678), in pretty much every other comparable test, the P1 Gen 6 came out on top or was able to run tests or run workflows that the MacBook Pro couldn't, including encoding 4K video into 1080p nearly 34% faster thanks to its Nvidia RTX 4080.

In rendering tasks, like architect and designer favorite Lumion 12.5, the P1 Gen 6 was able to render a roughly 30 second film clip from the included Streetscape example project (produced by KJJ Studio) at 1080p and 30 fps in about 26 minutes, and you can see the results above for reference.

Likewise, it burned through Blender 3.4.0 rendering workloads as well as V-Ray 5 tests with ease. While not putting up desktop workstation numbers by any means, for a mobile workstation, you can get a lot of rendering work done on the road.

For the data and computer scientists out there, the Nvidia RTX GPUs, from the RTX A1000 to the monster RTX 5000 16GB Ada GPU and nearly every Lovelace GPU in between, you have a lot of options for you compute needs.

Finally, with this much power under the hood, you'd be forgiven if you wanted to game on this laptop when you're not working. Fortunately, unless you're running the slimmest configuration with an A1000 GPU, you'll be able to get a lot of gaming performance out of this laptop, even getting close to 40 fps on average with Cyberpunk 2077 with every setting and ray tracing maxed out at 3,840x2400p, thanks to the RTX 4080's DLSS 3 with Frame Generation set to balanced (with a minimum fps of 33!). 

Fiddling with settings can easily get you to 60 fps on the most demanding games, so you don't need to worry that this machine will be all-work and no play.

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Software & Features

Thankfully, for a machine costing this much money, there's no real bloatware to speak of, not even repeat offender McAfee (which is hardly the best antivirus software you can get nowadays).

You do have Lenovo Commercial Advantage, which is a fairly light-touch control panel with some minor settings options but no performance tuning like you'd find on the best gaming laptops.

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6: Battery life

And now we come to the Achilles' Heel of the ThinkPad P1 Gen 6, though it's one that anyone could see coming just by looking at its spec sheet.

At just 6 hours and 20 minutes in PCMark 10's Battery test, this isn't the kind of laptop that's going to last long away from a wall outlet, especially considering that PCMark 10's test isn't a constant workload like video editing on a deadline or doing GPU dependent rendering work, where you'll be lucky to get more than two hours of battery life if the hardware is put to near-contant use.

Compare this to the MacBook Pro 16-inch's nearly 19 hours and you really see why the MacBook Pro is so hard to knock off the creative professional's pedestal. That said, the P1 Gen 6 isn't the worst battery life I've ever seen in a mobile workstation, so it can at least survive an hour-long commute on the train in the morning if you've got a last minute project to wrap up.

A Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 on a table

(Image credit: Future / John Loeffler)

Should I buy the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6?

Don't buy it if...

Also Consider

If my Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 review has you considering other options, here are two more laptops to consider.

How I tested the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6

I spent about a week with the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6, using it as my day-to-day work laptop as well as using it for creative projects.

In addition to my functional experience with the laptop, I also put it through an extensive battery of benchmark tests to measure its productivity, creative, and gaming performance, with special attention on the latter two use cases as these are what most potential buyers of this device would use it for.

In addition to having reviewed countless laptops in my career, I also have an extensive computer science background, so I know what high-quality hardware should be capable of.

We pride ourselves on our independence and our rigorous review-testing process, offering up long-term attention to the products we review and making sure our reviews are updated and maintained - regardless of when a device was released, if you can still buy it, it's on our radar.

Read more about how we test

  • First reviewed September 2023
Mortal Kombat 1 review – a definitive new beginning
3:07 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Tags: | Comments: Off
Review info

Platform reviewed: PS5
Available on: PS5, PC, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch
Release date: Early Access Sep 14, full release Sep 19 

If you’re all in on brutal and bloody fighting game action then Mortal Kombat 1 has it in spades. When you look closer, however, you’ll find some of the most polished combat of the entire series, a great narrative, a wealth of content to explore, and exciting new additions that mean that the latest entry in NetherRealm Studios' saga is one of the best fighting games you can play right now. 

Mortal Kombat 1 had an uphill battle ahead of it, serving as both a sequel and a soft reboot to over 30 years of established franchise history. With that said, the 12th mainline entry in the series excels across the board by going back to what made the bloody brawler so enthralling in the first place. This is reflected in an intelligently designed roster and a return to stripped-back fighting game fundamentals that make this one a series best. 

One thing that NetherRealm has always been good at delivering is its single-player content in its fighting games - Mortal Kombat 1 is no exception. The centre piece is the new story which takes around eight hours to complete. The plot follows Raiden, now EarthRealm’s champion, after the Fire God Liu Kang restarted history. You’ll also see the Lin Kuei at the height of its power, and Outworld during peacetime in a story that goes in unexpected directions. While billed as a reboot this narrative is actually intertwined with the previous trilogy of NetherRealm-developed titles (spanning Mortal Kombat (2011) to Mortal Kombat 11, but spins its own yarn and is the sharpest writing the team has delivered yet. 

Geras in Mortal Kombat 1

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

Despite the attempts made at making the story as self-contained as possible, it is still likely to alienate some newcomers. That’s because the events are tied into the previous game, Mortal Kombat 11, so if you missed NetherRealm’s last outing, you could struggle to put all the pieces together. Furthermore, as the story develops it unravels and starts to draw in influences from throughout Mortal Kombat history, with several moments likely leaving new players nothing but confused. It plays out in chapters where you assume control of a member of the roster for a few fights in between lengthy cinematics. You earn new characters and cosmetics for finishing each chapter, so it’s definitely worth experiencing at least once. 

It’s the narrative that will raise a few eyebrows among long-time fans as characters have been brought back in new ways. Sub Zero and Scorpion show up in all new forms, while thunder god Raiden appears as a young mortal man. Liu Kang’s fiddling with the timeline has changed the world fundamentally, so while you might recognize the characters here, they’ll often act in ways you wouldn’t expect. For example, sharp-toothed and blade-armed Baraka is a good guy now, for example. This story is a complete rework of the franchise's established lore, which builds to an epic conclusion. 

New to Mortal Kombat 1 is the Invasions mode which replaces the Krypt and is a mixture of a board game and top-down RPG. The main reason for exploring these areas, which are fleshed-out environments based on the core stages, is to unlock chests that contain goodies like concept art, character palettes, new skins, brutalities, fatalities, and other cosmetics. While these dioramas have heart and charm, the actual process of finding and getting these items is long and drawn out. That’s because each encounter takes place as a single-round fight with a reskin of a member of the roster. While initially novel, these quickly grow tiresome as the repetition sets in. 

Outside of this, there are the tower modes with varying difficulty levels, as well as survivor, and an endless gauntlet option. The three main difficulties are Novice, Warrior, and Champion where you go up against six, eight, and 10 opponents respectively, and Survivor mode means you keep your health bar from your prior fights. When you do choose to fight other players, there’s local co-op, and online options that include ranked and casual play, with Kombat League returning as well as King of the Hill making a reappearance. 

Time for a makeover 

Kitana in Mortal Kombat 1

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

Sure, it’s a reboot, but Mortal Kombat 1 doesn’t shy away from the series’ extensive history, and that’s reflected in the cast of characters. Yes, many of the staples are here including Scorpion, Sub-Zero, Liu Kang, and Johnny Cage, however, an equal amount of room among the 23 roster spaces is dedicated to 3D-era combatants and new faces. Reiko returns, alongside Havik, Ashrah, Nitara, and Li Mei. Geras, who debuted in Mortal Kombat 11, makes the cut, too. While it may be disappointing to some to relegate the likes of Sonya Blade and Kano to Kameo fighters, NetherRealm should be applauded for being bold with its choices here instead of retreading old ground. 

It also doesn’t hurt that the character designs are expressive and impressively detailed, and this can also be said of the new environments which are stunning. It’s in the background design that you can really see the upgrade in the engine as there’s a level of detail in these stages that eclipses prior games, and they are far more dynamic in motion. There’s a pop of color to even the darkest and dingiest arenas, with vastly improved animations, particle effects, and lighting. 

At times it’s tough to believe that this is running on a custom version of Unreal Engine 4. Performance on the PS5 is also a rock solid 60fps with no frame drops or stuttering. It’s a game that looks great in motion and is awesome to behold due to the speed and fluidity of the characters. It’s thrilling to see a Kameo fighter emerge from the background during a lengthy combo and hit a breaker, or pop a character up for an unexpected 'turning of the tables' moment.  

The fatalities are as unflinching as ever with the gore and viscera made even more gruesome by the capabilities of current-generation technology. While brutal, there’s a tongue-in-cheek sense to the over-the-top violence and literal liters of blood pouring out of your opponent. However, if you’re a little squeamish then you’ll want to avoid the game altogether. There is no option to disable blood or fatalities at this time. 

Rip and tear 

Raiden and Liu Kang in Mortal Kombat 1

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)
Best bit

Sub-Zero kicks Liu Kang

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

Getting to see all the ways that the story mode subverts expectations, reinventing the universe and making older characters and locations feel fresh

The core fighting experience of Mortal Kombat 1 is the deepest the series has ever been, and it all started by trimming the fat from the previous NetherRealm-developed titles in order to go back to the drawing board. Additions like the variation system, interactable objects in the environment, and the ability to meter burn have been cut in favor of a cleaner mechanical experience.,

Also not returning from Mortal Kombat 11 specifically are the breakaway system, Krushing blows, and the dual gauges for attack and defense. Instead, it’s back to the classic method of enhancing moves and using combo breakers which were introduced in Mortal Kombat (2011). In place of the ditched mechanics is the new Kameo system, which has you picking a second character that can be called upon during a fight to do a variety of different moves. There’s also the return of aerial combat, which was last utilized in Mortal Kombat: Armageddon when the franchise was still in 3D.

Every character has some form of meterless air-launch attack, whether through a string or a special move, which means combos can be taken to the air, or your opponent can be juggled or bounced to keep grounded combat going longer. This fundamentally changes not only the progression of matches, which are considerably faster than they were in Mortal Kombat 11 but also the way in which combos work themselves, as there’s so much you can do in this game than in any other Mortal Kombat title before it. This is especially true when factoring in a well-timed Kameo assist as well, as the likes of Sektor’s uppercut or Frost’s ice ball can give you the crucial milliseconds you need to keep a deadly combo going.

Depth and death

Scorpion, Sub-Zero, and Smoke

(Image credit: Warner Bros. )

Mortal Kombat 1 features the most robust tutorial mode that I’ve ever seen from a big-budget fighting game which does an excellent job of teaching you the basics and prepping you for competitive play. That’s because there are dedicated step-by-step sections for effective offense, defense, and combos as well as more advanced mechanics like how to apply pressure, how to flawless block, effectively use wakeup attacks, dash cancel, dash block, and even understand frame data. There are even challenges for every member on the roster which includes some full combos to master, too. These tutorials are thorough and encompassing and can take players all the way through to competing in Kombat League or going to tournaments. 

It’s a good thing because the combatants in Mortal Kombat 1 have intricacies. This latest entry has taken some clear inspiration from the likes of Guilty Gear Strive with the new archetypes that established fan favorites now embody. For example, Johnny Cage now has a hype meter that is built from effective parrying and taunting so that you can go into show-off mode which means you can use multiple special moves in rapid succession. That means lining up a ton of shadow kicks in the corner, chaining strings together with the Ball Buster (a groin punch), and an all-out aerial assault for a brief window. Cage isn’t the only person with unique mechanics, with several other characters boasting their own gimmicks - none more complicated than Kenshi, who can fight with a sword or just straight-up control his own ancestor while also getting stuck into the fighting himself. 

There are a few settings that can make Mortal Kombat 1 easier for new players as well. You’re able to tweak the input window timing from long (on by default), to short, or medium which tightens how long you have to pull off a string, combo, or hit special cancels. This includes the ability to turn the release check on or off, which means special moves land on release instead of press, and button shortcuts as well. All told, there are many options for the game to be as forgiving or as punishing as you need. I played some of the game with the default settings before switching to the shortest input window with the release check turned off, as is preferable when playing competitively, especially if using one of the best fight sticks

The more time I invest in Mortal Kombat 1, the more eager I am to jump into practice mode with an all-new character and learn what they're all about. Even after hundreds of matches, I am still discovering new strategies with the combatants, and the combo opportunities feel great to pull off. This is the most fun I've ever had with Mortal Kombat game to date, and I can't wait to see how the community and pro scene embrace the toolset that it offers. 

Accessibility features 

Mortal Kombat 1 accessibility menu

(Image credit: Warner Bros.)

Mortal Kombat 1 features extensive accessibility features from a dedicated menu in the settings that include a screen reader option, color blindness mode with an intensity slider, descriptive audio, speech-to-text, keyboard-to-speech, and different audio mixes for those hard of hearing. It’s really encouraging to see a fighting game be this accessible and is a step up from prior efforts. 

How we reviewed Mortal Kombat 1

I spent around 30 hours with Mortal Kombat 1 on PS5 and in that time I finished the story mode, completed the towers with almost the entire roster, thoroughly explored the first two playable maps in Invasions mode, and had around 100 matches outside of these modes with a mixture of the DualSense Wireless Controller, Victrix Pro BFG gamepad, and the Victrix Pros FS

Gear up for Mortal Kombat 1 with one of the best PS5 controllers and one of the best monitors for PS5, or you can game on Team Green hardware with one of the best Xbox controllers and the best monitors for Xbox Series X

Samsung Galaxy S23 FE renders reveal the device in full
2:05 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

We already saw a batch of images suggesting that the Samsung Galaxy S23 FE will have a design near-identical to the Galaxy S23, and these new ones from The Tech Outlook further confirm it. The device will likely hit the Indian market very soon and it's rumored to have a starting price of INR 54,999 ($660) in the country. Samsung Galaxy S23 FE in black The renders don't show anything unexpected and only confirm what we knew already. According to previous rumors, the handset will sport a 6.4-inch 120Hz OLED panel, run on Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 in the US and Exynos 2200 in the rest of...

Threatlocker review
1:36 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Comments: Off

Threatlocker is a newcomer to the cybersecurity game - the Florida-based company was only founded in 2017, long after security giants like Symantec and Kaspersky. Still, at TechRadar we pride ourselves on our ability to find scrappy new contenders and were intrigued when a Threatlocker representative reached out to us about their endpoint protection security platform. Have we uncovered a diamond in the rough, or should this platform have stayed in its eponymous locker? In this guide, you'll decide. 

Threatlocker: Plans and pricing

(Image credit: Threatlocker)

Threatlocker: Plans and pricing

If you're looking for a pricing sheet with detailed tiers, Threatlocker will leave you disappointed. Unlike some other endpoint security platforms we've reviewed, there's no 'per seat' charge for monthly or annual subscriptions. Interested parties can contact Threatlocker's sales department via e-mail or telephone, proudly displayed on the main website.

This said, it's only too easy to provide an email address to book a product demo with one of the company's 'Cyber Heroes'. There's also a 30-day free trial of the platform, with no credit card information required. 

Threatlocker: Features

(Image credit: Threatlocker)

Threatlocker: Features

Of all the endpoint security platforms we've reviewed, Threatlocker definitely has one of the most impressive array of features.

The main product page provides a very good overview of these and the platform includes basic features we'd expect to see such as black and whitelisting of applications. We were much more intrigued though to read about Threatlocker's 'Ringfencing' feature, which allows managers to set boundaries for how certain applications interact with each other. 

Although the platform doesn't incorporate a dedicated firewall for clients, it does include 'Dynamic Network Control'. This allows IT admins to regulate traffic, as well as open ports only for authorized applications using dynamic ACLs (Access Control Lists) or agent authentications. The Threatlocker website rightly points out that this is an often overlooked security gap when it comes to endpoint security platforms, which can spell disaster if a rogue device infiltrates your network. 

The platform also has a very advanced policy engine, which can also be used in a 'firewall-like' manner to restrict what applications can do. Threatlocker refer to their 'Allowlisting' as a way to put you in control over what software, scripts, executables, and libraries can run on your endpoints and servers. This 'Allow List' can be exclusive, in that it can block any applications that aren't included on it. 

Users can also set time-based policies, so applications can only be accessed and/or perform certain functions at an allotted time during the day. 

Threatlocker claims their support team is available 24/7, 365 days a year via telephone or the main portal. The website asserts that calls are answered within 30 seconds. Although we can't speak to this, when we decided to test pilot this platform we received replies to our emails within minutes.

Threatlocker: Setup

(Image credit: Threatlocker)

Threatlocker: Setup

We've previously mentioned Threatlocker's extremely friendly and helpful support team, who offered to contact us and set up a demo to walk us through the onboarding process. We appreciated the offer but decided to go it alone to see how easy the platform is to use. Nevertheless, it's good to know that help is on hand if needed.

After signing up for the Threatlocker trial, users are asked to provide their company and contact details. Next, you're logged straight in to the Threatlocker portal. We immediately headed over to the 'Deployment Center' to install the agent software on our test machine.

Threatlocker offers a number of ways to do this, including RMM (Remote Monitoring & Management), software deployment tool, Active Directory and Power Shell. We opted to install the agent manually using the Windows installer. There's an MSI version but we opted instead for the tiny 'stub' utility, which Threatlocker advises will install the most current version of the ThreatLocker Agent.

Agents are available for both Windows (Servers and Workstations) and macOS. We couldn't find any mention of Linux or mobile devices. 

Threatlocker: Interface

(Image credit: Threatlocker)

Threatlocker: Interface

As impressed as we were by the vast array of features available, we couldn't help but feel the main interface is a little spartan. At times it feels more like editing a database rather than editing an online portal.

That said, the left hand pane is logically laid out and it's easy to expand sections to see further options. For instance, expanding 'Application Control' lists clear choices like 'Policies', 'Permitted Applications', 'Applications' and 'Tags'.

We felt the interface was most wanting in terms of the main dashboard - or lack thereof. Unlike other endpoint security platforms we've reviewed there's no area where you can see a quick heads up of device status, threats blocked and so on, accompanied by some helpful pie charts and other infographics. 

The report generating feature allows you to summon any amount of data e.g. Blocked Files in the last 24 hours but these appear in a spreadsheet-like format, so you may have to do some click and dragging in order to view all the information.

Having trashed the interface for being a little too Nineties, we should draw readers' attention to Threatlocker's new 'Beta' portal, which has a much richer UI. There's still no handy dashboard per se but options are much more colorful and text is better laid out. The left hand pane has also been axed in favor of a drop down menu which users can launch from the top left.

Sadly the Threatlocker Agent has yet to get the 'Beta treatment' so if, for instance, you want to view blocked files you're stuck with the spreadsheet-style layout again. 

Threatlocker: Performance

(Image credit: Threatlocker)

Threatlocker: Performance

Despite our misgivings about the Threatlocker's current UI, what it lacks in looks it more than makes up for in functionality.

When reviewing endpoint security solutions, our first step is always to try to download a fake computer virus, provided by the good people of EICAR. We opened Microsoft Edge on our test machine and downloaded the fake virus in compressed (ZIP) format.

On our first attempt, we found we were unable to extract the file as the permissions had been changed. We decided to be cunning and downloaded the test virus uncompressed and tried to run it. We immediately saw a pop-up from the Threatlocker Agent to say the file had been blocked from executing. Interestingly, the agent does include a 'Request Access' option, which may be useful if an endpoint user wants to request permission to run a legitimate program.

Our next test was to try to copy a new, real computer virus we'd caught in the wild to the test machine's 'Downloads' folder, to see how Threatlocker would react. We do this test to check if an endpoint security platform can detect suspicious files based on their behavior, not just by checking their signature against a known database of threats.

Once again, Threatlocker didn't let us down, immediately detecting and quarantining the real trojan virus.

Our final test is always to log in to the cloud console of an endpoint security platform, to check if the threats had been correctly logged. We decided to use Threatlocker's beta cloud console to list these, and were pleased to see that the full file names were displayed without any fine tuning via the mouse. 

Threatlocker: Final verdict

A bare-bones interface is a small price to pay for a platform as powerful and as versatile as Threatlocker. While its creators aren't always mentioned in the same breath as long-established cybersecurity vendors like Malwarebytes, we were pleased how easy it was to register and try out the platform. We also were delighted with the level of support offered to help users with onboarding and defining policies.

Security-wise, while a dedicated firewall would have been ideal this is effectively made up for by fine tuned application control, as well as dynamic network control. We were particularly impressed that the platform takes port control seriously.

Threat detection was absolutely flawless, with both the fake and real virus being spotted and quarantined within moments. We would have appreciated a more graphically-rich agent but imagine this will get an overhaul in future, along with the introduction of Threalocker's new beta portal.

The only major criticism of the platform is that if you employ Threatlocker to protect your endpoints, you'll need to find another solution for mobile devices as the platform doesn't seem to support it. We did find, however, that there's a Threatlocker mobile app available for IT Administrators who want to manage endpoints from an Android or iOS devices.

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