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New Honor Pad 10 Pro packs a Dimensity 8350 in a 6.1mm chassis, Pad X10 and X10 Pro join it
11:32 pm | April 2, 2026

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

Honor just unveiled three mid-range tablets – the Pad 10 Pro, which offers a more premium alternative to last year’s Pad 10, as well as the Pad X10 and Pad X10 Pro. Honor Pad 10 Pro The Honor Pad 10 Pro brings more compute power in a slimmer package. The metal unibody design measures 6.1mm thick and weighs 475g. For comparison, the Pad 10 is 6.3mm and 525g, while the Pad 9 Pro from 2024 is 6.6mm and 589g. Don’t worry, though, this doesn’t come at the cost of battery capacity – the Pad 10 Pro has a 10,100mAh battery, which is the same as the Pad 10, while the Pad 9 Pro had a...

New Honor Pad 10 Pro packs a Dimensity 8350 in a 6.1mm chassis, Pad X10 and X10 Pro join it
11:32 pm |

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

Honor just unveiled three mid-range tablets – the Pad 10 Pro, which offers a more premium alternative to last year’s Pad 10, as well as the Pad X10 and Pad X10 Pro. Honor Pad 10 Pro The Honor Pad 10 Pro brings more compute power in a slimmer package. The metal unibody design measures 6.1mm thick and weighs 475g. For comparison, the Pad 10 is 6.3mm and 525g, while the Pad 9 Pro from 2024 is 6.6mm and 589g. Don’t worry, though, this doesn’t come at the cost of battery capacity – the Pad 10 Pro has a 10,100mAh battery, which is the same as the Pad 10, while the Pad 9 Pro had a...

Report: Samsung is looking to offset rising RAM prices in an unusual way
10:01 pm |

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

The rising cost of memory chips in the last year or so has forced manufacturers of electronic goods to come up with various strategies to offset the burden, especially smartphone makers that have a portfolio of low-end to mid-range devices. Bumping up the price of more affordable devices could potentially spell trouble. This doesn't necessarily apply to the high-end smartphones, where manufacturers are more inclined to shift the cost to consumers. A report from a Korean publication DealSite suggests that Samsung swapped out its homemade OLED panels in some of its mid-range models,...

Honor X70 Refresh Edition arrives with familiar specs, Watch X5i also unveiled
8:39 pm |

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

Honor is on a roll with its announcements, and the latest addition to its X-series smartphone lineup is a refresh of the toughened battery champion Honor X70, which was launched back in July. Honor also unveiled its latest fitness-oriented smartwatch - the Watch X5i, which brings 1.97-inch AMOLED and up to 21 days of battery endurance. Honor X70 Refresh Edition The X70 Refresh Edition has three changes: 1) it comes in a new Sunrise Gold color, 2) ships with MagicOS 10 based on Android 16, and 3) is CNY 300 ($44) more expensive than the regular Honor X70. As for the rest of the...

I’ve been testing film cameras for years, and the Lomography Lomo MC-A easily just became my favorite
7:35 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Cameras Compact Cameras Computers Gadgets | Tags: | Comments: Off

Lomography Lomo MC-A: two-minute review

New additions to the ranks of the best film cameras are a lot more common in 2026 than they were a few years ago, with offerings arriving from the likes of Kodak, Rollei and Pentax.

Into this increasingly competitive market steps the Lomography Lomo MC-A. With a sleek metal chassis, this compact film camera looks and feels like a premium product. It puts a reassuring amount of weight in your hands, and a welcome degree of control at your fingertips. This is no simple point-and-shoot — the Lomo MC-A is something much more sophisticated.

Let’s run through the basics. The Lomography Lomo MC-A is a compact analog camera that takes 35mm film. It sports a 32mm Minitar-II lens with a five-element construction and a maximum aperture of f/2.8, and offers control of key settings like aperture (running up to f/16) and shutter speed (1/500 sec to bulb). It can read DX coding, meaning it can automatically detect a loaded film’s ISO speed, and it also has a flash, an exposure compensation dial, and a multiple-exposure mode.

Also key to its appeal is the autofocus — something of a rarity on analog compacts. The Lomo MC-A uses a zone-based focusing system, with focal distance settings for 0.4m, 0.8m, 1.5m, 3m and infinity. You can select your zone manually, or make use of the LiDAR-based autofocus system, which will analyse the scene and judge the correct zone to use.

While it's not going to give you anywhere near the level of responsiveness and accuracy of the autofocus systems in new digital mirrorless cameras, this system still makes the MC-A a much more photographically versatile camera than a simple fixed-focus point-and-shoot, allowing you to home in on a specific subject in the frame for dynamic imagery.

Man's hand holding the Lomography Lomo MC-A analog compact camera, front-facing, with lens cap on

(Image credit: Future | Jon Stapley)

In a world where cheap film cameras are not hard to come by, the $549 / £499 / AU$799 Lomo MC-A might sound like a bit of an ask. But it has the potential to give you much better images than a point-and-shoot like the $99 Kodak Snapic A1, or than the $60 point-and-shoot from the 1990s you found at a garage sale.

Of course, the flip-side of this is that it makes the camera a little trickier to get to grips with. With the ability to focus comes the ability to mis-focus; and with the ability to control exposure comes the potential for misjudging it.

However, I’ve spent a considerable amount of time with the Lomography MC-A, and in my opinion it’s the best new film camera you can buy. It’s more versatile than the cheap point-and-shoots, and provides better value for money than the overpriced half-frame Pentax 17.

It’s not without its quirks and issues, which we'll get into, but it consistently delivers great-looking imagery on beautiful 35mm film — and can you ask for much more than that? In my view, this is now the benchmark for new film cameras to meet.

Close view of Lomography MC-A film camera, showing 32mm f/2.8 lens

(Image credit: Future | Jon Stapley)

Lomography Lomo MC-A: price and availability

As mentioned, the Lomography MC-A is priced at $549 / £499 / AU$799. That puts it about on a par with the Pentax 17, and given that it’s a better-made camera offering full-frame quality rather than half-frame, I think it offers better value for money.

You also get plenty in the box in addition to the camera itself: a glass UV filter, a lens cap, a protective fabric wrap, a leather hand strap, colored gel flash filters, a CR2 battery rechargeable via USB-C, a Splitzer lens attachment (for creating split-effect multiple exposures), a book of inspirational images, and a sticker sheet.

Lomography Lomo MC-A: design

  • Sturdy metal build feels hefty and premium
  • Viewfinder is a little cramped
  • Top LCD is neat, but practically not that useful

Your first reaction to picking up the Lomo MC-A will likely be to marvel at its heft. It's not a heavy camera in the grand scheme of things — you can use it one-handed without issue — but at 332g its metal-based build is substantially weightier than most modern point-and-shoots (which tend to be nothing but plastic). While I wouldn't risk dropping it, the MC-A feels reasonably tough, and I don't worry about it when it's in my bag — the supplied fabric wrap is also a help here.

Film-loading is simple — once the roll is secured in place, you simply make sure the leader is sitting with the perforations aligned to the teeth, and then close the back and you’re ready to go. The first time you load it, you might be a little dubious as to whether the film has actually taken, but the camera will warn you if it hasn't — and you can triple-check by winding on one frame and checking whether the rewind crank on the camera's base rotates as you do so.

The top LCD screen provides a counter of how many shots you’ve spent, as well as flash setting, focus setting and battery level. When you half-depress the shutter button the screen switches to displaying exposure information, though you’ll likely rarely see this, since when you half-depress the shutter button you’re almost certainly looking through the viewfinder.

Photograph of the Lomography Lomo MC-A, with grass visible in background, showing detail of top plate and LCD screen
Future | Jon Stapley
Photograph of the Lomography Lomo MC-A, with grass visible in background, showing wider view of top plate with engraving and dial controls
Future | Jon Stapley
Photograph of the Lomography Lomo MC-A, with grass visible in background, showing switch to set focusing distance
Future | Jon Stapley
Photograph of the Lomography Lomo MC-A, with grass visible in background, showing top plate dials, engraving and screen
Future | Jon Stapley
Photograph of the Lomography Lomo MC-A, with grass visible in background, showing detail of lens aperture ring
Future | Jon Stapley
Photograph of the Lomography Lomo MC-A, with grass visible in background, showing detail of top plate with controls and LCD screen
Future | Jon Stapley

The optical viewfinder does the job, but personally I find it quite small and cramped. A bigger viewfinder — maybe even one big enough for a readout of exposure information — would go a long way towards making composition feel more comfortable. There are two in-viewfinder LEDs, a blue one to let you know focus is locked, and an orange one to warn you if you’re getting a slow shutter speed that will likely cause image blur.

I find these lights a bit distracting and oblique, especially when the real-estate of the viewfinder is so small to begin with. A bigger viewfinder with room to display the exposure information displayed on the top LCD screen would have made much more sense to me.

Photograph of man's hand holding the Lomography Lomo MC-A analog compact camera, showing side-on view

(Image credit: Future | Jon Stapley)

Winding on film is done manually, via the delightfully retro-felling mechanical lever that springs back with a satisfying snap. The lever itself has quite a lot of travel, and you want to make sure you pull it all the way to the end with every frame – some users have reported a little bleed between frames, likely caused by the lever not being quite cranked far enough and the camera allowing the exposure anyway. In all my time with the MC-A, this only happened to me once, but it's worth being aware of.

Control of exposure is achieved via the dials on the top plate and the tiny aperture ring around the lens, which pops out from the front very slightly when the camera is activated. Settings can be dialed in manually or set to automated program mode, and in most situations, the camera will judge well enough that you can use the latter.

The tiny lens comes with an absolutely darling little lens cap. This is, I am embarrassed to report, incredibly easy to accidentally leave on — and the Lomo MC-A lacks a handy feature like the Pentax 17's ability to detect when the cap is on and refuse to capture an image until it's removed. If you're going to be taking the camera in and out of your pocket all day to capture little moments, I'd consider using the supplied clear UV filter as a lens protector instead. Just... trust me.

Overall though, the Lomo MC-A is a nicely designed object. Its premium metal build puts a reassuring weight in your hands, and the satisfying snap of the wind-on lever never gets old.

Lomography Lomo MC-A: performance

  • Autofocus works well once you're used to it
  • Lens is nicely sharp, though has a vignette
  • Exposure metering is solid

Ultimately, the image is the important thing, and I really liked a lot of the images I got back from the Lomo MC-A. The 5-zone autofocus system allows for the creation of much more dynamic and varied images than are possible with a fixed-focus compact.

You have to maintain some distance, as the camera isn’t one for close-focusing; the minimum claimed distance is 0.4m, but I would give it even more latitude than that. In general, it will probably take running a roll to get used to the ins and outs of the autofocus. Your first scans will likely have a fair few blurry misfires, until you get in the habit of slowing down, taking a breath, and waiting for that blue LED to turn solid before firing the shutter.

Once you get the hang of it though, you can capture images with a sharp main subject and a nicely defocused background, and even moving subjects as long as they're not too speedy. A striding pedestrian is perfectly possible to capture in a sharp image, but a speeding bike is a bit more of an ask.

Images offer a good level of detail. The 32mm lens allows you to fit plenty in the frame, without being so wide that the perspective becomes distorted and non-naturalistic, and its quality is sufficient to hold up to a bit of cropping if you want to hone in on your subject in editing.

There is a pronounced vignette to the lens, noticeable when you capture an image with a lot of empty space, like a big blue sky. It can also flare a little when shot into direct light, producing pronounced optical effects. I don’t mind these quirks, personally — I think they rather add to the low-fi feel. But if you’re looking for optical flawlessness, it ain’t here.

If I'm adding to my wishlist for the next MC-A, or future accessories for this one, a teleconverter for the lens could be an interesting way to expand its versatility.

Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200 (images like this are where you really notice the vignette)Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A image shot on Kodak Gold 200 showing London street scenes
Kodak Gold 200Future
Scan of Lomo MC-A photograph taken on Kodak ColorPlus 200, showing scenes from London's Hampstead and Camden
Kodak ColorPlus 200Future | Jon Stapley
Scan of Lomo MC-A photograph taken on Kodak ColorPlus 200, showing scenes from London's Hampstead and Camden
Kodak ColorPlus 200Future | Jon Stapley
Scan of Lomo MC-A photograph taken on Kodak ColorPlus 200, showing scenes from London's Hampstead and Camden
Kodak ColorPlus 200 (there's some pronounced flare from the direct light here)Future | Jon Stapley
Scan of Lomo MC-A photograph taken on Kodak ColorPlus 200, showing scenes from London's Hampstead and Camden
Kodak ColorPlus 200Future | Jon Stapley
Scan of Lomo MC-A photograph taken on Kodak ColorPlus 200, showing scenes from London's Hampstead and Camden
Kodak ColorPlus 200Future | Jon Stapley
Sample photograph from the Lomo MC-A shot on Lomography 400, showing scenes from London's Primrose Hill
Lomography 400Future | Jon Stapley
Sample photograph from the Lomo MC-A shot on Lomography 400, showing scenes from London's Primrose Hill
Lomography 400Future | Jon Stapley
Sample photograph from the Lomo MC-A shot on Lomography 400, showing scenes from London's Primrose Hill
Lomography 400Future | Jon Stapley

Realistically, you probably won't want to manually dial in your aperture and shutter speed for every single shot — and the good news here is that the Lomo MC-A's auto exposure modes generally do a commendable job.

I shot the majority of my test images using Aperture Priority mode – setting the aperture myself, and letting the camera handle shutter speeds. Exposures came back mostly well-balanced; I did notice a mild bias towards overexposure, particularly when the sun was out in full force, so you may want to consider dialing back half a stop using the exposure compensation dial if you think an image might run the risk of heavy glare.

Naturally, the look of your images is going to be predominantly dictated by the film you load. On my recent outings with the Lomo MC-A, I ran through some Kodak Gold 200, Kodak ColorPlus 200 and Lomography's own Lomo 400, the results of which you can see on this page.

I had the shots professionally developed, with scans at a resolution of 3130 x 2075, producing file sizes of around 5-7MB. I think the MC-A's lens is sharp enough that you could scan at higher resolutions than this.

Should I buy the Lomography Lomo MC-A?

Photograph of a man's hand holding the Lomography Lomo MC-A analog compact camera, front facing

(Image credit: Future | Jon Stapley)

Buy it if...

You want a new film compact
Avoiding the potential minefield of the used market, this is a camera you can be sure is going to work.

You want control over your images
A zone-based focusing system and a range of aperture and shutter speed settings provide photographic flexibility.

You like a proper retro feel
Everything from the vignetting lens to the delightful mechanical wind-on lever makes this camera a delightful throwback with real retro charm.

Don't buy it if...

You’re on a tight budget
There are much cheaper ways to get hold of a camera that shoots film, whether you go for a new compact or try the second-hand market.

You want a flexible zoom lens
The 32mm prime locks you into a particular perspective – no bad thing in my opinion, but some may prefer a versatile zoom.

How I tested the Lomography Lomo MC-A

Photograph of Lomography Lomo MC-A standing in grass

(Image credit: Future | Jon Stapley)
  • I received a loan unit of the Lomography MC-A for testing, though I've since purchased one for myself.
  • I’ve run a total of five rolls of 35mm color film through the camera over about three months.
  • I’ve shot in variable light conditions and have taken the camera to a number of locations, mostly around London.

I’ve now rattled through five rolls of film with the Lomography MC-A, making for a total of around 180 frames. I’ve tried my hand at street photography with it to test the autofocus system, have shot landscape-style images from landmarks like London’s Primrose Hill, and have used both the auto and manual focusing and exposure modes. I’ve made it my main driver for several days out, as well as taking it on dedicated photo walks.

First reviewed March 2026

Samsung Galaxy A27 to get a camera upgrade
7:11 pm |

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

Yesterday, the upcoming Samsung Galaxy A27 was spotted in the Geekbench online database, and this has revealed the fact that it's powered by the Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 SoC, which will be paired with 6GB of RAM in one version. Today a new rumor claims the Galaxy A27 won't just be switching SoCs from the Samsung-made Exynos line to the aforementioned Qualcomm Snapdragon. It will also allegedly feature an upgraded selfie camera. Samsung Galaxy A26 This will have 12MP resolution, which is a tiny bit lower than the 13MP of its predecessor, but it should be better quality and take better...

The Testaments review: praise be, the Hulu Handmaid’s Tale spinoff doesn’t disappoint under his eye
7:00 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Disney Plus Gadgets Hulu Streaming | Comments: Off

Take a look at The Handmaid's Tale Series Graph (episodes ranked by fan rating), and you'll see a near-impossible feat: back-to-back 9.0 and 5.7 ratings for the final two episodes of season 6. Translated, that's a Game of Thrones scale of reaction to the show's final-ever episode.

Given that the season 6 finale was an outright setup for new Hulu and Disney+ sequel series The Testaments, things didn't look too rosy. Thankfully, the reality is completely different — and I genuinely think The Testaments is as good as season 1 of The Handmaid's Tale.

For starters, the spinoff has nailed the art of reintroducing us to somewhere we already know (the totalitarian regime that is Gilead) and making it feel fresh. There are still secrets buried beneath the surface that we're none the wiser about, and a simple anti-regime stunt from Mayday isn't going to get any answers this time.

Then there's the casting. We already knew that Ann Dowd is absolutely blistering as the impenetrable Aunt Lydia, but newbies Chase Infiniti and Lucy Halliday mould the show into their own creation. We're looking at a major star on the rise after One Battle After Another with Infiniti, people.

If that's not enough to win you over to The Testaments, its main downside (feeling like it's just getting going) gives way to its biggest positive... surprises galore.

The Testaments is the journey to revolution that The Handmaid's Tale season 6 wanted to be

Some 15 years after the events of The Handmaid's Tale, a lot has changed in the Republic of Gilead. Aunt Lydia has rescued herself from imprisonment by being handpicked to oversee the laws and uniforms governing Gilead's women in the form of a new school.

Here, students are separated into four colors: Pinks for elementary age, Plums for young tweens who haven't come of age, Greens for those who have and are eligible for marriage, and the so-called 'Pearl Girls,' who have recently transferred in from the outside.

Where Margaret Atwood's book follows Aunt Lydia's perspective, Hulu's version homes in on devout Plum Agnes (Infiniti), who completely believes in the regime and what it's trying to achieve. She hates her stepmother, however, with her Commander father also constantly absent from the home.

One day, Aunt Lydia assigns her a Pearl Girl called Daisy (Halliday), prompting Agnes' friends to think she's done something wrong. Neither trusts the other, and while Daisy arrives with Gilead with secrets, Agnes begins to see the light.

It stands to reason that a school inside a totalitarian regime creates instant intrigue, but it's the ensemble performances that elevate it. Main cast aside, our Aunts and Plums have been picked to perfection, straddling the line between deranged and oblivious as, for the first time, men begin to feel the bulk of capital punishment.

Aunt Lydia could make or break what happens in The Testaments season 2 — which I'm convinced is coming

Daisy and Agnes appear on each side of the back of Aunt Lydia's head

The golden trio. (Image credit: Disney+)

Ann Dowd remains the class act that we've known she is for years, and I'm overjoyed that Aunt Lydia is the character that both Atwood and Hulu chose to continue. Season 6 saw her allegiance to Gilead finally falter, but this time around, I don't trust her.

Why? When we meet her again in The Testaments, her faith in Gilead appears to be completely restored. However, she clearly knows more than she's letting on, and that makes her completely opaque when it comes to potentially betraying the regime further down the line.

It's a slippery business, and Aunt Lydia could either help or hugely hinder Agnes and Daisy on their upcoming journey. Obviously, there are no spoilers here, but the entire season of The Testaments feels like a starter for the main course still to come, and I'm convinced season 2 already has to be being developed.

Wishing for more of a fictitious dictatorship while living through politically perilous times feels bizarre at best, but I'm hoping for as many instalments of The Testaments as I can handle.

In the meantime, what we already have is a heady and moreish binge dressed up in a coloured uniform. The soundtrack is bonkers yet effective, and you can never let your guard down — particularly when it comes to plot details fans have been theorizing might come true. Frankly, I'd stream it over The Handmaid's Tale itself any day of the week.

It's obvious that we're getting them for more reasons than I've listed, and if The Handmaid's Tale spinoff continues to live up to the level of brilliance we see across these 10 episodes, totalitarian TV will never have been better.


The Testaments review: praise be, the Hulu Handmaid’s Tale spinoff doesn’t disappoint under his eye
7:00 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Disney Plus Gadgets Hulu Streaming | Comments: Off

Take a look at The Handmaid's Tale Series Graph (episodes ranked by fan rating), and you'll see a near-impossible feat: back-to-back 9.0 and 5.7 ratings for the final two episodes of season 6. Translated, that's a Game of Thrones scale of reaction to the show's final-ever episode.

Given that the season 6 finale was an outright setup for new Hulu and Disney+ sequel series The Testaments, things didn't look too rosy. Thankfully, the reality is completely different — and I genuinely think The Testaments is as good as season 1 of The Handmaid's Tale.

For starters, the spinoff has nailed the art of reintroducing us to somewhere we already know (the totalitarian regime that is Gilead) and making it feel fresh. There are still secrets buried beneath the surface that we're none the wiser about, and a simple anti-regime stunt from Mayday isn't going to get any answers this time.

Then there's the casting. We already knew that Ann Dowd is absolutely blistering as the impenetrable Aunt Lydia, but newbies Chase Infiniti and Lucy Halliday mould the show into their own creation. We're looking at a major star on the rise after One Battle After Another with Infiniti, people.

If that's not enough to win you over to The Testaments, its main downside (feeling like it's just getting going) gives way to its biggest positive... surprises galore.

The Testaments is the journey to revolution that The Handmaid's Tale season 6 wanted to be

Some 15 years after the events of The Handmaid's Tale, a lot has changed in the Republic of Gilead. Aunt Lydia has rescued herself from imprisonment by being handpicked to oversee the laws and uniforms governing Gilead's women in the form of a new school.

Here, students are separated into four colors: Pinks for elementary age, Plums for young tweens who haven't come of age, Greens for those who have and are eligible for marriage, and the so-called 'Pearl Girls,' who have recently transferred in from the outside.

Where Margaret Atwood's book follows Aunt Lydia's perspective, Hulu's version homes in on devout Plum Agnes (Infiniti), who completely believes in the regime and what it's trying to achieve. She hates her stepmother, however, with her Commander father also constantly absent from the home.

One day, Aunt Lydia assigns her a Pearl Girl called Daisy (Halliday), prompting Agnes' friends to think she's done something wrong. Neither trusts the other, and while Daisy arrives with Gilead with secrets, Agnes begins to see the light.

It stands to reason that a school inside a totalitarian regime creates instant intrigue, but it's the ensemble performances that elevate it. Main cast aside, our Aunts and Plums have been picked to perfection, straddling the line between deranged and oblivious as, for the first time, men begin to feel the bulk of capital punishment.

Aunt Lydia could make or break what happens in The Testaments season 2 — which I'm convinced is coming

Daisy and Agnes appear on each side of the back of Aunt Lydia's head

The golden trio. (Image credit: Disney+)

Ann Dowd remains the class act that we've known she is for years, and I'm overjoyed that Aunt Lydia is the character that both Atwood and Hulu chose to continue. Season 6 saw her allegiance to Gilead finally falter, but this time around, I don't trust her.

Why? When we meet her again in The Testaments, her faith in Gilead appears to be completely restored. However, she clearly knows more than she's letting on, and that makes her completely opaque when it comes to potentially betraying the regime further down the line.

It's a slippery business, and Aunt Lydia could either help or hugely hinder Agnes and Daisy on their upcoming journey. Obviously, there are no spoilers here, but the entire season of The Testaments feels like a starter for the main course still to come, and I'm convinced season 2 already has to be being developed.

Wishing for more of a fictitious dictatorship while living through politically perilous times feels bizarre at best, but I'm hoping for as many instalments of The Testaments as I can handle.

In the meantime, what we already have is a heady and moreish binge dressed up in a coloured uniform. The soundtrack is bonkers yet effective, and you can never let your guard down — particularly when it comes to plot details fans have been theorizing might come true. Frankly, I'd stream it over The Handmaid's Tale itself any day of the week.

It's obvious that we're getting them for more reasons than I've listed, and if The Handmaid's Tale spinoff continues to live up to the level of brilliance we see across these 10 episodes, totalitarian TV will never have been better.


Honor Play 80 gets official too, here are the specs
6:02 pm |

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

Yesterday, Honor launched the Play 80 Pro in China, and the vanilla Honor Play 80 has now joined it. The Honor Play 80 has a 6.75-inch LCD screen with 720x1600 resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. It's powered by the 5G-capable MediaTek Dimensity 6300 SoC, and like the Pro it disappointingly (for 2026) runs Android 15 with Honor's MagicOS 9 on top. It comes with a 13MP rear camera and a 5MP front camera. Honor Play 80 official images Keeping the lights on is a 5,300 mAh battery with support for 15W wired charging. The phone measures 167 x 77 x 7.89 mm and weighs 186g. It's...

Apple’s AirTag 2 gets an improvement for its anti-stalking feature
5:01 pm |

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

Apple launched the second-generation AirTag back in January, and now the tracker is receiving a firmware update. This takes the tracker's firmware up to version 3.0.45. It comes with the usual unnamed bug fixes and improvements, along with an update to the unwanted tracking feature (aka anti-stalking). The unwanted tracking sound is now updated in order to more easily be able to locate an unknown AirTag with Precision Finding. Basically, if you're being stalked with an AirTag, you'll receive a notification on your iPhone saying an unknown AirTag has been traveling with you, and you...

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