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Motorola brings Edge 50 Fusion to India
3:44 pm | May 16, 2024

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

Motorola announced Edge 50 Fusion last month, and today, the company launched the phone in India. The device comes with a Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 chipset, a slightly curved screen with a 144 Hz refresh rate and Gorilla Glass 5 on top. As current marketing trends in India are to point out features that are special for the particular price segment the Edge 50 Fusion is said to bring the "segment's best" camera, a 50 MP shooter with a Sony LYT-700C sensor. The phone is also the "segment's only" device with IP68 water and dust protection. The color options are Hot Pink, Forest Blue...

Meizu 21 Note announced with SD 8 Gen 2 and Flyme AIOS
2:59 pm |

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

Earlier this year Meizu confirmed it is exiting the smartphone market and going all in on AI but that hasn’t stopped it from launching its Meizu 21 series phones and the latest is the Meizu 21 Note. Meizu 21 Note Meizu 21 Note is built around a 6.78-inch 8T LTPO OLED with FHD+ resolution, a 1-144Hz refresh rate and 5,000 nits peak brightness. You also get a 16MP front-facing camera and an ultrasonic fingerprint scanner embedded in the display. The back houses a 50 MP main cam with a 1/1.56" sensor and f/1.7 aperture and OIS alongside a 13MP ultrawide module. Meizu 21...

Android 14 for TV adds picture-in-picture mode and reduces power consumption
2:07 pm |

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

Google I/O brings a new version of the Android TV OS, which is based on Android 14. Just like the new Wear OS 5 (which is also based on Android 14), there is a focus on reduced power consumption. But the most interesting feature for users is support for picture-in-picture mode. This enables a form of multitasking with one app running in full screen and one in a small window. This will enable several use cases: ticker: live sports scores or stock tickers smart home: showing connected doorbells or baby monitors communication: running video or voice calls while watching TV ...

SIMOptions review
2:04 pm |

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

SIMOptions is an eSIM marketplace that offers data plans for over 200 countries worldwide. The platform sells its own regional eSIM plans and eSIMs from local network providers in various countries. While our overall impression with this eSIM provider is positive, users should be aware of a few caveats.

SIMOptions is competitively priced, with multiple carrier options per location to choose from. However, there’s no way to customize an existing plan or top up your data if you run out while on a trip abroad. It’s a great option for multi-country trips, but single-destination users can find better options out there.

Our biggest gripe with SIMOptions is the unresponsive customer support, which, when combined with the number of technical issues users face during activation, can become quite a drawback for most users. Still, it may be a good fit for some users depending on the location they’re visiting.

SIMOptions: Plans and pricing

SIMOptions is an eSIM reseller, so its plans can differ in value depending on the network and region you purchase into. Here’s an overview of popular options: 

Make sure to compare prices with other providers before buying an eSIM. SIMOptions typically resell plans from other providers and networks at a more competitive price, but you should still do your diligence. 

SIMOptions: Features

SIMOptions offers a few distinct features to improve the user experience, here are the ones we liked the best during our time with it:

Carrier Options

One of SimOptions' most notable features is its extensive partnerships with local mobile operators worldwide. This allows them to provide a diverse array of eSIM plans from different carriers in each country, giving customers more options to choose from based on their specific needs and preferences.

Competitive Prices

SIMOptions is known for its budget-friendly eSIM plans, often undercutting the prices of other providers. For example, it offers 15-day data packages for all of Europe for as low as $14.90 USD, which is significantly cheaper than other providers and networks.

Affiliate Program

Another unique feature of SIMOptions is its affiliate program, which allows customers to earn commissions by referring others to purchase eSIMs. Whenever someone purchases a data plan from SIMOptions through your affiliate link, you get 10%. 

SIMOptions: Installation

SIMOptions installation

(Image credit: SIMOptions)

To get started, simply visit SIMOptions’ website and select the eSIM package that suits your travel needs. The checkout process is quick and easy, requiring only your contact information, billing address, and payment details — no sign-up necessary. 

Once your payment is processed, you'll receive an email containing a QR code and instructions for installing the eSIM on your device. Activation is immediate upon installation, with the data plan switching on as soon as you reach your target destination.

However, SIMOptions requires you to go through the first-time activation process before you begin your trip, in the same country where you purchased your eSIM. Apart from that, the onboarding is user-friendly and there are plenty of resources to help you along.

SIMOptions: Coverage and speed

SIMOptions is a reseller marketplace that repackages eSIM plans from local telecom providers across 200+ countries. However, features, allowances, and network performance are not consistent across all locations and can differ based on your telecom network.

Because it offers no eSIM plans of its own, SIMOptions users regularly complain of issues like throttling, price hikes, and unresponsive support from individual network operators. Compared to other eSIM providers like Airalo or Holafly, SIMOptions falls short in almost every aspect. 

However, if you’re looking for a provider with complete carrier transparency, with the option to choose the exact telecom provider you want, this may be a good choice for you.

SIMOptions: Support

SIMOptions support

(Image credit: SIMOptions)

SIMOptions offers several customer support channels, including live chat, email (contact@simoptions.com), and phone (+1 6465862166). However, the quality and responsiveness of their support seem to be inconsistent.

SIMOptions claims to provide 24/7 customer service, but some reviewers have reported issues with getting timely responses or resolutions to their problems. In one case, a SIMOptions customer waited in the live chat queue for 20 minutes without receiving a response. Email support also appears to be hit-or-miss, with some customers receiving prompt replies and others being left without a resolution.

While it has a 4.3-star rating on TrustPilot, a closer inspection shows that SIMOptions has only replied to 6 out of 51 negative reviews, taking up to a week to respond. This suggests that the company is not quick to address customer complaints.

SIMOptions: Final verdict

SIMOptions is a good choice for budget-conscious travelers who prioritize wide country coverage and competitive pricing. With eSIM plans available for over 200 countries at affordable rates, it can provide significant savings compared to traditional roaming fees.

However, the inconsistent network performance and limited data allowances could be problematic for travelers who heavily rely on mobile data. Customer support is another concern, since getting a solution for your problem while on a foreign trip can be a real hit-or-miss experience.

SIMOptions: FAQs

What is SIMOptions?

Founded in 2014, SimOptions is a global marketplace specializing in offering affordable prepaid eSIMs for international travelers. It partners with leading Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) to provide eSIM plans with data, voice, and SMS.  

Is the SIMOptions marketplace legit?

Despite some negative reviews, SIMOptions is a legitimate eSIM marketplace that has been around since 2014. While user experiences have been mixed due to the nature of the reseller marketplace, SIMOptions is a genuine provider of eSIM connections for international travelers.  

Where is SIMOptions based?

SIMOptions is headquartered in Central Hong Kong, but it provides eSIM plans to travelers around 200+ countries and regions.  

Sony Xperia 1 VI’s UK pre-order offer revealed
1:11 pm |

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

Sony has announced its pre-order offer for the freshly unveiled Xperia 1 VI for UK customers. Those who pre-order the Xperia 1 VI from Sony's UK website will get a free pair of Sony WH-1000XM5 headphones worth €329/£299 and 50% off on the Xperia I IV Case purchased from Sony Store Online. The Sony Xperia 1 VI - starting at £1,299 in the UK and €1,399 in Germany - is powered by the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 SoC and comes with 12GB RAM and up to 512GB storage. It sports a 6.5" 120Hz FullHD+ LTPO OLED display and packs a 5,000 mAh battery with 30W charging. Sony Xperia 1 VI The Sony...

Laifen Wave toothbrush review: Great for a deep clean, but you’ll need nerves of steel
1:00 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Health & Fitness | Comments: Off

Laifen Wave: One-minute review

Suffice to say, Chinese brand Laifen is pretty excited to bring its latest device, the Laifen Wave, to market – especially following the success of its supersonic hairdryer, the Laifen Swift. Is it the best electric toothbrush? Not in my view; but it’s a very promising start, and for those who need frequent deep cleans, it could be everything they’ve been hoping for. 

Laifen has made some pretty bold claims about the efficacy of the Laifen Wave toothbrush, including that it “perfectly aligns with the dentist-recommended Bass brushing technique” and offers three times the power and brushing efficiency of a standard electric toothbrush. Based on my experience, that may be true – my teeth felt cleaner than ever after using the toothbrush. However, I’m not entirely convinced that this level of deep cleaning is necessary, nor healthy, on a daily basis.

The Laifen Wave offers 60-degree oscillation with 66,000 vibrations per minute, mimicking the motion of a regular non-electric toothbrush for what Laifen promises is a superior clean. You can set up three brushing profiles in the app, selecting between 10 levels of oscillation range and power, as well as vibration power. Plus, it has an average 30-day battery life, and takes only 2.5-3 hours to charge.

One thing is for certain, the Laifen Wave is a looker. It’s available in three different finishes: ABS plastic, aluminum alloy, and stainless steel. The toothbrush stands at 5.7in / 142.7mm tall, which is a little shorter than the majority of electric toothbrushes, but which makes it an excellent travel companion.

Laifen Wave review: Pricing

At the top of the handle sit three indicator lights that display the current mode selected, and just below these you’ll find the touch-sensitive power button. Towards the bottom sit an option for airplane mode and a battery indicator. 

I tested the stainless steel model, clad in a gorgeous shiny casing that certainly makes it the best-looking toothbrush I’ve ever used. Note that it does scuff easily, and is pretty slippery when wet, which could quickly result in a very scruffy-looking finish. 

The toothbrush heads are also a thing of beauty – well, as much as they can be. Elegant and slim, these heads are bespoke, although Philips Sonicare heads do fit, which is a real boon given you’ll be hard-pressed to find the Laifen Wave toothbrush heads in your local drugstore.

Out of the box, the Laifen Wave comes with three different toothbrush heads designed for different purposes: gum care, ultra-whitening and super clean. I found myself most drawn to the softer gum care brush head; but the super clean makes fantastic work of cleaning deeper into the recesses of your mouth, while the ultra-whitening brush head offers powerful cleaning to leave your grill gleaming. These can be purchased in packs of three or six directly from Laifen for $9.99 (about £8) and $16.99 (about £15) respectively. 

Laifen Wave toothbrush on mat

(Image credit: Future)

I don’t love the quality of the toothbrush heads; the bristles are great on all three heads, but they require some force to attach to the handle and can sometimes, rather inexplicably, become stuck. 

My stainless steel handle came with transparent heads instead of the white variant – which proved insightful. I noticed after not using the toothbrush for a week that a lot of condensation builds up inside the stem and inside the brush casing, which doesn’t feel particularly hygienic. 

This can happen in most toothbrush heads, but is easily rectified by removing them and shaking out any residue. However, with the Laifen Wave, not only is removing the head difficult, but it’s also supposedly watertight, meaning the water in the brush head either trickled down from the brush, or seeped in over time through the sealant. Neither bodes well for the brush design, or makes it terribly easy to prevent. 

Broadly speaking, though, I’ve been happy with the results, and I welcome the fact that the brush is customizable. 

After a super-quick and easy pairing process with its companion app, you can adjust the oscillation range and speed, as well as the vibration. You can also switch on flight mode, 30-second reminders, and even a high-frequency mode that unlocks a further 10 vibration strength settings. However, note that you need the app to really unlock most of these features. 

I did appreciate that you can set up different profiles and navigate between them by double-tapping the power button on the handle, though, as well as the ability to toggle flight mode by long-pressing the power button.

There are also some other clever features. When you pick up the toothbrush, it will turn on automatically. It will also activate its “backpack mode” when in motion for more than three minutes, which prevents battery wastage. That’s great; but some features I consider must-haves – such as pressure sensors – are missing. 

Laifen Wave toothbrush on mat

(Image credit: Future)

One thing that really ground my gears with the Laifen Wave is that, due to its oscillating head, it’s really easy to make a huge mess while brushing your teeth. I found that when I cleaned behind my lower-front teeth, the Laifen Wave flicked toothpaste and spit everywhere, meaning I was constantly cleaning up globs from all over my bathroom sink.

With the toothbrush heads being made of quite thick and robust plastic, I also learned the hard way that you really don’t want to nick your teeth while brushing. I was in physical pain for about 10 minutes one day having lost focus while brushing my teeth and catching the tip of my tooth with the back of the toothbrush head – I can’t say for sure, but I’m pretty sure I was close to chipping it. 

That alone was enough for me to think twice about recommending the Laifen Wave – which is a shame, since I think it shows a lot of promise and could be fantastic for those who struggle with gum health and plaque buildup. Right now, though, it just hasn’t been thought through quite enough.

Laifen Wave review: Specs

Should I buy?

Buy it if... 

Don't buy it if...

Also consider

How I tested the Laifen Wave

  •  I used the Laifen Wave as my main toothbrush for two months
  •  I brushed my teeth twice a day  
  •  I tried the different settings and toothbrush heads 

To test the Laifen Wave, I used it every day, twice a day, as my main toothbrush. While I settled on my personalized settings and favored brush head, I tried all of the different power settings and heads to see how effective they were in use.

I also tested all of the extra features – the smart-lifting technology, backpack mode, airplane mode and high-frequency mode – and found they all worked as described.

I’ve been reviewing lifestyle technology for two years, but like all readers, I’ve been brushing my teeth for a lot longer. I’ve used a variety of toothbrushes over the years, from budget-friendly to premium, and used this combined experience to rate the Laifen Wave.

vivo teases Y200 GT with Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 and 144Hz display, new Y200 model too
12:21 pm |

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

vivo has unveiled three phones in the Y200 series so far – the vanilla Y200, the Y200e with a processor upgrade and the Y200i with an LCD and a larger battery. Yes, “series” and, yes, “so far”. The company just shared two videos showing off two more Y200 models and while looking at them, we noticed one more. First, let’s look at the vivo Y200 or possibly “Y200 5G”. The original Y200 has 5G connectivity too, so the name doesn’t make too much sense. Anyway, the new model will have a larger battery at 6,000mAh (up from 4,800mAh) and promises 2 days of battery life. It will also support faster...

Avast One Gold review
12:18 pm |

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

Avast One Gold is a powerful security suite with a top-rated antivirus, web protection and a host of privacy extras. Top of the list is an unlimited VPN, but other welcome features include a firewall, device cleanup, tracker blocking, and a lengthy list of speed, privacy and protection tools.

Signing up gets you coverage for up to five devices, and there’s support for Windows, Mac, iOS and Android.

Avast One Gold is a very capable suite, broadly comparable to the likes of Bitdefender Premium Security or Norton 360 Deluxe. In this review we’ll look at everything it has to offer, and whether this could be the ideal security suite for you.

Avast One Gold: range

Avast One Gold is our pick of the Avast range. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Pricing

Avast One comes in four editions.

Avast One Basic is a Windows-only app with antivirus, web protection, a limited VPN and not much else.

Avast One Silver protects up to three Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices, and adds an unlimited VPN along with a scattering of other features. It’s yours for $2.99 a month ($35.88 billed annually) in year one, $6.67 a month ($79.99 billed annually) on renewal.

Avast One Gold covers up to five devices and adds many more performance, privacy and security tools . It costs $6.99 a month ($83.88 billed annually) in year one, $14.99 a month ($179.99 billed annually) on renewal.

Avast One Premium is essentially Avast One Gold with full identity theft protection thrown in, including credit report monitoring and $2 million insurance. It’s more expensive at $9.99 a month in year one (a total of $119.88), $24.99 a month ($299.99 a year) on renewal, but then it does also cover 30 devices. Could be good value if you’ve a lot of hardware to protect.

Avast One Gold is within the price range we expect for a premium security suite, but some of the top competition are a little cheaper. Bitdefender Premium Security has a full VPN and covers up to ten devices, but it’s fractionally cheaper at $79.99 in year one, $159.99 on renewal. And Norton 360 Deluxe is the clear value leader, with a full VPN and five device support for only $49.99 in year one, $119.99 on renewal.

Avast One Gold: UI 1

 Avast One’s apps have the same light and friendly interface on mobiles and desktops. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Getting started

Avast One installed easily on our test Windows laptop. The setup program ran a couple of scans to identify and remove any existing malware, and one reboot later, we were ready to go.

The Avast One interface has a colorful, friendly look, replacing dull Windows app icons and widgets with a light and airy design and a sprinkling of cartoon-like graphics (a running dog rather than a progress bar, for instance.)

The opening Avast One screen has a handy button to launch a Smart Scan, while other tiles include buttons to enable or disable the VPN, delete your browser history, clear your hard drive, optimize your running processes, and more.

An Explore button displays icons for many other features: the web shield to protect your browsing, email guardian to monitor local and webmail messages for dangerous links, a firewall, webcam protection, dark web monitoring, the software updater to find missing security patches, and more. 

Avast One Gold: UI tutorial.

 Avast One explains the basics of each feature when you select it for the first time. (Image credit: Future)

Choose an option for the first time and Avast One usually displays a simple tutorial page; a screenshot of the image with notes explaining what to do. It’s a smart way to help explain the very basics for security newbies.

Mostly, the Avast One interface works very well. It’s simple enough for beginners to use right away, yet also makes it reasonably straightforward for experts to find the options they need.

Avast One Gold: Generic AV test

(Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Antivirus Lab Test Results

Although we put every antivirus app we review through our own series of tests, we also pay close attention to results from the big antivirus testing labs.

We follow nine tests from labs including AV-Comparatives (Real-World Protection, Malware Protection, Android, Anti-Phishing, Performance), AV-Test (Windows, Android), MRG Effitas (360° Protection Testing) and SE Labs (Endpoint Security Home).

Each test has its own scoring system, making it tricky to compare performance. To address this, we use a special algorithm which (as long as an app is in at least five tests) converts the various results into a single summary score from zero to 10 representing the vendor’s overall rating.

Avast’s combined score was an excellent 9.98, putting it in first place, just ahead of Bitdefender (9.97), Avira (9.96) and F-Secure (9.96.)

Avast did this by appearing in all nine of the tests we monitor, too, the only provider to manage that, and giving us even more confidence that this is a reliable measure of Avast’s abilities.

Avast One Gold: Threat quarantined.

All the labs agree Avast delivers well above average malware protection. (Image credit: Future)

No antivirus provider excels at everything, and Avast does have one or two weaker points. Bitdefender beat it into second place for anti-phishing, for instance, and ESET and Bitdefender outperformed Avast in the last Advanced Threat Protection report (a measure of how well an antivirus can block more complex and sophisticated attacks.)

Reaching ‘only’ second place for anti-phishing isn’t exactly a problem, though, and Avast more than makes up for that with first (or equal first) places in the Real-World Protection, Malware Protection, Android (AV-Test), MRG Effitas and SE Labs reports.

Put it all together and the message is clear: whatever threat your device encounters, Avast has some of the best tools around to keep you safe.

Avast One Gold: unknown file.

Avast One runs an in-depth scan on every app it doesn’t recognize. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Tough on brand new files

Avast One automatically scans files as you open or launch them, allowing it to detect most threats before they can cause any harm. That’s good, but Avast does have one feature which could be annoying.

If you launch an app Avast hasn’t seen before, Avast One typically pauses the app and leaves you waiting for 15-60 seconds while it analyses the file for threats. During the review, we had a couple of occasions where Avast couldn’t decide whether an app was dangerous or not, so sent the file to its Threat Labs and blocked it from running until it got a verdict back (which could take a few hours.)

This can be a real hassle if, say, you’ve just downloaded a new installer which you’re 100% sure is safe. It’s also far more intrusive than many competitors. For example, if Avira doesn’t recognize a file, it generally just tells you that and asks if you’d like to run it anyway.

But, there’s no doubt Avast’s approach is more secure. If you’re the type of user who will run into this situation all the time - you’re a developer building your own projects, say - this might be so annoying that you decide to turn the feature off. But for everyone else, Avast just about earns a thumbs up for its tough security-first design.

Avast One Gold: scan types.

Scan files, folders or your whole system whenever you like. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Antivirus scanning

Avast One offers various types of on-demand scan to check everything from a single file to an entire hard drive for potential danger.

The default Smart Scan quickly checks the most commonly-infected areas for malware, identifies security vulnerabilities and even helps free up drive space by highlighting junk files that can safely be deleted.

On our test device, Smart Scan completed in around a minute, but still managed to find two relevant security settings issues (Data Execution Prevention not turned on and notifications visible on our lock screen), and noticed a couple of desktop text files stuffed with phishing links.

Avast can also scan selected files, folders or drives from Explorer (right-click and choose ‘Scan selected items for viruses’.) There’s a Deep Scan option to check your entire system, a Boot-Time Scan to look for threats before Windows boots (valuable for catching stealthy threats), and even a Custom Scan feature to define your own checks. 

Avast One Gold: schedule scan.

You can schedule scans to run automatically when you’re not around. (Image credit: Future)

Scanning speeds aren’t the best. Avast scanned 50GB+ of test executables in around 35 minutes, while Norton took 32 minutes and Avira required 26:30. Bitdefender was fractionally slower at 37 minutes on its first run, but because it only scans new or changed files by default, this dropped to 30 seconds on the second scan. Avast stayed at around 35 minutes for subsequent scans.

This shouldn’t be an issue for most users, though, because it generally isn’t necessary to run regular on-demand scans. Overall, Avast scores well on scanning for delivering several scan types, and giving you plenty of options to create scans of your own and automatically run them whenever you like.

Avast One Gold: No threat found.

(Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Password-protected files

Scanning archives presents all kinds of issues for antivirus, so we pay close attention to how each app handles these situations. Avast One scored for recognizing common archive formats and not being tricked by zip bombs (archives within archives within archives), but it’s not so great at handling password-protected files: it just ignores them. And that’s a concern.

Suppose a work colleague gives you a bunch of files to share with others, and one of those is a password-protected zip which (unknown to you) is infected with malware. You scan the folder with Avast One, it checks the files it can open, ignores the password-protected file that it can’t, and says ‘we didn’t find any viruses.’ You’ll assume that means all the files are clean, when that simply isn’t true.

Bitdefender handles this much better. If it finds a file is password-protected, Bitdefender prompts you for the password. If you don’t know what it is, you’re warned about any skipped files in the scan report. Instead of Avast’s ‘we didn’t find anything’, Bitdefender tells you ‘we didn’t find anything (but we couldn’t look here)’, a potentially very important extra detail.

This may not have much, perhaps any real-world impact on your security. Once you unzip your archive with the password, Avast One should automatically detect any threats as they’re written to your drive. But there is still scope for problems, especially if you send the archive to someone else without unpacking it yourself.

Avast One Gold: Ransomware protection.

Avast One Ransomware Protection prevents unauthorised apps changing your files unless you give permission. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Anti-ransomware

Ransomware is one of the most dangerous threats around, with Sophos’ latest ‘State of Ransomware’ report finding that 59% of organizations had experienced an attack in the last year.

We test an antivirus’ ransomware-fighting abilities by pitting the app against our own simple ransomware simulator. Avast scored well initially, detecting our simulator before it was able to run. But the bad news is once we made a small change to the simulator code, Avast didn’t recognise the file as a threat, and it was able to encrypt 3GB+ of user documents without any issues.

Although that’s not good news, Avast scores very highly when measured against genuine ransomware. MRG Effitas’ latest Ransomware tests pitted Avast against 37 ransomware samples, and it blocked every one.

It’s not just about detection. Avast One also has an extra layer of protection which prevents untrusted apps from modifying files in specific folders. This protects your desktop, Documents, Pictures, Videos and Music folders by default, and you can easily apply it to others. 

We turned this extra protective layer on for the test folder, and Avast wouldn’t allow the simulator to modify any files unless we gave permission.  That doesn’t completely solve the problem, because Avast still didn’t recognize our simulator as dangerous; it was able to keep running, and could try to carry out other compromising tasks. But this is still a useful extra feature which may protect your system from brand new ransomware threats.

Avast One Gold: block tester

Avast One blocks more phishing sites than most of the competition. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Anti-phishing

The best security apps don’t just block threats as they arrive: they prevent you ever accessing them in the first place. That’s why we’re always very interested in an app’s ability to keep you safe from phishing and other malicious websites.

The independent labs don’t pay much attention to phishing, but AV-Comparatives does have a small annual test with a handful of providers. The last report gave Avast a decent detection rate of 94%, just behind Bitdefender (96%), but outperforming ESET (92%) and Avira (88%.)

We ran a test of our own, and attempted to access 100 brand new phishing URLs on an Avast-protected system. Avast’s protection rate was very similar at 93%, but others did better; Norton reached 95%, Bitdefender 96%, and Avira led the way with a perfect 100%.

We also compared Avast’s results with Chrome, giving us a better idea of how much additional protection it offered. The results were very positive: Chrome only detected 65% of our test threats, so Avast identified an additional 28%. And in some extra good news, Chrome detected all seven of the phishing sites Avast missed, which means using Avast and Chrome together would block 100% of our sample threats.

Avast One PCmark

 Top benchmark PCMark showed Avast didn’t significantly slow down our test device. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold Performance impact

Detection rates and threat blocking stats are important, but there’s another factor to consider. The best antivirus apps keep you safe without slowing your device down, raising false alarms or otherwise interfering with your day.

AV-Comparatives’ Performance Test measures the performance impact of 16 antivirus apps on tasks including browsing websites, downloading files, and installing and launching applications. Avast had no significant impact on any area, earning the company an excellent equal third with Avira, just behind ESET and McAfee. 

We used the excellent PCMark benchmark to measure every aspect of our review laptop performance, and it delivered even better results. Although there’s only a tiny difference between the top providers, Avast One still beat Bitdefender, Norton and Avira for its minimal speed impact.

Antivirus can also slow you down by raising false alarms, making it more difficult to download or install legitimate apps. Avast isn’t quite the best around, but it has fewer than most, reaching equal third in AV-Comparatives’ False Alarm test behind Trend Micro and Bitdefender. 

Avast One Gold: Email guardian.

Email Guardian can scan both local and webmail messages for malware. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Email Guardian

Email Guardian scans your incoming and outgoing emails for dangerous attachments. Most antivirus apps do something similar, but what’s different here is Email Guardian doesn’t just protect local email service like Outlook: it can also optionally monitor webmail accounts, filtering messages in the cloud to protect you from incoming threats.

We tried adding a Gmail account, and it worked much like adding an extension to most web services: Google explained Avast was asking to access our emails, we gave permission, and that was that. Easy.

While that’s a definite protection plus, it does also require giving your email address, account details and full email access to Avast. If you want to preserve the maximum possible privacy, that might be a step too far. But if it’s not a problem for you, Email Guardian is simple to set up and works with Gmail, Outlook, AOL, Comcast, GMX, Mail.ru, Seznam, Web.de, Yahoo and Yandex accounts.

Avast One Gold: firewall

Avast One’s firewall is very short on features. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Firewall

Avast’s Firewall monitors incoming and outgoing traffic to prevent hackers accessing your device, or malware sending your personal information to the outside world.

This isn’t the traditional expert-level firewall software provided by Bitdefender or Norton, where you can fine-tune network traffic by setting up complex rules (block or allow traffic by protocol, port and more.)

Instead, Avast One generally makes its own decisions about which traffic to block. We were able to view a history of recently blocked traffic in the firewall window, but there’s no option to tweak this behavior in future, no way to say ‘please allow the connection next time.’

The firewall does allow you to choose processes which then won’t be able to access the internet. That could be useful if an app uses too much data, say, but isn’t as helpful for security. (If you don’t trust an app then you should uninstall it, not just block its web access.)

Put it all together and the firewall follows the same pattern as many Avast One features. It could be useful in a few situations, but it’s not as powerful as similar tools from the top competition. And as long as Avast still detected and blocked malicious apps in the background, you wouldn’t miss the firewall window if it wasn’t there.

Avast One Gold: VPN connected.

Avast One Secure VPN is easy to use, though a little basic. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Avast SecureLine VPN

Avast SecureLine VPN protects your identity and traffic just like any specialist VPN service, but it aims to be much easier to use. There’s no display of IP addresses or other cryptic networking details, no real complexities at all: just a switch on the main Avast One dashboard to connect to the VPN when you need it, and disconnect when you don’t.

There’s a version of the VPN available in the free Avast One Basic. This looks better than most, thanks to a generous 5GB data allowance a week, but beware. You can’t choose your location (the app automatically chooses the nearest server), and there’s no access to settings, so you can’t enable the kill switch.

Fortunately, Avast One Silver and Gold include the full and unlimited VPN. There are no data limits or settings restrictions, and you get access to Avast’s network of 59 cities across 37 countries. That might be enough for your needs (and it beats Norton VPN’s 29 countries), but Bitdefender offers 53 countries, and many specialist VPN providers have 80 countries and more.

Avast One Gold: VPN killswitch.

(Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: VPN Features

Avast’s VPN settings are a little limited. There’s no ability to choose a protocol  (the app supports WireGuard and OpenVPN, but decides the best option itself), and no split tunneling or other more advanced features.

The app does have a kill switch, and it worked reasonably well in testing. When we closed the Avast process responsible for the WireGuard connection, for instance, our internet was blocked immediately, the app notified us that it was reconnecting, and we were back online, VPN restored, in a couple of seconds.

Avast One Gold: VPN settings.

The VPNauto-connect feature looked interesting, but didn’t work reliably for us. (Image credit: Future)

An unusual auto-connect feature can automatically turn on the VPN when you access banking sites, when you’re shopping, streaming, torrenting and more. Bitdefender has something similar, and it’s potentially very useful, as it reduces the chance that you’ll forget to turn on the VPN at a sensitive site.

Unfortunately, Avast’s version just didn’t work as expected. It mis-labelled some sites, for example warning us to enable the VPN for banking when we visited the genealogy site Ancestry.com or the UK property site Rightmove. It didn’t work at all with many popular UK streaming sites, and then it simply stopped working, for no apparent reason, and wouldn’t auto-connect for any site we tried. We don’t know how common this might be, but if you can’t rely on auto-connect working whenever you need it, then the feature really isn’t much use at all.

Avast One VPN speeds varied quite a bit, but were generally very acceptable. The free version managed 70-220Mbps, for instance, more than enough for any task, and the unlimited VPN peaked at around 800Mbps.

Avast One Gold: Netflix blocked.

Avast’s VPN didn’t unblock exclusive Netflix content in any of the regions we tried. (Image credit: Future)

Unblocking results were poor. Avast couldn’t get us into Netflix in the US, UK, Australia, Canada or Japan, for instance. It also failed with BBC iPlayer, ITV and Channel 4. 

Avast did score one success in Australia, where we were able to access 9Now. But most VPNs do the same, and Avast couldn’t unblock the far better defended 10Play.

Although Avast clearly isn’t a great VPN, it delivers just-about-acceptable results on privacy at least, especially for the price you’re paying. NordVPN is our top-rated VPN, for instance, but its one-year Basic plan costs $68.85; Avast Silver only costs $35.88 in year one, and that’s the VPN, antivirus and a full security suite, too.

Avast One Gold: Webcam protection.

Webcam Protection aims to stop malicious apps secretly grabbing webcam images. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Webcam Protection

Webcam Protection prevents webcam hijacking by preventing untrusted apps from using your camera unless you give permission. Or if you rarely use your webcam, there’s a more extreme option to turn it off for everyone.

This mostly worked as expected. We ran several custom apps to grab webcam images and audio; Avast One recognised which were trusted and which weren’t, asked if the app was safe, and didn’t allow access if we clicked the ‘Block’ button.

We noticed that if we simply closed the ‘Block or Allow?’ box, though, without clicking either option, Avast allowed the app to access our device. That’s potentially unsafe if, say, the user is in a hurry and closes the box without properly reading it. We prefer this kind of tool to block apps by default, and only permit access if the user specifically clicks the Allow button.

Avast One Gold: Sensitive data shield.

(Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Sensitive Data Shield

The Sensitive Data Shield can limit access to confidential documents to specific apps or other user accounts on your PC. It works, but protection is limited to PDFs and documents in Office format, and if someone can access the device using your account then they can also access your files as usual. If you need to protect key files, save them using an encrypted storage service such as NordLocker or Microsoft OneDrive’s Personal Vault, and they’ll provide far better protection.

Avast One Gold: Threats found, many.

Avast One is great at detecting malware - but that’s just the start. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Bonus Protection Tools

Avast One’s Device Protection menu looks impressive, initially, with no less than 15 tools. This isn’t as good as you might think, because Avast has padded the list out by giving related features their own menu entry (virus and email scanning and quarantine take up four menu options, for instance.) But we’re looked at valuable tools like anti-phishing, firewall and ransomware protection already, and there are other interesting features here.

The Sandbox allows you to run untrusted apps in an isolated environment where they can’t change files, modify system settings or generally damage your system.

A sandbox can be handy for expert users who understand how they work, but they have their limits. This one allows apps to access the internet by default, for instance, so if an app steals some passwords and sends them home, the sandbox won’t help (you can turn off internet access in settings, but then some apps may not work at all.) In general, if you don’t trust an app then the answer isn’t to run it in the sandbox: it’s not to run it at all.

Avast One Gold: Network inspector.

The Network Inspector checks every network you access for security issue. (Image credit: Future)

Network Inspector is a feature which automatically scans new networks for vulnerabilities every time you connect to them. That’s good to know, but it’s difficult to usefully test this kind of feature, and we can’t be sure how effective Network Inspector might be.

Avast One’s Web Hijack Guard blocks DNS hijacking attacks, where a hacker redirects you from the banking or shopping site you need, to a malicious clone which then steals your details.

Web Hijack Guard works by routing DNS requests through an encrypted connection to Avast’s own secure DNS server. That does offer some protection, but it might conflict with VPNs, which also try to redirect your DNS. If your VPN offers DNS-based web content blocking, for instance, this won’t work if Avast grabs your DNS instead.

Avast One Gold: Password protection.

Do you store passwords in your browser? Malware may try to steal them, but Avast’s Password Protection can help. (Image credit: Future)

Finally, Avast’s Password Protection prevents apps accessing passwords stored in Chrome, Edge or Firefox, unless you give permission. We ran an app to read our Chrome passwords, and, sure enough, Avast One raised an alert. It’s a small feature, but an unusual one we rarely see elsewhere, and we’re happy it’s included here.

Avast One Gold: Bank mode.

Access banking and other sensitive sites in a secure and isolated (-ish) browser. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Bank Mode

Avast’s Bank Mode is a custom Chrome-based browser which runs in its own virtual desktop, isolated from the rest of your system. Access banking or other sensitive sites using Bank Mode, and even if malware is running on your system, it shouldn’t be able to grab screenshots, log keypresses or otherwise see what you’re doing.

Avast didn’t automatically prompt us to use Bank Mode when we visited a few banking sites, unlike Bitdefender and its similar Safepay feature. We launched it manually, and were surprised to see Bank Mode automatically install (though not activate) a host of Chrome extensions, including some from other vendors: Avira Browser Safety, Password Manager and Safe Shopping; Kaspersky Protection; Malwarebytes Browser Guard; McAfee Web Boost; even NordVPN and PureVPN Chrome extensions.

Avast One Gold: NordVPN browser extension.

(Image credit: Future)

There may have been others, too; Chrome displayed an ‘Error’ message after installing these addons, though it wasn’t clear why. This isn’t as bad as it sounds, because although these extensions were installed, they weren’t activated, they wouldn’t run any code unless you manually turned them on. Still, it seems odd to create an environment which you want to be isolated from other processes, but then fill that environment with all kinds of apps from assorted vendors. 

The core of Bank Mode works reasonably well. We launched it with a click, and browsed as usual. A commercial keylogger (and our own custom logger) weren’t able to record our keypresses, and a screenshot tool wasn’t able to take images of Bank Mode activity. 

Overall, we suspect most users won’t see enough benefit from the likes of Bank Mode or Safepay to justify the hassle of using a separate secure browser. If you feel you need that extra protection, we think Bitdefender’s Safepay is a little, well, safer. But Avast One’s Bank Mode is more convenient to use, and adds some useful extra layers of protection. 

Avast One Gold: Clear browsing history.

Clear all your browser histories with one click. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: More Privacy Tools

Avast One includes a number of smaller features which aim to protect your privacy online.

Tracking Prevention randomises your device fingerprint, preventing sites tracking you with browser fingerprinting. It doesn’t need any configuration: just install Avast One Gold and it goes to work right away. Avast warns that the technology might cause issues with some websites, though, and there’s no way to add those as exceptions. If there are problems, all you can do is turn Tracking Prevention off entirely.

Clear Browsing Data is a one-stop tool which allows you to delete all your browser histories with one click. It displayed the total space taken by the least important Chrome, Firefox and Edge data on our review PC, and deleted all of it when we clicked ‘Remove.’

Sensible default settings mean Clear Browsing Data deletes tracking cookies and your browser cache, but not regular cookies or your browser history. That’s good to see, and means you’ll stay logged into most websites when the wiping is complete. But there are plenty of free cleanup tools around which do a lot more, and even Avast’s CCleaner includes many extra cleaning tools and configuration options.

Private Mode improves your browsing privacy by connecting to the VPN, enabling tracking protection and opening your browser in Incognito mode. This might make you a little safer, but it took us four clicks to open from Avast’s dashboard: in real world use, we would probably just enable the VPN and private browsing when we needed it, in the normal way.

Avast One Gold: Dark web monitoring.

(Image credit: Future)

Dark Web Monitoring checks your email address to see if it’s been included in a data breach, or - if you provide your email to create an Avast account - regularly monitors the address and raises an alert if it appears in a new breach.

While this can be interesting, most of the breaches for our email address were ancient history, with some ten or more years old. You can get much the same information for free at Have I Been Pwned

Avast One Gold: Privacy advisor.

Simple tutorials explain how to optimize your privacy with WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram and more. (Image credit: Future)

The Privacy Advisor sounds more promising, with details on how to optimize privacy settings for Google, Facebook, Twitter/ X, Amazon, Instagram, Linkedin and YouTube, as well as a handful of Android and iOS apps (WhatsApp, YouTube, Instagram, Tiktok, Messenger.)

Privacy Advisor can’t automate these changes, unfortunately. Instead it displays step-by-step tutorials on how to find whatever settings you might want to tweak. 

The guides are well presented, with screenshots and occasional buttons to open the right settings page. But some of the advice didn’t match what we saw on our accounts - settings text had changed, maybe a setting was in a different place - and we had to do a little more work to hunt down the right option.

Avast One Gold: Driver updated.

Avast One has a handful of tools which might be able to speed up your device. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Performance Tools

Early Windows antivirus apps often hit PC performance, reducing device speeds to a crawl. It’s very different these days - developers are smarter, hardware is much faster - but Avast and others still include speedup features to try and compensate for any slowdown.

Driver Updater finds and installs missing device driver updates. In theory this could be a good idea, optimizing performance and highlighting missing security patches, but there are dangers. If Avast One makes a single error in the update process, it could break your PC to the point that it won’t even boot. Avast One has no built-in way to undo driver changes, either, so you’re left to rely on System Restore or other Windows recovery options.

Driver Updater does still have some value. If nothing else, just seeing that, say, your webcam has a really outdated driver could be helpful if it’s misbehaving. But it’s best to use it, well, cautiously.

Avast One Gold: PC speedup.

(Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: PC Speedup

Avast’s PC Speedup is a clever tool which optimizes PC performance by reducing the number of processes running in the background. The less resources these processes use, the more your main apps will get.

We ran PC Speedup, and it listed 35 processes that were running in the background of our review laptop, along with an estimate of their impact on performance. Clicking a ‘Details’ link displayed brief details on what the process does, and an Optimise button prevented the process using resources until we opened it.

Using PC Speedup properly requires a lot of work. In our case, we would have to work through all 35 processes, read the Details page, maybe Google for the process, try to decide if it was suitable for optimisation, or not. Many of our 35 processes were important - software updaters, our backup service - and optimising the wrong process could cause all kinds of unexpected problems. (Including security issues, if we stopped getting updates.)

PC Speedup is an interesting feature which could make a real performance difference to some systems. But, it’s not for non-technical types, and you’ll need plenty of time and PC knowledge to use the tool safely.

Avast One Gold: disk cleaner.

Disk Cleaner can free up huge amounts of storage space, but beware - there’s sometimes a catch. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Disk Cleaner

As the name suggests, Disk Cleaner helps free up storage space by identifying junk files that can safely be deleted.

The tool told us it could recover a huge 34.1GB, but that’s largely because it included 12GB+ of old Restore Points, there was 14GB of data in the Recycle Bin, and it suggested clearing out the Downloads folder.

In theory you can view Disk Cleaner’s chosen files and decide whether to delete them or not, but poor design makes this tricky. Most similar tools clearly identify the applications they’re cleaning, so you can easily choose to wipe Chrome’s history, Google Earth’s cache, and so on. But Avast displays generic titles like ‘Program Backup Files’, ‘Program Cache Files’ and ‘Program Log Files’, for instance. If you don’t want to delete Google Earth files, you must choose each section in turn and scroll through potentially thousands of files to find what you need.

We think Avira Prime’s Power Cleaner is a much better tool. It did a much better job of cleaning up leftover Windows and application junk, finding 31.7GB it could delete (and that didn’t include System Restore points), and it’s much easier to decide what to keep and what to dump.

Avast One Gold: For Mac.

Avast One for Mac has much the same appealing interface as Windows (but with a few less features. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Avast One for Mac

We were impressed by Avast One’s antivirus performance on Windows, but Mac users get even better protection: both AV-Comparatives and AV-Test gave Avast 100% for protection in their last Mac tests.

The app looks great, with the same clean and friendly interface as the Windows edition. Tap the Explore icon on the left and everything you need is just a click or two away.

We found the Avast app easy to use, and it generally performed well in our tests. One exception was the VPN’s auto-connect feature, which proved just as flaky as on Windows. When we turned it on for streaming, for instance, it worked initially for Netflix, but did nothing when we tried the site later, and entirely ignored BBC iPlayer and Disney Plus. Not an option we can recommend.

Avast One for Mac is a little short on features. It has the core antivirus, ransomware, email and web protection, along with the unlimited VPN and dark web monitoring. But the firewall, sandbox, Bank Mode, webcam protection and other Windows features haven’t made it to the Mac. And some tools are less powerful than their Windows cousins (there’s no kill switch with the Mac VPN.)

Overall, Avast One for Mac scores for its excellent malware protection and unlimited VPN. If you don’t need the VPN, though, Avast One Free might be enough for you. And if it’s power you’re after, Norton 360 for Mac has a firewall, webcam protection, cloud backup and even parental controls. (Oh, and it’s cheaper, too.)

Avast One Gold: For Android.

Antivirus, VPN and extra privacy protection for your Android device. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Avast One for Android

Avast One for Android may not have all the features we found on Windows, but it includes the protection essentials, and throws in one or two mobile-friendly extras for good measure.

Avast’s Android malware protection is accurate and reliable, scoring 100% for both well-known and zero day threats in AV-Test’s last report, for instance. That puts it equal first in the protection charts along with Norton, Bitdefender and Trend Micro, and fractionally ahead of Avira, F-Secure and McAfee.

As with Avast One on the desktop, there’s a VPN, too. Free users can’t choose their location and are limited to 5GB data a week (though that’s still generous for a free VPN), but signing up for Avast One Gold drops the restrictions and sees you able to use the service as much as you like.

The app includes Avast One’s capable web, anti-phishing and email protection, and has a handful of the features we’ve discussed above: data breaching monitoring alerts you if your email appears on the dark web, for instance, while Privacy Insights explains how to secure various apps and web accounts, and Performance Center helps you find and delete junk files.

There are one or two features you won’t find on Windows. App Lock allows you to lock individual apps with a PIN, password or fingerprint; App Insights shows you which apps use what permissions, and Photo Vault can prevent others viewing certain photos unless they have the PIN.

You won’t be overwhelmed with Avast One’s Android abilities, but it does a solid job of protecting your device

Avast One Gold: For iOS.

We like the VPN and web protection, but otherwise Avast’s iOS app doesn’t offer much. (Image credit: Future)

Avast One Gold: Avast One for iOS

Avast One’s iOS edition is the most basic in the range, as we see with most security suites. But there’s still worthwhile protection from malicious links in your browser and emails, while the unlimited VPN keeps your internet traffic safe from snoopers.

A handful of extras include dark web monitoring to warn you if your details appear in a data breach, and an option to keep photos hidden in an encrypted folder that only you can access. These work as advertised, but they’re not outstanding in any way, and there are better apps and services you can use for free.

The app looks good and has the same visual style as the rest of the range, though with some odd design differences. VPN locations on iOS are grouped by continent, for instance; on Windows, they’re in one big alphabetically-sorted list; and on Android, they’re a jumbled mess. That might be confusing if you’re using Avast One on several platforms, and it’s surely not that difficult to fix. If you generally just hit ‘On’ to access your nearest server then you may never notice, though, and in general the app is easy to use.

Overall, Avast One for iOS is a decent security app, but it’s exactly overflowing with features. If you don’t need the unlimited VPN, the free Avast One Basic may be enough. There’s no Email Guardian to highlight malicious links in your emails, but you get the same browsing protection, and although the free VPN doesn’t allow changing location, its 5GB a week data allowance is far more generous than most.

Avast One Gold: Final verdict

Avast One Gold has some of the best malware protection around and a stack of protection, privacy and performance features, but it also has a couple of problems. If your needs are simple, Avast One Basic gives you very similar protection for free; and if you’re after power, Bitdefender and Norton have suites with excellent antivirus, full VPNs and even more security features to explore. Avast One is still worth a look, but test the free version before you buy. 

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