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| RadioNZ - 10 Mar (RadioNZ) If it goes ahead, most landowners would not be able to submit objections to large infrastructure projects to the Environment Court. Read...Newslink ©2025 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | Stuff.co.nz - 7 Mar (Stuff.co.nz) “You’re paying for the privilege of leaving your pet in a nice environment,“ a pet cemetery owner says. Read...Newslink ©2025 to Stuff.co.nz |  |
|  | | RadioNZ - 7 Mar (RadioNZ) `You`re paying for the privilege of leaving your pet in a nice environment,` a pet cemetery owner says. Read...Newslink ©2025 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | PC World - 7 Mar (PC World)Like millions of people around the world, I work from home. And doing so means I need to create a healthy work environment that encourages productivity. Working on a PC all day can cause health issues — not just physical ones, but mental ones.
Everyone understands the need to maintain good PC work habits for physical health, yet many ignore the mental aspects. Here are some practical things you can do to tweak your home office so that it’s more conducive to better mental health and overall happiness.
Avoid relaxing in your office space
In my view, the most important thing you can do is keep your work environment separate from where you spend your time relaxing. If you want good work/life balance, then you have to take steps to keep work and life apart, especially when working from home.
If you’re lucky enough to own a big house, you probably have lots of options for this, with plenty of other rooms where you hang out in the evenings and while on break. If you live in a smaller dwelling, like an apartment? Separating work life from home life can be tricky.
Ross Helen / Shutterstock.com
Tricky, but doable. One thing you can do is cordone off a very specific section — maybe even just a corner — of your living space. Use dividers to give it some physical boundaries. Only use that laptop or PC for work-related purposes and keep a separate device for personal stuff. Only sit at that desk when you’re working. That desk is your “work mode” desk. If you want to take a break or relax, physically move yourself elsewhere.
For a more drastic solution, if you have a backyard, consider building or commissioning a “home office shed.” These can cost anywhere from $5,000 to $20,000+ depending on size and features. Expensive, I know, but if you’re serious about working from home and you just don’t have an extra room, this could be worth it.
Establish (and keep) your office clutter-free
You might enjoy living with a lot of “stuff” around you, but there’s evidence that clutter isn’t good for mental health. You’ve heard people say things like “Tidy house, tidy mind”? It’s true, and you should extend that truth to your office workspace.
Undrey / Shutterstock.com
Get rid of the clutter and tidy things up. If you need it, add more storage space with things like drawers and filing systems. Buy some boxes to keep tucked away in your closet if you need to. Organize your cables so they aren’t strewn all over the place. When you’re done with something, don’t just put it down — put it away.
It’s one thing to go clutter-free. It’s another to maintain it. Set yourself up for success by doing the little things as you can instead of letting it all build up into a mess. A disorderly desktop may not seem like a big deal, but it’s a subconscious drain on energy. Keep it clean.
Soundproof your home office space
Visual clutter isn’t the only thing wearing down on your brain. Loud sounds, distracting hums, and noise pollution from outside can prevent you from being fully focused and stress-free. More than that, the buildup of frustration and anxiety can take a toll on your mental health.
insta_photos / Shutterstock.com
The simplest and lowest impact thing you can do is to get yourself a pair of noise-canceling headphones or earbuds. For example, the Bose QuietComfort Bluetooth Earbuds are solid, but you can go cheaper with the EarFun Air Pro 3 Earbuds or opt for full-on budget-level affordability with the Anker Soundcore P30i Earbuds.
Don’t want to wear stuff in your ears all day long? Look into physical soundproofing options. If you own your home, insulate your walls. If you don’t, consider hanging up soundproofing blankets over your door and windows (which is how most sounds get in). A speaker playing brown noise can also help drown out background distractions.
Bask in as much natural light as you can
Commercial offices rely far too much on artificial lighting for reasons of practicality. If you’re working from home, you can do the opposite — strive to let in as much natural light as possible.
Natural light has positive effects on mental health, with numerous studies consistently proving it year after year. Of those many benefits, exposure to sunlight boosts serotonin production, which helps improve mood. (That’s why it’s often referred to as the “feel good” chemical.)
ShotPrime Studio / Shutterstock.com
Natural light also helps regulate the internal body clock, leading to better sleep patterns. More sleep (and better quality sleep) itself can boost your mental wellness. Last but not least, natural light can help alleviate symptoms of depression, especially during the winter months.
So, whenever possible, set up your workspace in an area with windows and sunshine. Skylights are also helpful. And if natural light simply isn’t an option for whatever reasons, you might try using a UV-free sunlight lamp that mimics sunlight using an LED source.
Keep the temperature comfortable
Work is stressful enough as it is even when you aren’t shivering in your seat or melting into your chair. When ambient temperatures are too high or too low, it can harm productivity — and when you struggle to finish your tasks on time, it can bring down mental health.
Maridav / Shutterstock.com
Nobody likes to “waste” money on heating and cooling, I know. But it might help to think of office comfort as an investment. In the winter, raise your thermostat a few degrees and get an electric blanket. In the summer, run a fan and get a portable AC if you need to.
With how much time you spend in your home office every day, a quality-of-life boost like this can work wonders for mental health. Suffering through hot and cold isn’t worth it if you can afford otherwise.
Use nature to bring your home office alive
As humans, we’re instinctively drawn to nature. That’s why so many people find hiking, camping, and other outdoor activities so beneficial to mental health. But unless you’re fortunate enough to have a home office in the middle of the woods, nature likely evades you.
Ground Picture / Shutterstock.com
To get the same benefits, you need to bring the outdoors inside. There are two main ways to do this:
Opt for natural (and natural-looking) materials when building and/or furnishing your home office. A desk with a natural wood finish would be the most obvious example of this.
Populate your home office with plants and flowers. Position them so they don’t get in the way of you working but remain visible. Hanging plants are particularly nice as they don’t take up desk space.
Cycle in fresh air on a regular basis
Fresh air is crucial for anyone looking to enjoy a healthy, happy life. While conditioned air is welcome during the sweltering summer months, it can’t replace the freshness of outdoor air. Sure, there will be days when the weather demands you shut your windows, but when the weather permits, try throwing open those windows more often.
Andrey Popov / Shutterstock.com
You can kill two birds with one stone here, combining this with the above tip on letting in natural light. All of this assumes you have windows, of course, and that you live in an area that isn’t ruined by excess pollution. Still, you have to get fresh air sometimes. Working from home in stale air day after day will take its toll on your mental wellness.
Further reading: The best work-from-home tech products Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 7 Mar (PC World)At a glanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Enjoyable keyboard
Vivid, high-contrast OLED display
High-resolution webcam and good microphone
Strong processor and integrated graphics performance
Lots of Thunderbolt 4 and USB-C connectivity
Cons
Modest audio quality
Battery life falls behind the pack
Expensive
Our Verdict
The HP Elitebook X G1a makes up for mediocre battery life with solid all-around performance, an enjoyable keyboard, and future-proof connectivity.
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Premium business laptops are an unusual slice of the broader laptop arena. They tend to fall behind consumer laptops on performance-per-dollar, then make up for it with premium design and forward-looking connectivity. The HP Elitebook X G1a doesn’t stray too far from this path, but its overall performance is strong for the category.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Specs and features
The AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 is the star of this show, and not only because it provides a 12-core GPU. It also has AMD’s Radeon 890M integrated graphics and an NPU that offers up to 55 TOPS. The model I reviewed also had 64GB of RAM, which is a ton.
CPU: AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 375
Memory: 64GB LPDDR5x-8533
Graphics/GPU: AMD Radeon 890M Graphics
NPU: AMD NPU up to 55 TOPS
Display: 2880 x 1800 OLED Multi-touch up to 120Hz, 16:10 aspect ratio
Storage: 1TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 solid state storage
Webcam: 1440p 30fps camera with IR 3D camera for Windows Hello, physical privacy shutter
Connectivity: 2x Thunderbolt 4 (with USB-C 4, DisplayPort, Power Delivery), 1x USB-C (with DisplayPort, Power Delivery, 10Gbps data), 1x USB-A (10Gbps data), 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x 3.5mm audio
Networking: Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
Biometrics: Windows Hello facial recognition, fingerprint reader
Battery capacity: 74.5 watt-hours
Dimensions: 12.29 x 8.45 x 0.72 inches
Weight: 3.3 pounds
MSRP: $2,749
The HP Elitebook X G1a has a fantastic keyboard that’s among best features. It offers a spacious layout with large keys—among the largest you’ll find in the 14-inch category.
This is the most expensive Elitebook X G1a configuration and retails at $2,749. HP also sells a $1,999 entry-level model with an AMD Ryzen AI 7 Pro 360 (which still provides Radeon 890M graphics). It scales back the memory to 32GB and halves the solid state drive to 512GB.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Design and build quality
IDG / Matthew Smith
The HP Elitebook X G1a doesn’t make a strong first impression. Designed for a corporate environment, it features a simple, understated chassis adorned only by a small HP logo. But the details matter, and they hold up well.
I appreciate that the HP Elitebook X G1a incorporates rounded corners and beveled edges, giving the laptop a softer and more approachable feel. The shade of silver used is also appealing, and the materials feel premium to the touch. While it may not stand out as unique, it feels durable and expensive. Which is good, because it is, in fact, expensive.
HP’s online store lists the Elitebook X G1a’s height at up to 0.52 inches, but that measurement is, shall we say, a bit optimistic, as it doesn’t include the rather thick rubber feet on the bottom of the laptop. The materials HP provided to me as part of the review clarified that the laptop’s full thickness is up to 0.72 inches at the rear, which more accurately represents how the laptop feels.
That’s a bit thick for a 14-inch workstation laptop with discrete graphics, but it’s mitigated by its weight of 3.3 pounds. Though certainly heavier than some alternatives like the Asus Zenbook S14, the Elitebook X G1a won’t feel like a burden when stowed in a messenger bag or backpack.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Keyboard, trackpad
IDG / Matthew Smith
The HP Elitebook X G1a has a fantastic keyboard that’s among best features. It offers a spacious layout with large keys—among the largest you’ll find in the 14-inch category. Key travel is generous, and each key activates with a satisfying, tactile feel. It’s not a mechanical keyboard, to be clear, but it feels crisp and responsive.
I also appreciate that HP uses a large font on the keycaps. This makes the keys easier to read, which is especially helpful if your vision isn’t perfect. A keyboard backlight is included, too, and because the backlight shines through the large-font keycaps, it remains easy to see after dark.
The touchpad is less impressive. It measures a tad under five inches wide and about three inches tall, which is average for a 14-inch laptop. And while I found it responsive, the look and feel of the touchpad didn’t stand out. There is, however, one feature some users will no doubt appreciate and that’s the right or left click at the bottom of the touchpad reveals significant physical travel.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Display, audio
IDG / Matthew Smith
Most HP Elitebook X G1a configurations, including the one I reviewed, have a 14-inch OLED touchscreen with a 16:10 aspect ratio and 2880 x 1800 resolution.
This is a common 14-inch display found across dozens of Windows laptops, but it’s popular for a reason. The OLED display provides vivid color, rich contrast, and excellent motion clarity with support for refresh rates up to 120Hz. It’s one of the best laptop display panels available, defeated only by a rare few OLED alternatives with a higher resolution, like the 14.5-inch 3200 x 2000 panel in the Dell XPS 14.
Brightness is the only potential issue, as the display hit a maximum measured SDR brightness of 403 nits. That’s typical for this panel but, because of the display’s glossy finish, it can seem dim when it’s used near a sunlit window or outdoors.
A pair of upwards-firing speakers line each side of the Elitebook X G1a’s keyboard. They provide good volume and clarity but can sound boomy and harsh at higher volumes as the weak speakers try to overcompensate for the lack of bass. Still, the speakers worked well when watching YouTube or listening to music at lower volumes.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Webcam, microphone, biometrics
Business and productivity laptops like the Elitebook X G1a are often used for video calls and HP leans into that by bestowing the laptop with an excellent 1440p webcam. It provides a crisp, sharp image with good color reproduction. A physical privacy shutter is included to block the camera when it’s unwanted.
The dual-array microphone is solid, too. It captured my voice easily even when I spoke quietly and readily removed background noise caused by a nearby space heater. The audio can still sound a bit distant and hollow, but it’s great for video calls.
HP provides two forms of biometrics. Windows Hello facial recognition is supported via the webcam, while fingerprint recognition is supported by a fingerprint reader in the power button. Both worked flawlessly in my testing, though the same is also true of most competitors with these same features.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Connectivity
IDG / Matthew Smith
The HP Elitebook X G1a takes a modern approach to connectivity. It has two Thunderbolt 4 ports and one USB-C port, all of which support up to 100 watts of USB Power Delivery and DisplayPort. One Thunderbolt 4 and USB-C line the left flank, while the second Thunderbolt 4 is joined by the laptop’s lone USB-A port on the right flank.
This setup means there’s limited support for connecting older USB-A devices. On the plus side, however, this configuration provides access to gobs of data and video bandwidth, as well as USB-C charging across three ports.
I also like that the Thunderbolt 4 ports are split with one on each side of the laptop, instead of both on one side, as that provides more versatility when connecting a Thunderbolt 4 dock or hub. Many competitors offer similar Thunderbolt and USB-C connectivity, but some place both Thunderbolt ports on one side—which is annoying if that’s not the side on which your dock or hub is located.
The included 100-watt power adapter can charge the laptop over any of the Thunderbolt 4 or USB-C ports and has a lengthy, durable six-foot braided cord.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Performance
The HP Elitebook X G1a configuration I received for review is a powerful model with an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 processor that packs 12 cores and 24 threads, as well as AMD Radeon 890M integrated graphics. It had 64GB of LPDDR5x memory, too, plus a 1TB PCIe solid state drive. These are solid specifications, and the Elitebook X G1a’s performance lived up to expectations.
IDG / Matthew Smith
The HP Elitebook X G1a got off to a weak start in PCMark 10, where it lagged behind the competitive set. The exact reason for this result isn’t clear, as the specification sheet suggests it should defeat the ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition, but repeated test runs showed no difference.
IDG / Matthew Smith
Fortunately, the story changed when I ran Cinebench R23. This is a multi-threaded test with a modest duration that leans heavily on CPU performance and gives the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 a chance to strut its stuff. The CPU’s relatively performant cores provide a major advantage over Intel Core Ultra competitors, which can’t sustain the same level of multi-threaded performance.
IDG / Matthew Smith
Handbrake, another multi-threaded CPU test but with a longer duration, once again puts the HP Elitebook X G1a in a solid position. While it only lands mid-pack in these rankings, it’s worth noting that only AMD’s own hardware provides significant competition and that the differences between AMD-powered laptops are slim. Laptops relying on Intel Core Ultra, like the Asus Zenbook Duo and ThinkPad X1 Carbon, fall much farther behind.
IDG / Matthew Smith
As mentioned, the AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 includes Radeon 890M integrated graphics. It’s an extremely capable solution with a total of 16 graphics cores (up from 12 on Radeon 880M). That translates to great performance for integrated graphics. Up until recently, any score above 3,000 was considered a great result for integrated graphics, but AMD’s Radeon 890M regularly scores around 4,000.
Intel hasn’t sat on its hands, however, and the 140V proves itself competitive, though it is a tad behind, at least when considering this set of business laptops.
The Asus ProArt PX13, housing RTX 4050 graphics, doubles the HP Elitebook X G1a’s performance, which is to be expected for a laptop that has discrete graphics. The ProArt PX13 is in the same price range, however, and it’s a better choice for a creative professional who might use 3D-accelerated productivity apps.
While the HP Elitebook X G1a doesn’t set records, its performance is solid for a 14-inch business laptop. Its performance is led by the Ryzen AI 9 HX 375 CPU, which delivers a big upgrade over similar laptops that have Intel Core Ultra processors. AMD’s lead in integrated graphics is much smaller, but the HP is still a fine choice for light-duty 3D acceleration including productivity apps and older or less demanding 3D games.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Battery life
The HP Elitebook X1 G1a ships with a 74.5 watt-hour battery. That’s rather large for a 14-inch laptop, as most have a battery between 50 and 70 watt-hours.
However, the large battery didn’t translate to excellent battery life. The Elitebook X1 G1a endured our standard battery test, which loops a 4K video file of the short film Tears of Steel, for a tad under 11 hours. That’s a good result, but it’s still a long way from others.
IDG / Matthew Smith
My time using the laptop showed this was no fluke. I found the battery could drain quickly at times, losing up to half its charge in about four hours or less.
My use wasn’t light as I typically have many open windows, but most of my time is spent in Microsoft Word and the Microsoft Edge browsers, so I found the rate of battery drain disappointing. Even so, this level of battery life is fine in many situations, and could get owners through an eight-hour workday so long as demanding apps are avoided.
Also, as mentioned, all the Thunderbolt 4 and USB-C ports support Power Delivery. The laptop is designed to consume up to 100 watts of power, but in most situations it will still charge when fed less power. That means you can more easily get away with leaving the charger at home, or pack a smaller, lower-wattage charger for emergencies.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Software & AI
This HP Elitebook X1 G1a is considered a Windows Copilot+ PC and, to underscore that point, it also ships with a piece of software called AI companion. It provides access to a competent LLM that includes the ability to parse documents. However, the LLM does not run locally, and it doesn’t provide anything you can’t get from the free version of ChatGPT.
I also installed LLM Studio and loaded several large language models, including DeepSeek R1 Distill Qwen 7B and Meta’s Llama-3.3-70B-Instruct. The Elitebook X1 G1a I received, with 64GB of RAM, can actually load Llama-3.3-70B-Instruct, but it generates at just 1.68 tokens per second, which is too slow to be useful in most situations. DeepSeek R1 Distill Qwen 7B, on the other hand, loaded quickly and generated text at about 14 tokens per second. Qwen2.5-Coder-14B also loaded quickly and output about 8 tokens per second, which is bit slow but usable for simple tasks.
In addition to its AI software, the Elitebook X1 G1a has a built-in IT management and security features, such as HP’s Wolf endpoint security. As I’m not running a corporate IT department, I can’t comment on its effectiveness, but it’s something for enterprise buyers to keep in mind.
HP Elitebook X G1a: Conclusion
The HP Elitebook X1 G1a is a solid premium business laptop that sits between thin-and-light business laptops, like the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 13 Aura Edition, and more focused workstations or creative professionals, like the Asus ProArt PX13. It’s not quite as portable as the former or as powerful as the latter, but offers a good compromise between the two extremes.
Like most premium business laptops, the Elitebook X1 G1a will struggle to reach a wider audience, as it’s priced similarly to consumer laptops with more powerful hardware. HP says it’s meant for “business leaders,” and the Elitebook X1 G1a’s performance and design will hit the mark with that demographic. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 6 Mar (PC World)TV antennas are having something of a renaissance in the U.S. Buoyed by the ever-increasing costs of cable and streaming subscriptions, and additional channels enabled by the advent of digital TV, roughly one in five U.S. homes now rely on an antenna for their television. Beyond the cost of the antenna, all the channels are free, and you might even get a better picture than through a pay TV service.
When it comes to choosing an antenna, the selection is almost as wide as the programming you can receive, but if you do a little homework, you should be able to buy with confidence and ensure a good picture.
We’ll walk through the steps required to figure out what kind of antenna you need and what you might receive, then you can use PCWorld’s buyer’s guide to help narrow down your choices when you’re ready to shop.
The first step is figuring out what TV programming is available where your live.
What can I tune in with a TV antenna?
The quantity and selection of TV channels depends on where you live. In general, the closer you are to a large metro area, where the broadcasters’ towers are generally located, the more channels will be broadcast. In rural areas, the opposite is typically the case. If you live near the Canadian or Mexican borders, you might be able to receive additional channels from those countries.
Most parts of the U.S. have access to the four major commercial networks (ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC) and a local PBS station. Many of these stations broadcast additional digital networks dedicated to a particular theme, such as children’s shows on PBS Kids and classic TV on MeTV, Cozi, and Antenna TV.
If you find yourself limited to an indoor antenna, you’d be best served by one that includes a signal amplifier. These draw electrical power from a USB adapter or an open USB port on your TV.Winegard
To figure out what’s available, we recommend navigating to Rabbit Ears. This website models TV reception based on the location of the antenna and TV transmitter data from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The Signal Search Map page is where you need to be.
Enter your address (street, city, and state)
When the map updates to show your house, click “Move pushpin to center of Map View” in the panel below the map
Set the approximate height your antenna is above ground level
Click “Go”
The site will display its best prediction of the TV channels available in your location, along with an estimate of the strength of their signal levels (higher numbers are better). Take a look at the channels and networks and figure out what you want to receive; make a note of the predicted signal level.
Use the website RabbitEars to discover the TV broadcast tower locations in the vicinity of your home address. The signal strength it reports will help you determine whether an indoor antenna will be strong enough to pull in the channels you want to see, or if you’ll need to buy an attic or roof-mount model.Michael Brown/Foundry
As a rule of thumb, an indoor antenna will be sufficient for channels with a good signal level, an attic or outdoor antenna will likely be required for stations marked fair, and a larger outdoor antenna with an amplifier will be required for those marked poor. Stations marked as bad will likely be difficult to receive without extreme measures.
Finally, take a look at the direction of the transmitters from your location. If they are all in roughly the same direction, a single antenna should be fine. If they are wide apart, an antenna on a rotator—a motor that can turn the mast the antenna is mounted to to change the antenna’s orientation—might be required, especially if the signals strengths are poor.
Choose an antenna
Now you’re armed with everything you need to make an informed decision. PCWorld’s antenna picks are divided into several categories, from cheap indoor antennas to substantial roof-mounted ones. In general, an outdoor antenna will always deliver the best performance, no matter the signal level. They’ll provide much more reliable reception than indoor antennas, which are always a compromise.
If an indoor antenna will fit your needs, this transpartent Ultra-Vizion model virtually disappears when attached to a window.Martyn Williams/Foundry
That said, not everyone can install an outdoor antenna, so we have several indoor antennas, from basic, thin antennas that can be put in a window so better amplified antennas that should provide a step up in reception.
A further level up are smaller outdoor antennas, many of which can easily be installed on the side of a house, on a balcony, or inside an attic space.
Many of these are also amplified. Finally, we have tested a number of roof-mounted antennas that are the gold standard in TV reception. A roof-mounted antenna will provide the most reliable reception and should pull in the greatest number of channels. If you are planning to install one yourself, please use safety precautions when on a roof and ensure the system meets local building code requirements, especially for grounding.
Warning! Don’t believe the claims
If you browse online shopping sites or look at the advertising for antennas, you’ll see lots of dubious claims.
The first rule is to ignore anything about antenna range claims. Reception depends on a multitude of factors, including the transmitter frequency and power, the location of the transmitter, the immediate environment around your house, and more. There is simply no way an antenna can guarantee its claimed number of miles. Use the method outlined above, that takes all these factors into account.
Don’t fall for the specious claims some TV antenna manufacturers make for their products. It’s highly unlikely that any indoor antenna will be capable of pulling in signals from a broadcast tower 130 miles away. Nor will one be capable of streaming ESPN.Jared Newman / Foundry
The second thing to remember is that there’s no such thing as an HD, 4K, or NextGen TV antenna. An antenna simply receives signals and isn’t dependent on the format being broadcast, so ignore those claims as well.
PCWorld’s antenna reviews are conducted under real-world conditions with the same equipment and at the same location, so we can give an honest and measured comparison of every antenna we test.
Attention renters, HOA residents, and apartment dwellers
If you rent a house or apartment or live under the terms of an HOA (Homeowners Association), don’t let anyone tell you you cannot install a TV antenna. In the U.S. federal law gives you the right to do so under the FCC’s “OTARD” regulations. In short, you have the right to install a TV antenna for reception of local broadcast signals in an area you rent or have exclusive access to. If you’re facing resistance, read the FCC page, linked above, and quote the OTARD rule.
Connecting the antenna to your TV
A length of coaxial cable cut and ready for a connector to be attached.
Martyn Williams/Foundry
Most indoor antennas come with a small cord attached that can be connected directly to a TV or amplifier, if one is supplied; other antennas might come with a cable or require you to supply your own.
TV antenna cable is called coaxial cable, or coax for short. It has a center wire that carries the signal, a plastic insulator, an outer braid that shields the center cable from interference, and an outer sheath protects the cable from the elements. The standard for TV antennas is called RG-6.
It’s important to use a good quality coax because cables result in signal loss. You can minimize this by using a good cable and keeping the length as short as possible. If you need to run a very long cable, consider an amplifier, ideally at the antenna end of the connection.
And that’s how to choose a TV antenna
That should be everything you need to choose and install a TV antenna. TV reception is mostly a science but can be a little bit of an art; so, if you don’t get satisfactory reception, go over the steps again. Try moving the location of the antenna to see if that improves picture quality. If you get a lot of interference, consider adding an amplifier.
Most of all, don’t give up! A good antenna will provide thousands of hours of free entertainment for many years, so invest a bit of time and money into getting it right.
Still unsure which one to buy? Check out PCWorld’s most highly recommended TV antennas. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | RadioNZ - 4 Mar (RadioNZ) `We want to make sure that when people are in distress, they can come into a safe environment, talk to someone who`s been there themselves,` the Health Minister says. Read...Newslink ©2025 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | PC World - 4 Mar (PC World)At a glanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Works just as well on a table as on the wall
Copious built-in lighting themes built in
Onboard controls are handy for quick adjustments
Cons
Matter-over-Wi-Fi implementation is still a bit rocky
Small lighting surface means effects have limited impact
Our Verdict
LIFX’s pint-sized smart lamp gives you plenty of lighting flexibility without breaking the bank.
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On the surface, smart lamps like the LIFX Luna seem a limited, even boring, category. A smart light bulb can be dropped into any light fixture, so why limit yourself to a singular design that can’t be changed—and that can’t be repaired when one or more of its LEDs inevitably dies?
Smart lighting stalwart LIFX attempts to address some of these concerns, along the way making a compelling case for a dedicated smart lamp device. It won’t work for every environment, but the Luna has enough flexibility and a rich enough feature set to recommend it to a wider swath of customers than you’d think.
Specifications
The lamp itself is innocuous out of the box: It’s an all-white, oval device measuring about 8 x 5 inches across its face and 2 inches deep. The Luna is designed to either sit upright on a table, its light shining outward at a slightly upward angle, or to lie flat on its back, so the light can shine directly upwards. One could compare it to the Bluetooth-and-Zigbee-based Philips Hue Go, except that the Luna can also be mounted on the wall, using a clever mounting bracket that attaches to a surface with just one screw (included).
The LIFX Luna supports a huge range of white color temperatures (1500K to 9000K); plus, full color support courtesy of RGBW LEDs.
Total lighting power is nearly twice that of the Philips product—1,000 lumens compared to 520—with a maximum power draw of 25 watts. It should be noted that the Hue Go can operate on either AC or battery power, whereas the Luna depends on the 6-foot cable connecting it to a standard power brick (no detachable USB cables here).
The colorful LIFX Luna can be operated on a table or mounted to a wall.Christopher Null/Foundry
All physical controls are located on the top of the Luna, and they’re basic and reasonably intuitive. Paired + and – buttons brighten and dim the display, and an on/off switch can either turn the light on instantly or, with a long-press, slowly illuminate with a sunrise effect. A final button can be used to cycle through various preloaded effects.
Day-to-day use
Naturally the LIFX app is the key to a vast array of intricate configuration options, and here the Luna behaves much like any other LIFX product. I had no trouble onboarding the lamp to my Wi-Fi network (2.4GHz networks only) through the app’s auto-discovery feature, after which I was able to put it through its paces in full.
Like all recent LIFX products, the Luna supports a huge range of white color temperatures (1500K to 9000K); plus, full color support courtesy of RGBW LEDs. Color selections can make the face of the Luna a solid shade or appear as a gradient or blend of three complementary colors. Given the small size of the Luna’s light panel, however, some look better than others—there’s just not enough room for a whole lot of variation from one end of the panel to the other for complex effects to show up well.
The lamp’s 31 LED zones can even be individually configured, though dreams of spelling your initials in light should be put to rest, as the LEDs all tend to blur together thanks to the diffusing front cover.
As always, LIFX’s vast array of preconfigured themes and dynamic motion effects are all available, whether you want the Luna to cycle through the color wheel or fire off lighting effects in time with ambient music (courtesy of your phone’s microphone). Again, there’s only so much complexity you can get on an 8 x 5-inch oval, but if you need a little pop of shimmering green for St. Patrick’s Day, LIFX has it ready for you with a touch.
The LIFX app offers a host of configuration options for the Luna lamp.Christopher Null/Foundry
The Luna also supports Matter-over-Wi-Fi, so it can be used in third-party ecosystems, though there are considerably fewer configurability options in apps like iOS Home and SmartThings than you’ll get in the LIFX app directly. There’s also a dormant Thread radio onboard, which LIFX plans to activate later this year. Oddly, when using the Luna with iOS, I was able to freely control the brightness of the lamp, but was unable to change the color of the lights until I manually unplugged the light and plugged it back in. I imagine this glitch will be fixed with a firmware update.
Matter also enables another feature on the Luna by letting the buttons on top of the device do double-duty. Not only can they be used to control scenes on the Luna itself but also to control other devices you have in your smart home that are connected to the same hub. Each button can be set to perform three different functions: Short-press, double-press, and long-press. It’s easy enough to set up. For example, I was able to set a short button press on the Luna to open a set of SwitchBot curtains and another to close them.
Should you buy the LIFX Luna?
Potential Luna buyers should note, however, that pressing a button also causes that button to perform its default action on the device (such as switching the lighting theme). This might be handy for some users, but this latter behavior is probably something that will need to be addressed in firmware updates to prevent frustration.
[This review is part of TechHive’s in-depth coverage of the best smart lighting.]
At $70, the LIFX Luna is not a major investment, although, as noted at the top, it’s certainly a much bigger one than dropping a smart light bulb into a standard lamp fixture. That said, I really enjoyed the lamp’s flexibility, including its ability to be easily relocated on demand. If nothing else, it sure is a lot more fun than playing with a light bulb. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
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|  | | PC World - 4 Mar (PC World)At a GlanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Extremely broad and option-laden feature set, including VM backup and imaging
Supports multiple destinations per job
Supports network and online storage destinations
Cons
No wizard-based online storage setup
Minor interface oddities
Our Verdict
Pros will love the feature/option-rich pay version of Iperius Backup, which also features an optional management Console. There’s power aplenty, but the learning curve and interface might occasionally flummox less-experienced users.
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Iperius Backup Basic is an extremely powerful backup program with a boatload of features and options, as well as broad online storage and network support. There are also sure signs of an enterprise-grade focus — support for Hyper-V, ESXi, and tape.
For the average user, the main issues with Iperius Backup will be both its daunting scope and its not-always-obvious game plan. It all makes sense after some tire-kicking, but operations such as adding consumer-grade online storage accounts could certainly be a lot friendlier.
Iperius Backup 8.5
A limited, but still useful free version is available if all you need is the plain file backup.
Read on to learn more, then see our roundup of the best Windows backup software for comparison.
What are Iperius Backup’s features?
Iperius Backup Basic supports file backup (plain and zip-compressed/encrypted) as well as imaging to both its own proprietary format and a Windows recovery-compatible format that automatically includes the OS drive.
Note that you must download and install the CBT (Changed Block Tracking) service from the image-backup dialog before you can perform incremental or differential backups in the proprietary format. Full and Windows-compatible backups don’t require it.
By far my favorite feature of Iperius Backup is that it allows multiple destinations per job. Most users have a single set of data they want saved to multiple locations, but the majority of backup programs require that you create/recreate a separate job for every destination. This does mean that some Iperius options, such as compression, must be defined with each destination.
Iperius Backup images to friendly VHDX containers with both jobs. The VHDX files are mountable by Windows and various virtual machines (VirtualBox, VMware, etc.) programs, so you’re not reliant upon Iperius to browse them. In other words, they’re application independent.
Iperius offers an online console management service for tracking backups and letting you control them remotely.
Super granular scheduling is only one of a host of Iperius Backup options.
I’d be here all day if I listed the plethora of options in Iperius Backup. But a sampling includes: extremely granular scheduling down to the minute (effectively real time), email upon error or completion, network user profiles (user name/password so you don’t have to re-enter them for every job), compression levels, post- and pre-backup run of other applications, job export and import, extensive log files, and a host of criteria about what and how to copy, etc.
Iperius backs up to cloud services such as Dropbox and Google Drive. However unlike other programs that provide wizards to connect with consumer-oriented online storage repositories, Iperius treats them all as if they were Amazon S3 and S3-compatible services. I.e. you must log on independently to the service’s website to generate and copy access tokens and IDs. Not the worst thing in the world, but not consumer friendly.
The tools (recovery disc, logs, etc.) page in Iperius Backup.
Iperius also offers an online console management service for IT types that will track what’s been going on with your backups and let you control them remotely. Assuming, of course, that you’ve downloaded the local client service.
Iperius Backup will also create recovery media in several Windows PE versions (with bare-metal restore) directly to an external drive, or to an ISO file for use later. Nicely, it includes a disk clone utility that’s not in the Windows application.
That’s an especially nice feature as it allows you to make an exact backup of a disk before overwriting it — in my experience, always a good failsafe measure. The program connects to the Iperius website to download the source file during the creation routine.
The Iperius Backup 8.5 recovery disc environment.
The free version of Iperius is great for backing up files to local and local network destinations, but it won’t run as a service, perform multiple simultaneous backups, or create recovery boot media as the pay versions will. To be honest, you might as well stick with Windows File History if the pro features are absent.
I do have one feature request for Iperius Backup — allow online storage services as sources as well as destinations. I like to back up from one to the other. A dedicated two-way sync function might be handy also. The file copy does have some options that render it one-way sync.
How easy is Iperius Backup to use?
Because of the clean design and attractive interface, Iperius definitely gives you the initial impression that you’re dealing with a pro-level application. Not that there aren’t some ugly ducklings that will haul the freight, but inspiring confidence is a good thing — if it’s backed up by performance, of course, as Iperius is.
However, as of this latest version (8.5), the size and spacing of some screen elements was a bit off as you can see in the screen caps. Some buttons are very tiny — including the non-standard windows minimize/maximize/close controls — and text is scrunched together in menus. Dialog titles are overwritten by the custom icon. Hardly insurmountable issues, but a ding to that confidence I just rattled on about.
You must fire up your browser on your own to grab info from any online storage service you want to back up to with Iperius Backup. Note the untranslated text, squashed text, and overwritten window icon.
Also, the backup progress dialog isn’t modal and disappears behind the main window if you access the latter. This was an issue I mentioned five years ago, and I’m slightly peeved that such a simple thing still hasn’t been fixed. Additionally, the job creation dialog completely eclipses the main Window and looks nearly identical, which can create some initial confusion.
I’d also like to be able to define the additional destinations in the wizards, not add them later in the destinations tab. And for some reason, if you want to give the job a name of your choosing, you must do so post-wizard in the summary pane.
Obviously you can easily work around all these relatively minor foibles, but I do wish Iperius would put some more work into the interface and workflow.
How much does Iperius Backup cost?
A single PC license is 69 euros ($71.58 at the time of this writing) — more than double what the program cost five years ago. That puts it up against some rather heady competition in Acronis True Image, R-Drive Image, Easeus ToDo Backup, and others. Still, I recommend that you give the 21-day trial a shot. The advanced features are useful, and if you don’t need them, you can continue to use the limited version for free. You can compare all Iperius Backup versions on the company’s website.
How fast is Iperius Backup?
I did a number of tests with Iperius Backup, including multiple-action file/image jobs with multiple destinations. For all file-related tasks, including downloading files from FTP and network locations, it performed quickly without slowing down my system in the least. The integrity of the backups was perfect and there was only one glitch operationally, described below.
Iperius Backup is fast and never hiccuped once during testing over a dozen jobs to multiple destinations.
At first, after a successful small imaging job, I thought the company had fixed another issue I noted five years ago, where the program wouldn’t write to exFAT external SSDs. Alas, while trying to write a 750GB Windows recovery image, the program tanked after around 50GB.
This error occurred on and external exFAT SSD.
Reformatting the external drive to NTFS solved the issue, but exFAT can handle a file that large, and exFAT is very common on drives being used across multiple operating systems. On the up side, the job took ony 20 minutes. Sweet.
This was the same job written to the drive reformatted to NTFS.
Should you buy Iperius backup?
Other than the exFAT deal, I’m smitten with Iperius Backup’s versatility and performance. That said, it needs to be a tad easier to use to capture a larger portion of the consumer audience. And for goodness sake, fix some of the bugs that I pointed out five years ago.
Negativity aside, for power users and IT types, Iperius Backup is a fantastically powerful program that should definitely be given a look-see — especially in light of the online management console. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
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