Tag: reviews

  • Tuxedo InfinityBook Pro Review (2024): A Top Linux Laptop

    Tuxedo InfinityBook Pro Review (2024): A Top Linux Laptop

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    The other thing I noticed is the European-style keyboard. Tuxedo sent me a German keyboard, which is fine, I touch type anyway, so once I set the layout to US in the settings, the keyboard was mostly fine. Except for the Enter key. Most US keyboards use what’s known as an ANSI design, which features a long thin Enter key. Tuxedo uses an ISO-format keyboard, which has a taller Enter key with another key to the left of it. This is helpful for European users because it provides another accent key, but it’s definitely something that will trip you up for a bit if you’re used to US keyboards. I got around this by remapping the extra accent key to Enter (using Input Remapper), so that even if I mistyped, I got the result I intended.

    Otherwise the keyboard was quite nice. The keys are on the tall side for a chiclet-style keyboard and have a satisfying amount of travel. I was able to type just as fast as I do on my Thinkpad T14.

    Tuxedo also offers a wealth of keyboard customization options. You can put pretty much anything you want on the keyboard, including nothing. You can also have your custom logo etched in the lid.

    The InfinityBook Pro is built around an Intel Core i7-13700H. The model I tested had integrated graphics, but there is an option to configure your InfinityBook Pro with a high-end Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 graphics card. I never felt the need for it, but if you plan to do anything more than light gaming, that’s probably the way to go. (The screen refresh tops out at 90 Hz, which is fine for gaming but not quite as fast as some displays.) I did a good bit of video editing on this machine, and while that did get the fan spinning, it was plenty fast for my needs.

    Speaking of fans, the InfinityBook Pro 14 is equipped with a dual-fan cooling system, which is double what you’ll get in most thin laptops of this design. It works well, too. Even as I exported large 5.2K video footage down to 4K, the laptop never got too hot to have in my lap.

    As with most Linux laptops, battery life is good, but can’t match new MacBooks. Doing our usual battery drain test (looping a Full HD video at 75 percent brightness), the InfinityBook Pro managed 6.5 hours. I haven’t felt constrained by battery life in the months I’ve tested the InfinityBook Pro. I liked the brightness at about 40 percent for web browsing and document, so that’s generally where I left it unless I was editing photos or video. Average use, at 40 percent brightness, generally got me between nine and ten hours. A full day’s work and some change. This can be further improved and tweaked using Tuxedo’s excellent Control Center app (more on that below).

    Ports on the Tuxedo InfinityBook Pro 4

    Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

    Ports on the Tuxedo InfinityBook Pro 4

    Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

    The InfinityBook offers more ports than you might think. There’s a Thunderbolt 4/USB-C port that can charge as well, a USB-C 3.2 Gen2 port, two USB-A ports, a full-size SD card reader, HDMI port, headphone/mic port, and a separate power plug. The latter is the fastest way to charge up, though you can use a standard USB-C cord to charge. You’ll want want a 100-watt charger, though. My 60-watt charger worked, but under heavy load—exporting video for example—the laptop drained power faster than it could charge. Tuxedo’s website has a whole page devoted to the best settings to charge from USB-C.

    The trackpad on the InfinityBook Pro is large and responsive. It did occasionally pick up my palms as touch events while I was typing, but I prefer to turn off tapping anyway.

    It Runs Tuxedo OS, or Other Linux Distros

    Screenshot of Tuxedo OS

    Tuxedo via Scott Gilbertson

    Like System76, Tuxedo laptops ship with a customized OS based on Ubuntu Linux, though they will run just about any Linux distribution. (I tested Fedora to see if it worked and Arch because that’s what I use most of the time.) Tuxedo OS, which is built around the KDE desktop, provides a good, beginner-friendly Linux experience.

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  • Nanit Pro Camera Review (2024): A Super Smart, Expensive Baby Monitor

    Nanit Pro Camera Review (2024): A Super Smart, Expensive Baby Monitor

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    I tested both a sleep sack and a breathing band with my 18-month-old toddler. I found he was too tall for the sleep sack designed for 12- to 24-month-old babies, but the breathing band worked great sitting on top of his pajamas and sleep sack. The only downside was, being a toddler, he noticed I had added something to his sleepwear, and that it was Velcro he could rip off. Some nights I was able to distract him from removing it before he fell asleep, while other nights it was a lost cause. It didn’t bother him at all while he slept, but toddlers are perceptive and determined little people. He made it his mission to open the Velcro while he was awake.

    It was cool watching his breathing on the app, and Nanit has a chart with breathing rates based on age, so you can use that to check how normal the numbers are. My son’s breathing rate actually dipped to one below Nanit’s expected range, but it didn’t make the app alert me.

    At 18 months, he’s not really the target demographic for this feature; it’s for younger babies and parents worried about SIDS. I didn’t get any false alerts while using it, but technology like this isn’t perfect and it’s always possible to get a false alert. Still, knowing how many times I stared at my son while watching him breathe in those early days, I probably would’ve slept a little better if I’d had an alert system in place.

    Wi-Fi Watches

    Many monitors use Wi-Fi, and Nanit is included in our list. Not all of us want a Wi-Fi-enabled camera staring at our kid all night long (and you, when you come in and out of the nursery).

    It’s not my preferred style of monitor. My favorite is the radio-based Eufy SpaceView (8/10, WIRED Recommends), and my husband continued to use our Eufy while I tested the Nanit. We found that the radio connection was a split second faster; cries and movement would come through on the handheld Eufy about a half-second before the Nanit app. Which makes sense—the Nanit has to send the feed to the cloud and then to your app, versus the direct connection between devices like the Eufy.

    I often have issues with Wi-Fi connection in my apartment, but my network problems didn’t cause any major disconnections for the Nanit. I would usually see one reported disconnection overnight (the Nanit app includes any connection drops in the overnight report of how the baby slept) but the camera would easily reconnect itself and continue working as normal.

    Nanit promises that video is encrypted and is only pushed through their servers. The app only allows you to view videos for multiple days if you pay for a subscription, and Nanit confirmed for us that no videos are stored on their servers without a subscription. Nanit has three subscription plans to give you video storage: the Sleep plan, which is $50 a month (you have to sign up online); the Memories plan, a $120 plan with two days of continuous video history and 30 days of video clips (short videos that are triggered by sound or movement); and the Milestones plan, a $300 plan with seven days of continuous video history and unlimited video clips. You’re also able to disable the continuous video feed if you want, but not clips that pair with movement and sound notifications.

    I do find myself checking the app’s recap of how my son slept each morning. It tells me how long he slept, how many night visits he may have had, and his average breaths per minute if he let me put the breathing band on him. It also shows me clips if he woke up. The report would have more information about his sleep position and activity if I had one of the memberships mentioned above, but I don’t feel like I’m missing out. I still get a lot of information, and things like a fun little movement map included in the report that shows the baby’s main sleeping areas in the crib.

    Not every feature is necessary, but I love how it has made each night’s sleep a fun little data report. If you’re a data geek too and don’t mind a Wi-Fi monitor in your kids’ room, the Nanit performs well across its wide wheelhouse of features.

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  • Book, Movie, and Product Reviews Are Being Bought and Paid For

    Book, Movie, and Product Reviews Are Being Bought and Paid For

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    Anyone who writes reviews for a living has heard it before, and plenty: “How much did you get paid to write this?”

    I’ve been a critic of many things over the years: movies, wine and spirits, and all manner of tech gear, for WIRED and other publications. And no matter what it is that I’m writing about, there’s always that one guy who pipes up in the comments suggesting that my opinions were bought and paid for.

    It was invariably easy to dismiss these comments, but things got more complicated in September, when Vulture published a story that revealed the untold scale of the paid reviews industry. The story showed, among other things, how publicists were paying some independent film critics to review indie films and non-mainstream releases. These reviews, which were often published on independent film review websites, were then getting grabbed by Rotten Tomatoes. This meant, the story suggested, that a coveted Certified Fresh score on the hallowed Tomatometer could potentially be bought, and not earned.

    The story caused chaos in the film industry.

    Cast an eye beyond the world of art houses and streaming services, and you soon realize that this practice is commonplace. Reviews of everything—from gadgets to books, apparel, hotels, booze, you name it—are all potentially compromised, depending on your definition of that word. And the more you dig, the weirder things get.

    In the wake of Vulture’s story, Rotten Tomatoes took action and began to boot movie reviewers who it believed had taken payments off the platform. In doing so, the company upended the lives of many film reviewers and blew a hole in a common tactic employed by indie titles to get visibility. Defenders of the practice argued that those smaller films would have gone unnoticed by critics absent a financial incentive to watch them.

    The scenario points to a fundamental paradox in online reviews. Indie films—heck, indie anything—make the creative industry a better place, and boosting their signal above the noise is a net win for anyone with tastes outside of the mainstream. The practice of amplifying these independent voices by paying for coverage can be seen as deceitful, dishonest, and mercenary by readers who aren’t aware of the bigger picture.

    That bigger picture is in fact a blockbuster. No matter what you produce, there’s probably a way to buy a review for it. A network of platforms exists to connect filmmakers, authors, and product manufacturers with writers, blogs, and publications who can boost their brand for a fee. My inbox is inundated by overseas manufacturers of white-label tech products who are desperate to pay me to write a review if I can get it published in WIRED or another outlet. I politely declined, and for decades I never accepted outside payment to write a review of a product.

    Until, one day, I did.

    The Trouble With Bunker 15

    Lane Brown’s piece in Vulture, “The Decomposition of Rotten Tomatoes,” claimed that the popular movie review site could be “easily hacked.” At the core of the article is a publicity company called Bunker 15. It’s one of many businesses that help independent filmmakers get reviews for their movies that can count toward the all-important Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer rating. For the service, it pays some reviewers $50 per review.

    Brown emailed me before his story was published to ask if I’d been paid by Bunker 15 for my review of the film Ophelia–also central to his piece–and, honestly, I didn’t know if I had or not. I published my review at Film Racket, an independent film website that I’ve run since 2013, more than five years ago, and I don’t have records going back that far. I told Brown it was possible, and that we did work with Bunker 15 on other films over the years. After the story was published I did more digging and discovered that, yes, I was one of the critics who was paid $50 to write a review of the movie, and that it was probably the first film the company ever submitted to Film Racket for proposed coverage. It’s not a great movie, but I gave it three stars out of five, which Rotten Tomatoes marked as “fresh.” It remains the only review I have ever personally written of a Bunker 15 film or for which I’ve been paid by a third party; other writers did the rest.

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  • Nubia Z60 Ultra Review: Bigger Isn’t Always Better

    Nubia Z60 Ultra Review: Bigger Isn’t Always Better

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    I did not expect to like the Nubia Z60 Ultra. It’s a big, chunky slab packed with high-end specs at a relatively affordable price from a lesser-known Chinese manufacturer. The usual proposition is that you sacrifice on the software front to get cutting-edge hardware without breaking the bank. Sure enough, Nubia’s unimaginatively named MyOS adds little to Android 14, but the Z60 Ultra confounded my expectations in other ways.

    Person holding the Nubia Z60 Ultra smartphone

    Photograph: Simon Hill

    Refreshingly free of bloatware, the Nubia Z60 Ultra has an expansive screen, uninterrupted by any camera cutout (there’s one under the display). Performance is near flawless, with a flagship processor providing plenty of grunt under the hood. But what really won me over was the versatile triple-lens camera. It’s a little inconsistent, but after a week with the phone, I have captured some lovely photos.

    While the Nubia Z60 Ultra has a design that will turn some folks off, I have thoroughly enjoyed using it. There are things you can criticize, and I’ll get to them, but if you hunger for something different, and gaming and photography are priorities for you, the Nubia Z60 Ultra is worth a look.

    A Bold Brick

    Nubia was originally a subsidiary of the ZTE brand, but it became an independent company in 2015. (Nubia’s PR team specifically mentioned that the two are separate companies.) Nubia’s gaming subbrand RedMagic has been turning out impressively powerful, aggressively priced, and slightly unrefined gaming phones for several years now, and the Z60 Ultra bears some relation.

    Nubia Z60 Ultra smartphone next to an iPhone

    Here is the Nubia Z60 Ultra side by side with the Apple iPhone 14 Pro to give you an idea of its size.

    Photograph: Simon Hill

    Sliding the Nubia Z60 Ultra from the box, I was struck by its heft. This phone weighs 246 grams. For context, Apple’s biggest phone, the iPhone 15 Pro Max (8/10, WIRED Recommends), weighs 221 grams. The Z60 Ultra is a rectangular slab in a matte black or silver finish. My black review unit has an aluminum frame with textured glass on the back and a prominent camera module. The bold design also has shiny red metallic highlights around the main lens and a textured power button. Above the power button is a volume rocker, and below is a handy sliding switch that quickly launches the camera but can be used for a different shortcut. The SIM card tray and USB-C port are on the bottom edge. The Z60 Ultra is thick enough that it’s easy to balance on its sides or ends.

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  • Tribit’s Stormbox Flow Review: A Budget Speaker With Great Battery

    Tribit’s Stormbox Flow Review: A Budget Speaker With Great Battery

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    You can get a whole bunch of good stuff in a Bluetooth speaker for less than $100, especially if you’re willing to consider up-and-coming audio brands like Tribit. The company’s $80 Stormbox Flow (which is sometimes $20 off) is fully loaded, offering a sleek yet rugged design, plenty of features, and battery life that holds out longer than anything I’ve tested.

    The Stormbox Flow’s sound quality isn’t as poised or detailed as the best Bluetooth speakers we’ve tested, and its hefty 1.5-lb weight makes it better for your back patio than a beach getaway. Otherwise, Tribit’s latest is surprisingly versatile, making it a real contender for those seeking a pliable wireless companion on a tight-ish budget.

    Flex Like a Bose

    If you’ve seen Bose’s Soundlink Flex, you’ll feel right at home with the Stormbox Flow. Much like how many of Tribit’s earbuds mimic Apple’s popular AirPods, the Flow does a great Soundlink impression—and that’s a good thing. Pulling the speaker from its garish yellow box reveals surprising style for the price, with sleek lines of matte plastic that look and feel premium. Like most modern portable speakers, it’s built to take on the elements with an IP67 waterproof rating, indicating it’s been tested to block dust and survive a quick dunk in a pool or lake.

    Tribit Stormbox Flow

    Photograph: Tribit

    Along the speaker’s top panel is a handy band of raised command keys for controlling power, playback, volume, and Bluetooth pairing. There’s also a key that looks like an infinity symbol which can pair the Stormbox Flow with a second model for stereo playback.

    Rubbery feet on the speaker’s bottom panel help diffuse it from surfaces to keep it from rumbling when the bass gets heavy, while a second set of feet at the speaker’s backside lets it blast sound upward if you’d like. With only one active driver beneath the Stormbox Flow’s acoustic grille (along with a passive radiator to extend the bass), the availability of multiple playback positions significantly improves the speaker’s reach when set on a table or countertop.

    A strap along the side to hang the speaker provides another playback position, but considering its weight, you’ll need a sturdy hook. Tie the speaker to a backpack like the website shows and you’re in for a bumpy ride.

    The Full Package

    The Stormbox Flow offers nearly everything you’d expect in a great Bluetooth speaker, and some you wouldn’t, such as its built-in speakerphone. The once-ubiquitous feature has gone out of fashion, and I admittedly discovered it by accident, calling a friend while jamming out. I tested the feature over a few days and discovered it produced clear and full calls on my end and good clarity for callers on the other end, with one friend saying it sounded as good or better than my iPhone’s speaker.

    Tribit Stormbox Flow outside in the snow

    Photograph: Ryan Waniata

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