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Samsung is working on two new pairs of more affordable TWS earbuds
5:19 am | June 12, 2025

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

Samsung launched the Galaxy Buds FE in 2023 as its most affordable pair of TWS earbuds, and we've recently heard that they would be succeeded by the Galaxy Buds Core that are currently in development. Today the existence of the Galaxy Buds Core has been confirmed through a deep dive into the code of the latest Galaxy Buds Controller app for Wear OS. But, intriguingly, they're not the only affordable earbuds Samsung has in the pipeline. The Galaxy Buds3 FE are also coming, and so the Korean company's roster of earbuds will soon double in size. The Buds3 and Buds3 Pro will definitely...

ZTE Blade A56 silently listed
3:41 am |

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

ZTE is expanding its Blade series portfolio as we came across a listing for a new budget device from the brand – the Blade A56. This one comes after the recently announced Blade A76 and features entry-level specs. Blade A56 features a 6.75-inch IPS LCD with HD+ resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. The panel sports a waterdrop notch for its 8MP front-facing camera. There’s a Unisoc T7200 (aka T606) chipset at the helm paired with 4GB RAM and 64GB internal storage, which is expandable via the microSD card slot. The phone features a 13MP main shooter and two 0.08MP auxiliary sensors....

ZTE Blade A56 silently listed
3:41 am |

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

ZTE is expanding its Blade series portfolio as we came across a listing for a new budget device from the brand – the Blade A56. This one comes after the recently announced Blade A76 and features entry-level specs. Blade A56 features a 6.75-inch IPS LCD with HD+ resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. The panel sports a waterdrop notch for its 8MP front-facing camera. There’s a Unisoc T7200 (aka T606) chipset at the helm paired with 4GB RAM and 64GB internal storage, which is expandable via the microSD card slot. The phone features a 13MP main shooter and two 0.08MP auxiliary sensors....

Huawei FreeBuds 6 now come in a blinged up new hue
2:02 am |

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

Huawei launched the FreeBuds 6 in March in white, black, and purple, and today the brand has added a fourth color, the most blinged up one yet: rose gold. These are the exact same buds as before, nothing else has changed, but you can now have them in rose gold too. They're priced at CNY 999 ($139) usually, but right now all colors are discounted to CNY 949 ($132) in Huawei's official online store. Huawei FreeBuds 6 in rose gold The FreeBuds 6 have dual drivers which promise 14 Hz bass and 48 KHz highs, and they last for 5.5 h on one charge (36h if you count the case in) with...

Samsung showcases a VR headset screen with 20,000 nits brightness along with other display tech
12:31 am |

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

As Samsung is preparing to launch its first mixed-reality headset, dubbed Project Moohan, the Korean tech giant showcased a cutting-edge OLEDoS panel for such headsets, capable of reaching 20,000 nits of brightness. OLEDoS panels are the same as standard OLED screens, but instead of using a glass or plastic substrate for the backplane, they use silicon, which allows higher brightness, resolution and pixel density. It's mostly used on small screens, and Samsung paired it with a Micro Lens Array to enhance brightness and viewing angles further. However, we don't know if Samsung...

Samsung showcases a VR headset screen with 20,000 nits brightness along with other display tech
12:31 am |

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

As Samsung is preparing to launch its first mixed-reality headset, dubbed Project Moohan, the Korean tech giant showcased a cutting-edge OLEDoS panel for such headsets, capable of reaching 20,000 nits of brightness. OLEDoS panels are the same as standard OLED screens, but instead of using a glass or plastic substrate for the backplane, they use silicon, which allows higher brightness, resolution and pixel density. It's mostly used on small screens, and Samsung paired it with a Micro Lens Array to enhance brightness and viewing angles further. However, we don't know if Samsung...

iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max Geekbench scores tipped
11:01 pm | June 11, 2025

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

Apple's upcoming iPhone 17 series is due to be made official in September, and ahead of that today we have yet another rumor claiming that all four devices will have high refresh rate screens. That said, don't expect the vanilla iPhone 17's panel to be on par with those of the Pros - what's recently been rumored is that it won't be variable refresh rate since it won't get an LTPO OLED panel. Aside from this, the leaker who goes by Digital Chat Station on Weibo has also presented us with the performance figures for the upcoming A19 Pro chip which will be powering the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro...

Google Pixel 10 series might finally copy this long-standing Apple feature
9:41 pm |

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

Google's expected to unveil the Pixel 10 series on August 20, and based on the leaks we've seen so far, these will look almost identical to their predecessors from 2024. But the company is going to pack them with some very interesting updates on the inside - the Tensor G5 chipset will be the first one made by TSMC and not Samsung, which should improve performance and battery life; gimbal-like camera stabilization seems to be in too. And also magnets. A new report claims the Pixel 10 devices will support Qi 2.2 wireless charging with magnets built into the phones themselves, just like Apple...

I was blown away by this laptop cooling pad’s arctic cooling – but it still can’t quite freeze out the competition
9:20 pm |

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

Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad: review

The Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad is a relatively high-end option for keeping your gaming or productivity laptop cool. At $89.99 / £116.26 (around AU$140), it certainly costs a pretty penny; but in return you get a cooling pad with a giant 4.72-inch turbo fan capable of spinning at up to a ludicrous 3,500rpm.

Unlike more shy and retiring options, the Llano V10 isn’t scared to announce its presence – in fact, it’s a little bit of a loudmouth. To benchmark this laptop cooling pad, I ran a 3DMark stress test on our Acer Predator Helios 300 testing laptop with an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 GPU testing laptop, while running the Llano V10 at max power for 15 minutes. Using a sound level meter, I measured the noise it was kicking out 10 minutes into the test; it registered 69dB from a few inches away, and 57.5dB at my head height. This makes the Llano the second-noisiest cooling pad I’ve tested, right after the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad, which clocked 79dB and 64dB respectively.

But the one thing you can count on from this little blowhard is that it blows – hard. I measured our gaming laptop’s peak temperature before benchmarking, and again at the conclusion of the 15-minute stress test. With the Llano running at max, its temperature rose from 81.5ºF (27.5ºC) to 103ºF (39.5ºC), a rise of just 21.5ºF (12ºC). This performance is right up there with the best cooling pads, with the only one I’ve tested that could beat it being the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad. So, you’re getting pretty icy cooling here.

A closeup of the side of the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad, showing off its RGB lighting.

(Image credit: Future)

When it comes to design, the Llano V10 looks decent enough, treading just on the right side of cyberpunk styling without looking too conspicuously edgy or brutalist. The polygonal RGB lighting bars along the sides and back are tastefully done, allowing you to choose between a range of shifting hues. Unlike some laptop cooling pads, it isn't available in an array of colors; but the black offered looks just fine to my eyes.

The Llano also feels pretty ergonomic in use. It offers only a single height setting, which may not suit everyone, but I did find the 10-degree angle at which it held my laptop pretty comfortable for long-term use. However, its build does feel a little more insubstantial than products such as the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad – the V10's materials and buttons feel a little more plasticky and clicky than I’d like.

Probably the biggest question when it comes to the $89.99 / £116.26 (around AU$140) Llano V10 is down to value. On the one hand, you’re absolutely getting the cooling you’re paying for – the fact that it prevented our laptop from warming more than 21.5ºF (12ºC) is the second-best result from any laptop cooler I’ve tested.

The only issue is the best result: the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad trimmed that warming back to 8ºC and yet costs only $119.99 / £129.99 (around AU$188.33), which isn't much more. Plus, it's often available for even less – for example, costing $95.99 at the time of writing in the US. That slightly weakens the Llano V10’s value in comparison.

The Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad at a 3/4s angle with a closed ASUS gaming laptop on top of it in front of a pink background.

(Image credit: Future)

Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad review: price & availability

  • Launched on May 17, 2024
  • List price of $89.99 / £116.26 (around AU$140)

Having launched on May 17, 2024, the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad is available now. It can be purchased from Amazon at a list price of $89.99 / £116.26 (around AU$140). While that’s at the higher end of the market, it's still its lowest ever price in the UK, and only a few dollars off the $87.99 it briefly dropped down to in May 2025. As such, it represents a decent deal.

Unfortunately, though, the fact that this is a premium product means it has quite a few rivals nipping at its heels. From one end of the market, the budget-priced $19.99 / £20.99 / AU$66.91 Liangstar Laptop Cooling Pad offered disproportionately frosty cooling for its mild price, seeing our test laptop rise by 27.5ºF (15.3ºC). Conversely, if you catch it on sale then you can pick up the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad from as little as $95.99 / £129.99 – it stopped our testing rig from warming any more than 14.5ºF (8ºC), which is a substantial performance boost for comparatively little extra spend.

A closeup of the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad's controls, showing a lighting mode switch, color switch, on/off switch, fan speeds switches and an LCD panel showing its 900rpm fan speed.

(Image credit: Future)

Should I buy the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad?

Buy it if…

You want exceptional cooling
This is one of the most chill laptop cooling pads I’ve ever had my hands on. It stopped our laptop from warming any more than 21.5ºF (12ºC) during our stress test, which is seriously impressive.

You want an attractive, comfortable cooling pad
Sitting at an ergonomic 10-degree angle, the Llano V10 is comfortable to use over long stretches of time. And its restrained use of RGB lighting means its looks aren’t too in your face, either.

Don’t buy it if…

You want the best cooling for your cash
With the Liangstar offering only marginally weaker cooling for much less money, and the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad offering superior cooling for not much more, the V10 probably isn’t the best value option out there.

You hate noise
The Llano V10 isn’t the loudest laptop cooling pad I’ve ever tested, but it isn't far off. Both the pad and our testing laptop registered at a combined 69dB during tests, which is nearly as loud as highway traffic, according to the Center for Hearing and Communication.

A closeup of the bottom-right corner of the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad in front of a pink background.

(Image credit: Future)

Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad review: also consider

Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad
The higher-end stablemate of the V10, the Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad offers the best cooling performance I’ve encountered in tests so far. Even during our 3DMark stress test, this cooling pad kept our laptop's temperature from rising any more than 14.5ºF (8ºC), which is seriously arctic chilling. That’s a pretty impressive step up from the V10, given its list price is just $30 / £13.73 (around AU$48.33) higher. Read our full Llano RGB Laptop Cooling Pad review.

Liangstar Laptop Cooling Pad
If you can’t stretch to premium prices, the Liangstar Laptop Cooling Pad is your best shot for glacial cooling. During tests, it kept our laptop from rising by more than 27.5ºF (15.3ºC) – that’s pretty decent cooling in its own right. But it’s rendered far more impressive when you factor in its list price, which at just $18.99 / £23.59 / AU$63.33, means it costs less than a quarter of the price of the V10. Read our full Liangstar Laptop Cooling Pad review.

The Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad at a 3/4s angle with an open ASUS gaming laptop on top of it in front of a pink background.

(Image credit: Future)

How I tested the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad

  • Tested over the course of multiple days
  • Measured its cooling while running a stress test on our testing laptop
  • Recorded the combined volume of the cooling pad and laptop’s fans

I tested the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad over the course of several days, using the standard TechRadar testing process I designed. First, I recorded the baseline temperature of our Acer Predator Helios 300 with an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 testing laptop using a thermal camera. Then I ran a 3DMark stress test on the laptop for 15 minutes while setting the cooling pad to its highest setting, recording the laptop’s temperature again at the end of the test to measure the impact the cooling pad had on the laptop's warming.

In addition, I measured the peak volume of the laptop and cooling pad to assess how much noise they kicked out. When the stress test had been in progress for 10 minutes, I checked the volume of the combined fan noise using a sound level meter, both from a few inches away and at my head height (21 inches from the surface of the laptop).

I also tested how the Llano V10 Gaming Laptop Cooling Pad felt in use, while working and playing games, to assess its overall build quality and ergonomics. In terms of additional experience, I’ve been using a gaming laptop and using creative workflows for decades, meaning I’m very familiar with the struggle of keeping a laptop cool.

Motorola Razr 2025/Razr 60 review
8:47 pm |

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

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