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US

John Oliver Gleefully Mocks Alex Jones’ Trial Text-Message Screw-Up

One week after kicking disgraced UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson on his way out the door, John Oliver returned to the Last Week Tonight desk on Sunday to weigh in on the defamation trial of unhinged conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who was found liable for falsely claiming the Sandy Hook massacre was a “hoax” filled “with actors.”

The jury awarded Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, the parents of slain 6-year-old Jesse Lewis, $45.2 million in punitive damages and $4.1 million in compensatory damages. Jones, 48, is facing additional defamation suits in Connecticut and Texas.

After describing Jones as “a man who boldly answers the question: What if Grimace were a Proud Boy?” Oliver exclaimed, “Guess what, Alex? You fucked with info and this time info fucking won.” He added: “And the way he’s handled this trial is almost a master class in what not to do in court.”

For starters, as Oliver pointed out, the judge became so “exasperated” with Jones’ lying in court that she at one point stopped the proceedings to address it, telling him, “It seems absurd to instruct you again that you must tell the truth while you testify, but here I am: You must tell the truth while you testify… this is not your show.”

That didn’t stop Jones, who continued to appear during the trial on his truth-averse Infowars show, where he, according to Oliver, “baselessly linked [the judge] to pedophilia” and suggested that his political enemies stacked the jury with “blue-collar” people who were not capable of deciding the damages he should pay. This is typical of Jones, who once claimed that the government had been poisoning the water and made frogs turn gay, that Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg was a crisis actor, that the car attack in Charlottesville was a false flag operation, that Michelle Obama is transgender, and that 9/11 was “a government-orchestrated controlled bombing.”

“There was one twist that he may not have seen coming,” Oliver said of Jones’ trial.

A lawyer representing the parents of the slain Sandy Hook child presented a text message in court that proved Jones had lied on the stand when he claimed that there were no texts on his phone of him discussing Sandy Hook. When Jones expressed surprise at where the lawyer might have gotten it, he explained to Jones: “Did you know [that] 12 days ago your attorneys messed up and sent me an entire digital copy of your entire cellphone, with every text message you’ve sent for the past two years? And when informed, [they] did not take any steps to identify it as privileged or protected in any way? And as of two days ago, it fell free and clear into my possession, and that is how I know you lied to me when you said you didn’t have text messages about Sandy Hook.”

“This is your Perry Mason moment,” a stunned Jones replied.

“Oh shit!” exclaimed Oliver. “First, credit to that lawyer for having the superhuman patience to sit on those text messages for 12 whole days… but the content of Jones’ phone could become a problem for him. Not only has the Jan. 6 committee already requested those phone records, but they also show that Jones, who’s tried to plead poverty in this case, was earning revenue of as much as $800,000 per day in recent years from sales.”

Oliver concluded: “Look, clearly, none of this is going to stop him. There are two more trials coming up, and he’s probably going to find ways to turn those into a clown show as well and fundraise off them too. But at the very least, this phone thing could make his life much more difficult—and for a while. And that is something that we should all be allowed to enjoy, because to wake up one morning and find out that Alex Jones’ lawyers mistakenly shared his cellphone records of him is a true blessing. We don’t deserve this, but one thing’s for sure: He definitely does.”

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Technology

LG Gram – Lightweight Body, Heavyweight Specs – channelnews

As with previous years’ models, the LG Gram’s selling point is its weight. True to form, this laptop’s light body is the very first thing you’ll notice when you pick one of these up. The 16-inch model comes in at just under 1.2kgs, with 14- and 17-inch versions also available in the 2022 lineup.

This is perfect if you need to travel around and want a truly portable machine with a decent-sized screen that won’t cause you to develop a hernia.

The downside is that the second thing you notice is how flimsy the LG Gram feels. The super-thin screen bends in an unsettling way, and although I have no doubt of its actual sturdiness, its hard to shake the feeling that one day you might go to pull it out of your bag and find the lid has snapped off or warped in a permanent way.

The magnesium alloy chassis apparently passed MIL-STD-810 durability tests for shock, vibration, and temperature, so maybe this malleable feel is a feature rather than a bug.

Under the hood, the LG Gram is anything but lightweight. With Intel 12th Gen processors running the Core i7-1260P, four performance cores and eight efficient cores, with clock speeds up to 4.7GHz, the LG Gram can handle anything you throw at it.

If you plan to use this as a video editing machine or for gaming, you’ll want to add the Nvidia RTX 2050 graphics card rather than the Intel Iris XE. If your LG Gram is purely for work and fun, without the need for high-powered response times or a smooth frame rate, then you can safely opt for the latter without noticing any performance lags in your day-to-day.

The two PCIe 4.0 SSDs mean that you can bolster the included 1TB, 512GB or 256GB SSD memory with another 1 or 2TB card in the second slot if you plan to house content on this machine rather than in the cloud.

Ergonomically speaking, the LG Gram does have a few minor issues that may take some getting used to. As mentioned before, just lifting or closing your laptop screen feels perilous at times, a careless one-handed tug will notably see the screen bend, while slamming it too hard feels like it could do real damage. I understand this is a high-tech machine and not an angler grinder, but at this price, durability should come as read.

The trackpad is also a lot larger than most laptops, meaning you’ll often undershoot when trying to right click without looking. This having to second-guess what are now automatic movements is a hassle at first – although, if this becomes your main computer, it won’t take long to adjust to this extra tracking real estate. On the upside, you’ll get a numeric pad on the keyboard – which will delight gamers or those who miss this feature when using a laptop.

Speaking of extra real estate, the monitor offers a 16:10 aspect ratio, giving a 2,560 x 1,600 resolution, rather than 16:9’s 2,560 x 1,440. This extra screen space may seem trivial, but it’s surprising how luxurious this ratio seems, especially on the 16-inch model we reviewed.

The IPS display uses an anti-glare texture, rather than the usual glossy screens that cause so many lighting issues when being used in a well-lit outdoors area. Brightness of 365 nits means the LG gram is perfect for all lighting situations – an underlooked feature in the laptop world. The only possible downside to this screen is that it isn’t a touchscreen, which may throw some people who rely on this feature.

Port-wise, the left side sports two Type-C Thunderbolt 4 ports, plus a HDMI, and a 3.5mm headphone jack. The right side gives two USB 3.2 Gen 2 slots, and a micro SD. The Gram offers Wi-Fi 6e support, but no ethernet port.

An 80Wh battery (bumped to 90Wh if you opt for the Nvidia card) will keep the computer charged for over 20 hours, and even longer depending on usage.

Lastly, the webcam is now full HD, with an IR sensor for facial recognition, a major leap from the last generation’s 720p camera.

CONCLUSION:

The LG Gram is a powerful beast that weighs next to nothing, and with the newly-available 17-inch screen version, offers a large, spacious design with enough under the bonnet to please even the most picky laptop shoppers. 9/10

PROS:

16:10 ratio with an anti-glare screen

Huge battery life

Comes bundled with the LG view, which is a handy product in its own right (review coming separately)

CONS:

feel flimsy

The trackpad is overly large

Categories
Sports

The Bulldogs trade link David King “doesn’t understand”

The Western Bulldogs’ final hopes are now in the hands of fate following their loss to Fremantle on Saturday.

The Round 21 loss was a demoralizing one for Dogs fans, as the Dockers kicked their way through Luke Beveridge’s set-up with ease.

The side’s defensive system across the ground broke down again. Since the bye, they’ve conceded 94+ points on six occasions, the latest 17-point defeat coming after Fremantle kicked nine first-half goals.

The Dogs have been linked with two main targets in the upcoming trade period, one of which is former Carlton defender Liam Jones.

Jones is reported to have been enticed by a three-year deal from the Dogs and will likely sign with them when the trade period opens in October, a recruit King is supportive of.

“I understand (the play for) Jones, I 100 per cent understand because they need a key post defender that can play on a man and still beat that guy and intercept,” King said on SEN’s Whateley.

“They’re a hard combination to find, and when you find them, you hang onto them. So Jones is that man.

“I don’t know whether he’s too old or past his best or whatever but the product we saw at Carlton 18 months ago is that guy.”

But the dual-premiership Kangaroo was far less positive about the club’s links to Dockers tall Rory Lobb.

Lobb is under contract with Fremantle but will reportedly pursue a move away from the club again after almost joining GWS last year.

The Dogs have confirmed interest in Lobb. However, he’d join Aaron Naughton, Jamarra Ugle-Hagan and Josh Bruce in an already top-heavy forward line.

Sam Darcy is also touted as a forward but debuted in defense for the Dogs on Saturday evening.

“(The play for) Lobb I don’t understand why I think they’ve got that player, they’ve got a few of that player,” King continued.

“What does that look like? Does Darcy go forward next year and replace Bruce and they go younger again? You can’t have Jones, (Alex) Keath and Darcy (in the backline), it’s too tall.”

Lobb kicked four goals for Fremantle on Saturday to be the best forward on the ground.

If they are to play in September, the Dogs will need wins against GWS and Hawthorn and rely on other results going in their favour.

However, just scraping into the finals won’t cover up a subpar season after playing in last year’s Grand Final.

“So I don’t know how it’s going to look next year, all I know is the way they set up this year, they don’t win the ball back in their midzone of the field, which means the pressure is on their back six constantly and they’re not good enough to handle that level of pressure,” King concluded.

“They’ve been awful as a one-on-one defence. You had to make a decision, you either cut the supply or support back. They’ve done neither, and that’s why they find themselves where they are on the AFL table.”

Carlton and Richmond need just one more win to sink the Dogs’ final hopes, while St Kilda requires two wins to feature in September given their lower percentage.





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Categories
Australia

NT WorkSafe charges City of Palmerston over council worker’s near-drowning on lake in Durack

One of the Northern Territory’s largest councils has been charged over a near-drowning incident, after a weed harvester capsized on a lake, trapping a worker underneath.

The City of Palmerston — east of Darwin — has been charged by NT WorkSafe with nine counts of breaching the Northern Territory’s workplace health and safety laws and regulations in relation to the February 2020 incident, including four counts of failing to comply with its duty of care .

If found guilty of all charges, the council could be fined up to $7 million.

In a statement, NT WorkSafe said the council worker and a colleague had been taking it in turns using the amphibious weed harvester to clear and remove weeds from a lake in Durack, when the craft had tipped over and capsized.

The worker was briefly trapped underneath the harvester before escaping, but sustained injuries.

“NT WorkSafe will allege that the City of Palmerston failed to follow all the manufacturer’s safety recommendations, which were provided during the purchase of the craft,” WorkSafe NT said.

“One of the recommendation not followed, was when the City of Palmerston modified the craft by installing a crocodile cage, without first consulting with the manufacturer on how this modification would affect the craft’s stability and safety during operation.”

The case is due to come before Darwin Local Court on Monday, August 29.

The City of Palmerston declined to comment.

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Categories
US

Wright County deputies fatally shoot man who fled after threatening to harm family

The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is investigating an incident where deputies fatally shot a man early Sunday morning in Otsego, the Wright County Sheriff’s Office says.

The sheriff’s office says deputies went to the 12000 block of 72na Court Northeast for a report that a man had threatened to hurt his family and himself while having mental health challenges.

The report indicates the man agreed to go with responders to the hospital for an evaluation, but while waiting for the ambulance, the man grabbed a knife and fled.

Squads surrounded the neighborhood and called the Minnesota State Patrol helicopter to the area.

Shortly after, the man confronted deputies in a nearby backyard.

The sheriff’s office says the deputies tried to assess the man but were not successful.

When the man was near the deputies, he threatened them with a knife, so they shot him, the report says.

Despite life-saving efforts, the man later died at North Memorial Hospital.

No details about the man or the deputies have been provided at this time.

While the BCA investigates, the deputies have been placed on administrative leave, which the sheriff says is standard procedure.

Categories
Technology

OnePlus 10T review: this phone fully charges in 19 minutes | smartphones

EITHERnePlus is back with another mid-cycle upgrade to its top Android phone – this time with the lightning-fast-charging 10T handset, which can fully power up in under 20 minutes without destroying its battery life.

After a two-year hiatus, the “T” series of phones is back to debut new technology halfway through the year, this time with 150W charging – more than five times the power of Apple’s top iPhone.

The OnePlus 10T costs £629 ($649), undercutting fast-charging rivals from Xiaomi and other Chinese smartphone manufacturers that typically cost £1,000 or so.

The back of the OnePlus 10T.
The molded glass back feels smooth – it slides around on non-level surfaces if you’re not careful. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

On the outside the 10T follows a familiar formula. The shiny metallic sides meet glass front and back. The back plate now fully envelops the camera lump in one smooth piece of glass, similar to the Find X5 Pro from parent company Oppo.

The 6.5in screen is very good-looking and has a high refresh rate of 120Hz, which keeps things smooth. It is a little less bright than the older 10 Pro and some top rivals, but is otherwise excellent.

OnePlus’s unique alert slider, which quickly switches the phone between silent, vibrate and ring, and has been a fan favorite for years, is nowhere to be seen, which is a shame.

Specifications

  • Screen: 6.5in 120Hz FHD+ OLED (393ppi)

  • processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1

  • RAM: 8 or 16GB of RAM

  • Storage: 128 or 256GB

  • Operating system: Oxygen OS 12.1 (Android 12)

  • Camera: 50MP main, 8MP ultrawide, 2MP macro; 16MP selfie

  • connectivity: 5G, eSIM, Wi-Fi 6, NFC, Bluetooth 5.3 and GNSS

  • Water resistance: None

  • Dimensions: 163×75.4×8.8mm

  • Weight: 203.5g

A full charge in a little over 19 minutes

SuperVooc 150W charging certainly is fast.
SuperVooc 150W charging may have a stupid name but it is certainly fast. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

The 10T has Qualcomm’s very latest Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chip, which on paper is 10% faster than the regular 8 Gen 1 processor used in top Android phones at the start of the year.

It is certainly snappy and responsive, but the biggest improvement is that the chip is 30% more energy efficient, which helps conserve battery life and keeps the phone noticeably cooler in operation.

The battery life is good but not great, lasting about 36 hours between charges, with the screen on for about six hours using a mixture of messaging and media-consumption apps. That’s seven hours short of the 10 Pro, but on par with a Google Pixel 6 Pro.

What the 10T may lack in stamina, it makes up for in both charging speed and battery longevity. Using the included USB-C power adapter, the phone will fully charge in just over 19 minutes from 1% and does so consistently without getting super-hot, unlike Xiaomi’s nearest rival.

Its tremendous charging speed doesn’t hurt the battery either. OnePlus rates it for a full 1,600 charge cycles while maintaining at least 80% of the original capacity – double most rivals. That means the battery should last more than 6.5 years if charged every day and a half, so you probably won’t have to replace the battery in the lifetime of the phone, which can’t be said for most phones.

Sustainability

The phone does not contain recycled materials but is generally repairable by OnePlus, with a replacement battery costing about £20 plus labour. The company operates a trade-in scheme and is included in Oppo’s parent-company annual sustainability reports.

Oxygen OS 12.1

OnePlus in-display fingerprint scanner
OnePlus in-display fingerprint scanner is super quick and accurate for unlocking the phone, but it is placed a bit too low down on the display. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

The 10T runs the same OxygenOS 12.1 software based on Android 12 as the 10 Pro from April, not the recently announced Android 13-based OxygenOS 13. OnePlus will provide bi-monthly security patches for four years from release and three major Android version upgrades, including OxygenOS 13 later this year.

For now, it has the same slick look and similar niggles as before, so for more, see the 10 Pro review.

Camera

A photo being taken on the OnePlus 10T of a potted plant.
The OnePlus camera app is fairly simple to use with a few useful tools for getting the best shot. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

The camera system on the 10T is a downgrade from the 10 Pro, eschewing the Hasselblad technology from OnePlus’s previous smartphones and ditching the telephoto camera. It still has a 50-megapixel main and an 8MP ultrawide camera, plus a rubbish 2MP macro camera that can safely be avoided.

The main 50MP camera is pretty good, capturing shots with a good level of detail, reasonable good color balance and dynamic range. With a bit of effort you can get some really beautiful images. It becomes a little more grainy than better cameras in low light, but portrait mode, night mode and other fancy features work well. Video captured up to 4K at 60 frames a second is decent, too.

The ultrawide camera is weaker, however, struggling with detail and dynamic range, often making scenes look significantly darker than the main camera. The digital zoom is also not great, producing obviously blown-up images beyond 2x. The 16MP selfie cam produces detailed images but lacks dynamic range, becoming a bit bleached-out in bright light.

Overall the main camera is decent for the price, but not a patch on the best in the business, and it can’t compete with the 10 Pro or cheaper rivals such as Google’s Pixel 6a.

Price

The OnePlus 10T costs £629 ($649) with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage, or £729 with 16 and 256GB shipping on 25 August.

For comparison, the OnePlus 10 Pro costs £799, the Google Pixel 6 costs £599, the Pixel 6a costs £399, the Samsung Galaxy S21+ costs £949, and the Xiaomi 12 Pro costs £999.

verdict

The OnePlus 10T is a good phone at a cheaper price – one that undercuts most of its close rivals. But corners have been cut to reach that price, so how good it is will depend on what your priorities are.

It genuinely charges so fast, it changed the way I thought about using it. I no longer needed to charge it overnight because it was full again in the time it took me to brush my teeth.

It also has a better chip, slick performance and a large and fast screen.

But that screen is less bright than top models, and the camera is a marked downgrade on previous highs for the brand. The removal of OnePlus’s unique alert slider makes the phone more generic and feels like an erosion of the brand by parent company Oppo, which is a shame. Four years of software support is also a bit short for 2022, when top rivals offer at least five.

Buy it for the performance and charging, not the camera, and the OnePlus 10T is a good top-spec phone at a highly competitive price. But with extremely good mid-range phones such as the Pixel 6a costing £400-ish, is that enough?

Pros: Slick performance, good software, reasonable battery life, sub-20 minute full charge, long battery longevity, decent screen, reasonable price.

Cons: no optical zoom, weak ultrawide camera, useless macro camera, no water-resistance rating, no alert slider makes it feel more generic, only four years of updates.

The OnePlus 10T lying flat on a table showing its molded glass back in a light blue-green colour.
The phone is available in this hospital-green colour, which is a fingerprint magnet, or the more interesting textured black. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

Other reviews

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Sports

14 SANFL players invited to NAB AFL National Draft Combine

By ZAC MILBANK

SANFL will be represented by 14 players when the NAB AFL National Draft Combine returns to Melbourne in October for the first time since 2019.

After holding a series of state-based combines for the past two years due to Covid-19, the AFL has reintroduced the national version to be held at Marvel Stadium and the Melbourne Tennis Center from Friday October 7 to Sunday October 9.

Torrens University SA U18 captain Adam D’Aloia heads the list of Croweaters, with fellow Woodville-West Torrens product Mattaes Phillipou and potential Adelaide father-son draftee Max Michalanney.

SA’s plethora of tall prospects are also among the list, including West Adelaide trio Harry Lemmey, Harry Barnett and Tom Scully, Norwood’s Phoenix Foster and North Adelaide high-flyer Isaac Keeler, who is also tied to the Crows as a Next Generation Academy player.

Essendon Next Generation Academy player Anthony Munkara, from the Northern Territory, has impressed while playing with West Adelaide while South Adelaide’s Jaiden Magor will be encouraged by receiving an invite despite missing most of the AFL U18 National Championships with an ankle injury.

A South Australian NAB AFL Combine will also be held this year, a week later on Saturday October 15.

Categories
Australia

WA NDIS participant Mitchell Pearce dies in Busselton hospital waiting for disability accommodation

The family of a disabled man who died after spending more than four months in hospital waiting for accommodation have described the National Disability Insurance Scheme and aged care system in Australia as “broken”.

Mitchell Pearce, 52, died on Saturday in hospice care, little more than a day after NDIS Minister Bill Shorten ordered the agency to find him appropriate accommodation as a “matter of urgency.”

His sister Justine Richmond said her brother died peacefully surrounded by people who loved him.

Mr Pearce had been in Busselton Hospital since March 29.

His family said Mr Pearce, who was disabled since suffering brain tumors as a child, had lost the will to live in hospital, and refused to eat or drink.

Vow to keep fighting

While it was too late for her brother, Mrs Richmond urged people to keep speaking up for change.

Two women stand in a home garden looking at a camera
Mr Pearce’s sister Mrs Richmond, left, and mother Judith Pearce want people to speak up and bring about structural change to the NDIS.(ABC South West: Georgia Loney)

She said since the family’s story came out on Friday she had been inundated with people wanting to share their experiences.

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Categories
US

Front Range under flood watch as multiple rounds of thunderstorms move in

DENVER — A flood advisory has been issued for Denver and Adams counties until 8:15 pm Sunday. Multiple warnings have been issued Sunday evening as a flood watch remains in effect for Denver and the Front Range as storms move through.

A heavy rain threat may produce rainfall of 1 to 2 inches in as little as 45 minutes, with locally higher storm totals possible, according to the National Weather Service.

Screen Shot 2022-08-07 at 9.03.12 AM.png

N.W.S.

Multiple rounds of thunderstorms from mid-afternoon through Sunday evening are expected. The heavy rain is expected to end late Sunday, with the flood watch set to expire at midnight.

Recent burn areas are especially vulnerable, leading to possible flash flooding and debris flows in areas previously ravaged by flash floods earlier this year.

The Cameron Peak and Calwood burn scar areas are included in the flood watch which goes into effect Sunday afternoon.

Screen Shot 2022-08-07 at 9.03.24 AM.png

N.W.S.

“The focus for storms today is expected in and near the foothills. The weak front that pushes south this morning, stalls as it pushes up the east slopes of the Front Range foothills and mountains,” the NWS forecast discussion said.

Next week will be drier and warmer, with highs in the mid-80s on Monday and only a slight chance for a scattered late-day storm.

Denver7 Weather

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Categories
Technology

Netgear Nighthawk RAXE500 – super-speedy Wi-Fi right off the bat! -STACK

Keeping up with advances in technology can be challenging, so when an opportunity comes along to get onto some serious futureproofing, it’s well worth checking out. Like Netgear’s super-powerful Nighthawk RAXE500 tri-band Wi-Fi 6E router.

Designed to provide the sort of raw performance that’s required for top connection speeds in all internet uses – ranging from streaming the highest resolution video content backwards and forwards, to running your small business (including those ever-present Zoom meetings) to, of course, gaming – the key to the latest Nighthawk’s technology leap is the introduction of Wi-Fi 6E, using the previously mainly emergency broadcasts-only 6GHz band.

This is an advancement upon the fairly recently introduced Wi-Fi 6 protocol, providing faster speeds (depending upon your internet connection, of course) and band-exclusive congestion-free signal, with 200 per cent more spectrum than the well-established dual- band.

If you imagine the 2.4GHz band as a laneway, and 5Ghz as an average two-way street, then 6GHz is essentially the equivalent of a multi-lane freeway, allowing smoother streaming, and lower latency when using high-bandwidth applications.

Plus, it can handle up to 60 Wi-Fi devices, so those days of various pieces of equipment in the home fighting for bandwidth are relegated to history.

While the range of devices supporting Wi-Fi 6E isn’t massive currently, being the big new thing in connectivity means manufacturers are jostling to introduce support. Being prepared for the future is half the battle and, in the meantime, you’re getting full backwards compatibility from a device with an incredible specification sheet that’s an ode to power. This Nighthawk is equipped with a 64-bit, 1.8 GHz quad-core processor, which can provide enough juice to cater for all wired and wireless demands at blistering connection speeds.

If you’ve invested in gigabit NBN then this latest Netgear wonder has the grunt to handle whatever’s thrown at it, with the ability to operate up to a blistering 10.8Gbps Wi-Fi speed.

This Wi-Fi oomph can also be spread wider from where you install your new Nighthawk router, with eight powerful built-in beamforming antennae able to cover up to just over 30 square meters. Rather than going for the porcupine look that you get with many routers, the antennae are sealed inside two folding wings, in a device that while larger than some – there’s a lot of power to house – looks sleek, and not unlike something that you might find in the modern-day Batcave. Obviously where you place the router will affect that wireless range – unobstructed on a flat surface or mounted to a clear wall space is best, so that the antennae have room to do their stuff. That being said, we tested ours with it out of sight behind our entertainment center and Wi-Fi was still solid at all extremes of our flat. Yes, power!

If it’s finally time to upgrade from that functional but feature-lacking ISP router that you’ve been getting by with and experience the blazingly fast future of Wi-Fi, it’s worth doing it properly. The Netgear Nighthawk RAXE500 tri-band Wi-Fi 6E router is amongst the most futureproof options available, offering best network performance that your gaming will thank you for – as will any other connected functionalities that you may throw at this superpowered device.

Buy now at JB Hi-Fi

The Netgear Orbi – Slow Wi-Fi and streaming dropouts in your home can be solved with a mesh network