Samsung Galaxy S25 review: More powerful, but more of the same

Over a year since it dipped into generative artificial intelligence, Samsung’s Galaxy S-series phones are now the vanguard for its gen-AI features. This year, we’re getting even deeper hooks into Google’s Gemini AI assistant and more built-in software tricks than ever before. At the same time, however, the Galaxy S25 arrives with marginal hardware upgrades over last year’s S24.

While there’s a case of “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” you’ll need to stare hard at the spec sheets to spot the differences between this year’s phone and the 2024 model. With the Galaxy S25, there’s a triple-camera system, a 6.2-inch Full HD+ screen and support for the ever-improving Galaxy AI, which the company seems to be prioritizing this year — even if it isn’t quite enough to carry an entirely new device.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

Barring a powerful new chip, the S25 is a massive serving of deja vu from a hardware perspective. You could revisit last year’s S24 review to get the gist.

Samsung decided thinner is the new direction this time around. Galaxy S25 Edge aside, this year’s range has been slimmed down. I think the S25 is tangibly thinner – but that’s because I was able to compare it with a Galaxy S24 side-by-side. It’s less of a selling point when measuring a change of 0.4 millimeters.

After several years of carrying around and testing phones with screens over 6.5 inches, having the S25 with me is refreshing. Even if the 6.2-inch screen is a little small for extensive Netflix or YouTube watching, like the 6.3-inch Pixel 9 Pro, it remains plenty big for pretty much everything else. The 2X AMOLED screen tops out at 2,600 nits, which is plenty bright enough, with variable refresh rates that top out at 120Hz.

I received the Silver Shadow S25 with a frosted sheen, which I love. It’s not the most eye-catching option, however. I think the rich Navy blue is my pick. But who are we kidding? Most of us throw our phones into cases – and I’ll do the same once my case gets here.

Oddly enough, one of the upgrades with the S25 involves adding a case: support for faster Qi2 charging (and magnetic latching) is only possible through compatible cases. Those cases, however, weren’t available for this review. My colleague Sam Rutherford explains it all here; but at least there’s some compatibility, which was lacking in last year’s Galaxy phones.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

Samsung makes some of the best smartphones for photography, which is lucky because the S25’s camera sensors appear identical to last year’s. Which themselves are the same as the year before. Hmm.

As a refresher, that includes a 50-megapixel primary sensor, a 12MP ultra-wide shooter and a 10MP 3x telephoto camera with a front-facing 12MP camera. if you’re looking for 5x zoom and high-res sensors, you should check out the Galaxy S25 Ultra (or the Pixel 9 Pro) — but the setup on the base S25 still works well, despite the aging sensors.

I was pleasantly surprised with the S25’s sheer consistency. Most of my photos were crisp and objects were in focus, although I preferred the iPhone 16’s results in darker conditions. I found that the Galaxy S25 tends to process images differently between the telephoto and primary sensor, with some night-time shots coming out a bit amber-hued.

Samsung’s claims that the new Snapdragon 8 Elite would help low-light performance are also accurate. The company says that with the chip’s power, the S25 series can better analyze noise, even detecting moving and static objects and processing them differently. Samsung’s computational photography has also improved when it comes to difficult shooting conditions. Digital zoom, at 10x, seems crisper and offers more usable photos than its predecessors.

If you’re willing to dip into a separate camera app, Samsung’s Expert RAW features another new option: virtual aperture. I’ve struggled to discern a tangible difference while shooting with the S25. It appears to be a more advanced version of Portrait mode, without requiring the phone to identify a person or subject to apply a soft bokeh to the background. The effect is moderately successful, but demands a good level of light. I found it struggled to apply a virtual aperture effect in dark environments.

Unfortunately, the feature is hidden away in the experimental section of Samsung’s Expert RAW camera app, which needs to be downloaded separately. This camera app is for power users who demand manual controls, and it’s great that it’s available. However, lots of (maybe most) prospective S25 buyers won’t need it, or even know it exists

Another under-the-hood improvement is within S25’s gallery, where the search feature has improved categorization and makes it generally easier to find what you’re looking for. As I typed, it’d suggest WhatsApp images, locations and more. Samsung says it’s added 2.7 times more keywords, which is delightfully specific.

While photography is still similar, spec-wise, on the S25, Samsung has substantially improved video for more seasoned cinematographers. This year’s phones will also capture video in HDR by default, while a new Galaxy Log mode means you can capture log video for improved dynamic range. It’ll also mean you can apply more accurate color grading if you like to edit videos and get in deep. Video is also recorded in 10-bit color, offering more latitude for editors. Still, like I said, this is for folks already neck-deep in using LUTs, with a compatible editing app at the ready.

With Audio Eraser. Samsung has caught up with Apple and Google. This is its own post-processing feature for recording video in louder environments. It taps into AI to nix specific environmental noises, like wind, water and traffic. The effect isn’t quite as impressive in real life as during Samsung’s S25 launch keynote, however.

When faced with the erratic street traffic noise, Audio Eraser’s automatic setting compressed the audio pretty severely, leaving my voice sounding a little gurgly and crunchy. It’s similar to audio with noise cancellation on Google Meet and WhatsApp voice notes. I was definitely more audible – but it wasn’t easy listening.

The upgrades are welcome, but given the iPhone 16’s Camera Control button and the Pixel 9’s latest software tricks like Add Me, Samsung’s cameras have had a weaker showing than the competition.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

Software additions don’t stop at the camera app. There’s a scattering of new features across the board with the S25. The most immediately noticeable update is more of a duo: Now Bar and Now Brief. The Now Bar is a new lockscreen tile — part contextual info panel and part notification banner. With rolling Google Maps navigation instructions and media playing functions, we’ve seen many of these ideas on the iPhone’s Dynamic Island. Samsung’s version is more limited, at least for now.

Embarrassingly, only eight apps (or features) can appear on the Now Bar, including the clock, sports notifications from Google and a voice recorder. It’s underwhelming. If third-party app makers (or more Google apps) can make their way into the Bar, it could be more helpful, but as it is, it’s barely more than a lock-screen widget.

The Now Brief, similarly, could use a little more meat. I hate to make another Apple comparison, but it’s a more accessible version of the iPhone’s summaries generated in Notifications. The Now Brief populates with relevant notifications, weather summaries and even traffic guidance, all of which is possibly most valuable in the mornings. It will also generate daily summaries accessible from a widget on the S25’s home screen. I’ll be strapping on a Galaxy Watch to see how these interact with fitness goals and wellness, so stay tuned for more insight here.

(Sidenote: Google Discover, a swipe-left-from-home screen also offers a similar stream of news, notifications and other smartphone info. It has been around for years.)

Changes elsewhere seem more like rebranded features. AI Select (once called Smart Select) resides in the pull-out Edge Panel (and the screenshot toolbar) and will offer up suggested actions once you select or circle something onscreen. It can offer clever suggestions when it contextually detects an event to add to your calendar or something that needs translating. I’m not sure AI Select is noticeably better than Smart Select, but it’s at least on by default. You had to enable the former in Settings for it to appear in the Edge Panel. While it’s not completely straightforward, AI Select does work well as a shortcut, suggesting translation with foreign languages or offering to pull dates into your calendar with a tap.

This ties into Gemini AI upgrades, which appear first on the S25 series but will be coming to other Android phones that can run Gemini AI. With a long press of a button, your voice commands to Gemini can pull in information and then apply them to make a reminder, plan a route or send details through text message to a friend, or even a WhatsApp message. I’m looking forward to Android adding further third-party apps and services, but I’ve been waiting for more effortless uses for AI assistants. This is a step in that direction.

I’m also not entirely writing off the Now Brief. It could improve over time, especially with Samsung’s Personal Data Engine, which will attempt to join the dots between your smartphone interactions. As I finished this review, the Now Brief began offering audio highlights from The Guardian, even though I hadn’t yet installed the news organization’s app. However, Galaxy AI figured it out, it was the right choice: I don’t read the Daily Mail Online. I wish Google and Apple News would work that out without me having to actively block news sources.

Has Samsung solved our smartphone battery life woes? The Galaxy S25 clocked in at over 28 hours of video playback. That’s almost four hours more than last year’s S24, and given the hardware parity with the S25, it’s a testament to the processor efficiency upgrades this year. With more typical use, I was recharging the phone every two days. That’s not how often I usually have to charge smartphones during reviews — I’m very impressed.

With the 3nm Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, those gains aren’t just in efficiency. The CPU multi-core performance hit 8,950 (up from 7,049 on the S24), while GPU scored 19,158, up from 15,082 last year. Not that there was that much need for such a leap.

Once again, the Galaxy S25 is fast and handled everything I threw at it effortlessly. However, back-to-back generative AI requests and shooting and uploading 4K video made the S25 heat up – it lacks the expanded vapor chamber that Samsung added to the S25 Ultra.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

With the Galaxy S25, never has a Galaxy S series seemed more iterative. Fortunately, Samsung’s premium smartphones are in a commanding position, so even with a screen (an cameras) that are now two years old, the Galaxy S25 isn’t a bad smartphone. In fact, it’s a very good one.

I described the S25’s cameras as consistent and I think that applies to the entire phone. The screen is bright, smooth and rich, the battery life is, frankly, incredible, while both performance scores and my experience with it prove this is a powerful flagship phone.

I love the streamlined Gemini AI capabilities, which can take a voice command and easily turn it into a calendar entry, reminder and even plan my route. Even Galaxy AI diversions like the Portrait Studio offered more refined (and consistent) 3D cartoons and sketches of my portrait photos. I’m not sure Samsung’s features would warrant an AI subscription — I doubt many would pay for them as they stand.

And that brings me to a bigger point: Besides a powerful new chip and AI tricks, why isn’t the S25 cheaper? The Galaxy S25 is priced at $799 at launch, the same as the S24 and even the S23. The comparison you have to make isn’t only with the latest iPhone, but also cheaper Android phones, like the $499 Pixel 8a. Or, unfortunately, the year-old Galaxy S24. Unless you’re desperate for a bump in processing power and battery life, it would be wise to see how heavily last year’s models get discounted in the coming months.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/samsung-galaxy-s25-review-170040665.html?src=rss

Samsung Galaxy S25 review: More powerful, but more of the same

Over a year since it dipped into generative artificial intelligence, Samsung’s Galaxy S-series phones are now the vanguard for its gen-AI features. This year, we’re getting even deeper hooks into Google’s Gemini AI assistant and more built-in software tricks than ever before. At the same time, however, the Galaxy S25 arrives with marginal hardware upgrades over last year’s S24.

While there’s a case of “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” you’ll need to stare hard at the spec sheets to spot the differences between this year’s phone and the 2024 model. With the Galaxy S25, there’s a triple-camera system, a 6.2-inch Full HD+ screen and support for the ever-improving Galaxy AI, which the company seems to be prioritizing this year — even if it isn’t quite enough to carry an entirely new device.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

Barring a powerful new chip, the S25 is a massive serving of deja vu from a hardware perspective. You could revisit last year’s S24 review to get the gist.

Samsung decided thinner is the new direction this time around. Galaxy S25 Edge aside, this year’s range has been slimmed down. I think the S25 is tangibly thinner – but that’s because I was able to compare it with a Galaxy S24 side-by-side. It’s less of a selling point when measuring a change of 0.4 millimeters.

After several years of carrying around and testing phones with screens over 6.5 inches, having the S25 with me is refreshing. Even if the 6.2-inch screen is a little small for extensive Netflix or YouTube watching, like the 6.3-inch Pixel 9 Pro, it remains plenty big for pretty much everything else. The 2X AMOLED screen tops out at 2,600 nits, which is plenty bright enough, with variable refresh rates that top out at 120Hz.

I received the Silver Shadow S25 with a frosted sheen, which I love. It’s not the most eye-catching option, however. I think the rich Navy blue is my pick. But who are we kidding? Most of us throw our phones into cases – and I’ll do the same once my case gets here.

Oddly enough, one of the upgrades with the S25 involves adding a case: support for faster Qi2 charging (and magnetic latching) is only possible through compatible cases. Those cases, however, weren’t available for this review. My colleague Sam Rutherford explains it all here; but at least there’s some compatibility, which was lacking in last year’s Galaxy phones.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

Samsung makes some of the best smartphones for photography, which is lucky because the S25’s camera sensors appear identical to last year’s. Which themselves are the same as the year before. Hmm.

As a refresher, that includes a 50-megapixel primary sensor, a 12MP ultra-wide shooter and a 10MP 3x telephoto camera with a front-facing 12MP camera. if you’re looking for 5x zoom and high-res sensors, you should check out the Galaxy S25 Ultra (or the Pixel 9 Pro) — but the setup on the base S25 still works well, despite the aging sensors.

I was pleasantly surprised with the S25’s sheer consistency. Most of my photos were crisp and objects were in focus, although I preferred the iPhone 16’s results in darker conditions. I found that the Galaxy S25 tends to process images differently between the telephoto and primary sensor, with some night-time shots coming out a bit amber-hued.

Samsung’s claims that the new Snapdragon 8 Elite would help low-light performance are also accurate. The company says that with the chip’s power, the S25 series can better analyze noise, even detecting moving and static objects and processing them differently. Samsung’s computational photography has also improved when it comes to difficult shooting conditions. Digital zoom, at 10x, seems crisper and offers more usable photos than its predecessors.

If you’re willing to dip into a separate camera app, Samsung’s Expert RAW features another new option: virtual aperture. I’ve struggled to discern a tangible difference while shooting with the S25. It appears to be a more advanced version of Portrait mode, without requiring the phone to identify a person or subject to apply a soft bokeh to the background. The effect is moderately successful, but demands a good level of light. I found it struggled to apply a virtual aperture effect in dark environments.

Unfortunately, the feature is hidden away in the experimental section of Samsung’s Expert RAW camera app, which needs to be downloaded separately. This camera app is for power users who demand manual controls, and it’s great that it’s available. However, lots of (maybe most) prospective S25 buyers won’t need it, or even know it exists

Another under-the-hood improvement is within S25’s gallery, where the search feature has improved categorization and makes it generally easier to find what you’re looking for. As I typed, it’d suggest WhatsApp images, locations and more. Samsung says it’s added 2.7 times more keywords, which is delightfully specific.

While photography is still similar, spec-wise, on the S25, Samsung has substantially improved video for more seasoned cinematographers. This year’s phones will also capture video in HDR by default, while a new Galaxy Log mode means you can capture log video for improved dynamic range. It’ll also mean you can apply more accurate color grading if you like to edit videos and get in deep. Video is also recorded in 10-bit color, offering more latitude for editors. Still, like I said, this is for folks already neck-deep in using LUTs, with a compatible editing app at the ready.

With Audio Eraser. Samsung has caught up with Apple and Google. This is its own post-processing feature for recording video in louder environments. It taps into AI to nix specific environmental noises, like wind, water and traffic. The effect isn’t quite as impressive in real life as during Samsung’s S25 launch keynote, however.

When faced with the erratic street traffic noise, Audio Eraser’s automatic setting compressed the audio pretty severely, leaving my voice sounding a little gurgly and crunchy. It’s similar to audio with noise cancellation on Google Meet and WhatsApp voice notes. I was definitely more audible – but it wasn’t easy listening.

The upgrades are welcome, but given the iPhone 16’s Camera Control button and the Pixel 9’s latest software tricks like Add Me, Samsung’s cameras have had a weaker showing than the competition.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

Software additions don’t stop at the camera app. There’s a scattering of new features across the board with the S25. The most immediately noticeable update is more of a duo: Now Bar and Now Brief. The Now Bar is a new lockscreen tile — part contextual info panel and part notification banner. With rolling Google Maps navigation instructions and media playing functions, we’ve seen many of these ideas on the iPhone’s Dynamic Island. Samsung’s version is more limited, at least for now.

Embarrassingly, only eight apps (or features) can appear on the Now Bar, including the clock, sports notifications from Google and a voice recorder. It’s underwhelming. If third-party app makers (or more Google apps) can make their way into the Bar, it could be more helpful, but as it is, it’s barely more than a lock-screen widget.

The Now Brief, similarly, could use a little more meat. I hate to make another Apple comparison, but it’s a more accessible version of the iPhone’s summaries generated in Notifications. The Now Brief populates with relevant notifications, weather summaries and even traffic guidance, all of which is possibly most valuable in the mornings. It will also generate daily summaries accessible from a widget on the S25’s home screen. I’ll be strapping on a Galaxy Watch to see how these interact with fitness goals and wellness, so stay tuned for more insight here.

(Sidenote: Google Discover, a swipe-left-from-home screen also offers a similar stream of news, notifications and other smartphone info. It has been around for years.)

Changes elsewhere seem more like rebranded features. AI Select (once called Smart Select) resides in the pull-out Edge Panel (and the screenshot toolbar) and will offer up suggested actions once you select or circle something onscreen. It can offer clever suggestions when it contextually detects an event to add to your calendar or something that needs translating. I’m not sure AI Select is noticeably better than Smart Select, but it’s at least on by default. You had to enable the former in Settings for it to appear in the Edge Panel. While it’s not completely straightforward, AI Select does work well as a shortcut, suggesting translation with foreign languages or offering to pull dates into your calendar with a tap.

This ties into Gemini AI upgrades, which appear first on the S25 series but will be coming to other Android phones that can run Gemini AI. With a long press of a button, your voice commands to Gemini can pull in information and then apply them to make a reminder, plan a route or send details through text message to a friend, or even a WhatsApp message. I’m looking forward to Android adding further third-party apps and services, but I’ve been waiting for more effortless uses for AI assistants. This is a step in that direction.

I’m also not entirely writing off the Now Brief. It could improve over time, especially with Samsung’s Personal Data Engine, which will attempt to join the dots between your smartphone interactions. As I finished this review, the Now Brief began offering audio highlights from The Guardian, even though I hadn’t yet installed the news organization’s app. However, Galaxy AI figured it out, it was the right choice: I don’t read the Daily Mail Online. I wish Google and Apple News would work that out without me having to actively block news sources.

Has Samsung solved our smartphone battery life woes? The Galaxy S25 clocked in at over 28 hours of video playback. That’s almost four hours more than last year’s S24, and given the hardware parity with the S25, it’s a testament to the processor efficiency upgrades this year. With more typical use, I was recharging the phone every two days. That’s not how often I usually have to charge smartphones during reviews — I’m very impressed.

With the 3nm Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, those gains aren’t just in efficiency. The CPU multi-core performance hit 8,950 (up from 7,049 on the S24), while GPU scored 19,158, up from 15,082 last year. Not that there was that much need for such a leap.

Once again, the Galaxy S25 is fast and handled everything I threw at it effortlessly. However, back-to-back generative AI requests and shooting and uploading 4K video made the S25 heat up – it lacks the expanded vapor chamber that Samsung added to the S25 Ultra.

Samsung Galaxy S25 review
Photo by Mat Smith for Engadget

With the Galaxy S25, never has a Galaxy S series seemed more iterative. Fortunately, Samsung’s premium smartphones are in a commanding position, so even with a screen (an cameras) that are now two years old, the Galaxy S25 isn’t a bad smartphone. In fact, it’s a very good one.

I described the S25’s cameras as consistent and I think that applies to the entire phone. The screen is bright, smooth and rich, the battery life is, frankly, incredible, while both performance scores and my experience with it prove this is a powerful flagship phone.

I love the streamlined Gemini AI capabilities, which can take a voice command and easily turn it into a calendar entry, reminder and even plan my route. Even Galaxy AI diversions like the Portrait Studio offered more refined (and consistent) 3D cartoons and sketches of my portrait photos. I’m not sure Samsung’s features would warrant an AI subscription — I doubt many would pay for them as they stand.

And that brings me to a bigger point: Besides a powerful new chip and AI tricks, why isn’t the S25 cheaper? The Galaxy S25 is priced at $799 at launch, the same as the S24 and even the S23. The comparison you have to make isn’t only with the latest iPhone, but also cheaper Android phones, like the $499 Pixel 8a. Or, unfortunately, the year-old Galaxy S24. Unless you’re desperate for a bump in processing power and battery life, it would be wise to see how heavily last year’s models get discounted in the coming months.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/samsung-galaxy-s25-review-170040665.html?src=rss

Security researchers found a big hole in DeepSeek's security

The generative intelligence platform DeepSeek has set the world on fire this week, but with great popularity comes increased scrutiny. Analysts with Wiz Research have found a fairly substantial hole in the software’s security. The research shows that DeepSeek left one of its critical databases exposed.

This means that whoever came across the database would be allowed access to more than one million records, including user data, system logs, API keys and even prompt submissions. The researchers also noted that they were able to find the database almost immediately, without too much scanning or probing.

“Usually when we find this kind of exposure, it’s in some neglected service that takes us hours to find—hours of scanning,” Nir Ohfeld, the head of vulnerability research at Wiz, told Wired. But this time, he said, “here it was at the front door.”

Wiz Research says it’s possible that a nefarious actor could have used this security hole to access other DeepSeek systems, but the company admits it only performed the base minimum assessment. This was to confirm its findings without further compromising user privacy. There is also no evidence that anyone else found the database.

Wiz staffers didn’t exactly know how to disclose their findings, given that DeepSeek is both a new entity and based in China. Researchers eventually sent their findings to every email address and LinkedIn profile they could find. The database was locked down within 30 minutes of the mass email.

DeepSeek isn’t the only AI company that has experienced a serious security breach (or two.) A hacker was able to access OpenAI’s internal messaging logs back in 2023 and a bug exposed personal information later that year.

“AI is the new frontier in everything related to technology and cybersecurity,” Ohfeld said. “Still we see the same old vulnerabilities like databases left open on the internet.”

As previously mentioned, DeepSeek took the world by storm in the past week or so. The disruptive AI model was allegedly created for just several million dollars. OpenAI runs through billions of dollars each year. This massive financial discrepancy sent the stock market into a tailspin, with many AI-adjacent stocks taking a plunge.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/security-researchers-found-a-big-hole-in-deepseeks-security-163536961.html?src=rss

Here's how to buy a NVIDIA RTX 50 series GPU

After a two-year wait, NVIDIA’s highly-anticipated GeForce 50 series of GPUs are here. Engadget published its review of the $2,000 RTX 5090 last week, but if you’re reading this article, chances are you already know if you want to splurge on a 50 series card. The question then is how to buy one. If you’re reading this story on or after January 30, the good news is that major retailers, including Best Buy and Newegg, have officially begun selling the first wave of NVIDIA’s new GPUs.

As for the bad news? If the 50 series launch is anything like the 40 series one before it, expect high demand and limited initial availability; in fact, NVIDIA has warned RTX 5090 and 5080 stock will be constrained. If you’re set on buying an RTX 5070 Ti or 5070 at release, be sure to use the notification feature Best Buy and other retailers offer to have the best chance of securing one of the cards before they all sell out.

GeForce RTX 5090 for $2,000: The RTX 5090 is the most expensive consumer GPU NVIDIA has ever released. It’s also one of the most powerful and power-hungry, with the 5090 featuring 21,760 CUDA cores, 32GB of GDDR7 VRAM and a potential total power draw of 575W.

Of course, as with all of NVIDIA’s new GPUs, raw specs are only half the story. In conjunction with DLSS 4, the entire 50 series is capable of multi-frame generation. With the tech, RTX 50 GPUs can generate up to three additional frames for every frame they render using traditional techniques. DLSS 4 is the reason the 5090 can produce an average of 246 frames per second with full ray tracing in games like Cyberpunk 2077.

If you prefer to buy from Newegg or Best Buy, both retailers will stock models from third-party OEMs, including ASUS, Gigabyte, MSI and Zotac.

GeForce RTX 5080 for $999: The RTX 5080 features 10,752 CUDA cores and 16GB of GDDR7 VRAM, with a memory bandwidth of 960GB/sec. Like the 5090, you get the benefit of DLSS 4 multi-frame generation. Moreover, total power draw is more modest at 360W, meaning you probably won’t need a 1,000W PSU to power the 5080. Early reviews of the 5080 have been mixed, but that hasn’t stopped people from buying the new high-end card. 

Again, both Newegg and Best Buy will stock third-party options. For a Founders Edition model, your best bets are NVIDIA and Best Buy. 

GeForce RTX 5070 Ti for $749. If I had to guess, the 5070 Ti is probably the model with the most interest from people who want to buy a 50 series card. That’s because it features 16GB of GDDR7 VRAM compared to the 5070’s 12GB. An extra 4GB of VRAM might not seem like much, but it will likely translate to the 5070 Ti being a much better purchase over the long run. Modern AAA games use a lot of VRAM, so much so that 8GB GPUs like the RTX 3070 are starting to show their age. 

Unfortunately, the 5070 Ti is the one model NVIDIA won’t offer a Founders Edition version of, so finding one to buy may be tricky. Your best bet here is likely to be B&H. The retailer is showing a few 5070 Ti models on its website, though you’ll need to wait until February for those to arrive. 

GeForce RTX 5070 for $549: At launch, the RTX 5070 will be NVIDIA’s most affordable 50 series GPU. It’s also the GPU NVIDIA claims is as fast as the RTX 4090. Of course, that’s with DLSS 4 enabled. If you’re interested in the 5070, I strongly advise waiting for reviews to come out before you commit to buying one. As mentioned, with only 12GB of VRAM, the 5070 could quickly become a bottleneck to your system.

Update 1/29/25 1:50PM ET: As one may have predicted, it seems like it will be difficult to get your hands on one of NVIDIA’s new graphics cards. The company itself stated publicly that it “expect significant demand for the GeForce RTX 5090 and 5080 and believes stock-outs may happen.” It’s possible that limited availability, or widespread stock-outs, could affect customers worldwide. It’s reported that some countries, like Korea, won’t see shipments until mid-February.

Update 1/30/25 10:10AM ET: We updated this piece with more information about availability now that some of the cards are officially up for sale. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/heres-how-to-buy-a-nvidia-rtx-50-series-gpu-160902874.html?src=rss

Lime announces $25 million action plan to help fix London's e-bike chaos

In November, Transport for London (TfL) announced new steps to regulate e-bikes, but a lack of legislation or power meant that most of the onus fell to e-bike services to do the right thing. Now, Lime CEO Wayne Ting has announced a £20 million ($24.8 million) five-point London Action Plan to help with overcrowding and poor parking, multiple publications report, including UKTN

“The feedback we’ve received from London residents, community groups and elected officials is why we’re launching our London Action Plan,” Ting stated. “We recognise the need for meaningful investments to accelerate change and improve parking, starting with more funding for dedicated e-bike parking, and additional operational capacity and processes.”

An investment of £5 million ($6.2 million) will go into creating 2,500 additional e-bike parking spaces. Part of the plan will also include expanding Lime’s on-street team to 400 people and aiming to move or collect about 4,000 bikes daily. Plus, Lime intends to use improved AI to confirm proper parking in end of trip photos. 

The action plan directly responds to TfL’s statement at the end of last year. “The new policy sets out that TfL will consider taking action against operators who allow their bikes to be parked outside of designated places on red routes and on TfL land, which includes areas such as station forecourts and bus garages,” the organization said. “Operators are ultimately responsible for ensuring their bikes are deployed and parked bikes appropriately.”

As someone living in London, I can certaintly attest that Lime bikes are scattered everywhere around the city. Lime claims that 49 percent of 18 to 34 year olds in London rent an e-bike weekly. The company also states that 2024 saw an 85 percent increase in annual journeys.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/lime-announces-25-million-action-plan-to-help-fix-londons-e-bike-chaos-141559309.html?src=rss

Deepseek is coming to Windows Copilot+ PCs

Microsoft is closely associated with OpenAI’s ChatGPT AI model, but the software giant has no qualms about playing the field. Microsoft announced that it’s bringing the DeepSeek-R1 AI model to Copilot+ PCs soon, starting with Snapdragon X devices and following later with Intel Lunar Lake and AMD Ryzen AI 9 PCs. The DeepSeek-R1-Distill-Qwen-1.5B model will arrive “soon” on Microsoft AI Tookit for developers, with more powerful 7B and 14B variants coming later.

The 1.5B (base) model isn’t powerful compared to the higher-tier 32B and 70B models, but MIcrosoft points out that the models are “NPU-optimized” for Copilot+ PCs. The minimum configuration for such computers is 256GB of storage, 16GB of RAM and an NPU with at least 40 TOPS (trillions of operations per second). 

“These optimized models let developers build and deploy AI-powered applications that run efficiently on-device, taking full advantage of the powerful NPUs in Copilot+ PCs,” Microsoft wrote. It added that it implemented systems to take advantage of low-bit processing to ensure the R1 models could run locally on NPU hardware. 

At the same time, Microsoft is bringing DeepSeek’s R1 model to its Azure AI Foundry platform, The Verge reported. It joins other AI models on that service, including GPT-4, Mistral AI, Meta-Llama 3 and others. That comes as a bit of a surprise, given that Microsoft is reportedly probing whether DeepSeek used OpenAI’s technology in an unauthorized manner. 

AI pundits have also expressed concerns about privacy issues around China-based DeepSeek, something that Microsoft addressed in a Marketplace Community post. “DeepSeek R1 has undergone rigorous red teaming and safety evaluations, including automated assessments of model behavior and extensive security reviews to mitigate potential risks,” wrote Microsoft senior product marketing manager, Justin Royal. 

DeepSeek shook up the AI world with its R1 model, which doesn’t require nearly as much computing power as competing models. That spooked markets yesterday, causing a selloff in chip giant NVIDIA and other AI-adjacent stocks. OpenAI, which has been sued by multiple newspapers and publishers around the world for copyright infringement, recently accused DeepSeek and other Chinese AI startups of “distilling” its models. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/deepseek-is-coming-to-windows-copilot-pcs-130041096.html?src=rss

Netflix finally lets iOS users download an entire season with one tap

You’ll finally be able to download all the episodes in an entire season on Netflix with just one tap if you’re on iOS. The streaming service introduced the capability on Android years ago, but it remained a “much-requested” feature for users on iPhone and iPad until now. It’s not unusual for Netflix to give Android users access to a certain capability first — it took a year for Smart Downloads, which automatically deletes downloaded episodes you’ve already seen and then downloads the next one in a series, to be available on iOS.

“We’ve heard that downloading episodes one-by-one has been a pain point for iOS members — something we’re now addressing with this rollout,” a Netflix spokesperson told Variety. It’s certainly great to have if you like stocking up on shows you can watch for long flights or cross-country road trips. 

The option to download entire seasons is available for all the shows currently on the streaming service. To download multiple episodes all at once, find the button for the new feature next to the Share option on the series’ page in the Netflix app. While tapping the button will download all the episodes in a season automatically, you can still manage individual episodes under the Downloads section in the My Netflix tab.

A screenshot of the Netflix app.
Netflix

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/netflix-finally-lets-ios-users-download-an-entire-season-with-one-tap-133025196.html?src=rss

US Department of Transportation moves to cut fuel efficiency standards

Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has only been in his post for a day and already making it clear that the agency will be ignoring the role vehicle pollution plays in worsening climate change. Duffy sent a memo to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration calling for a review of fuel economy standards to align with President Donald Trump’s goals of promoting the use of oil, natural gas and biofuels. The memo claims that “artificially high” fuel economy standards have made new cars prohibitively expensive for US buyers and could negatively impact the US auto industry.

It’s the latest swing of the pendulum as the country’s leadership changes hands once again. Trump’s first presidency saw a rollback of fuel efficiency standards that had been enacted by Barack Obama, followed by the EPA introducing its strictest standards to date when Joe Biden assumed office. President Donald Trump’s transition team had already signaled in December that he would walk back moves by previous administration to strengthen fuel efficiency standards and promote electric vehicle adoption. Today’s development isn’t a surprise, but it’s still bad news considering multiple international reports have demonstrated that the planet’s rising temperature will cause extreme and catastrophic weather events.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/us-department-of-transportation-moves-to-cut-fuel-efficiency-standards-235205073.html?src=rss

US Department of Transportation moves to cut fuel efficiency standards

Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has only been in his post for a day and already making it clear that the agency will be ignoring the role vehicle pollution plays in worsening climate change. Duffy sent a memo to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration calling for a review of fuel economy standards to align with President Donald Trump’s goals of promoting the use of oil, natural gas and biofuels. The memo claims that “artificially high” fuel economy standards have made new cars prohibitively expensive for US buyers and could negatively impact the US auto industry.

It’s the latest swing of the pendulum as the country’s leadership changes hands once again. Trump’s first presidency saw a rollback of fuel efficiency standards that had been enacted by Barack Obama, followed by the EPA introducing its strictest standards to date when Joe Biden assumed office. President Donald Trump’s transition team had already signaled in December that he would walk back moves by previous administration to strengthen fuel efficiency standards and promote electric vehicle adoption. Today’s development isn’t a surprise, but it’s still bad news considering multiple international reports have demonstrated that the planet’s rising temperature will cause extreme and catastrophic weather events.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/us-department-of-transportation-moves-to-cut-fuel-efficiency-standards-235205073.html?src=rss

US Department of Transportation moves to cut fuel efficiency standards

Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has only been in his post for a day and already making it clear that the agency will be ignoring the role vehicle pollution plays in worsening climate change. Duffy sent a memo to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration calling for a review of fuel economy standards to align with President Donald Trump’s goals of promoting the use of oil, natural gas and biofuels. The memo claims that “artificially high” fuel economy standards have made new cars prohibitively expensive for US buyers and could negatively impact the US auto industry.

It’s the latest swing of the pendulum as the country’s leadership changes hands once again. Trump’s first presidency saw a rollback of fuel efficiency standards that had been enacted by Barack Obama, followed by the EPA introducing its strictest standards to date when Joe Biden assumed office. President Donald Trump’s transition team had already signaled in December that he would walk back moves by previous administration to strengthen fuel efficiency standards and promote electric vehicle adoption. Today’s development isn’t a surprise, but it’s still bad news considering multiple international reports have demonstrated that the planet’s rising temperature will cause extreme and catastrophic weather events.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/us-department-of-transportation-moves-to-cut-fuel-efficiency-standards-235205073.html?src=rss