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8 Jul 2025   
  
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Get $415 off an Alienware 4K OLED gaming monitor
OLED monitors have been the hot ticket for PC gamers for over a year now… maybe because it’s impossible to find a decent price on a new GPU, so you might as well look elsewhere for your upgrades. Today the popular Alienware series is offering a steep discount on a 32-inch, 4K version, down to just $765 with some combination discounts. The AW3225QF OLED monitor is already discounted to $849.99, $350 off its original price on Dell.com. But SlickDeals penny-pinchers have found a way to drive that price even lower. If you log in with a Dell account (new or returning), you can find a 10 percent off coupon for Alienware monitors under “Benefits” that can be applied to this or any other model. Apply that coupon at checkout, and you get an extra $85 off, bringing the price down to an incredible $764.99. Shipping (at least to my Pennsylvania address) is free. Dell This 4K, 32-inch monitor might just bring your gaming monitor to its knees if you try to hit the 240Hz maximum speed of the curved panel. With G-Sync and FreeSync support plus a .03ms response time, it’s built for gaming, but thanks to that standard 16:9 aspect ratio and HDMI eARC support, it’ll be great for video or console use, too. The only bummer on the spec list is that it lacks USB-C video support. It has a USB-C port (as well as two USB-A ports), but it’s only for data and some mild charging, so this isn’t a perfect companion for a gaming laptop. Still, this is a great price on a great monitor, and you can read all about it in PCWorld’s full review of the Alienware AW3225QF. If this isn’t quite what you’re looking for, keep an eye on our roundups of the best monitors on the market and the best monitor deals for Amazon Prime Day 2025, which kicks off tomorrow, July 8th. Get an Alienware 4K 32-inch OLED gaming monitor for $765 with couponView Deal 
© 2025 PC World 3:05am 

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Ikea’s Dirigera smart hub just got a big Matter boost
It’s been more than a year since Ikea’s smart hub got a Matter update, but up until now, the Dirigea hub could only act as a bridge between Ikea devices and existing Matter networks. That’s about to change thanks to a just-released firmware update.  Dirigea firmware update 2.805.6 gives the Dirigea hub Matter controller capabilities, meaning it can now discover and take charge of Matter devices, including those from third-party manufacturers. The firmware update was confirmed by an Ikea rep on Reddit.  Previously, the Dirigera hub could only expose Ikea devices to other Matter controllers, such as the Apple HomePod mini, the Amazon Echo, and the Google Nest Hub.  The budding Matter standard is a big deal in the smart home world, as it’s designed to unite such competing smart home platforms as Amazon’s Alexa, Apple Home, and Google Home. But while Matter shows promise, it’s a relatively new standard that’s still experiencing growing pains.  The ability to use the Dirigera hub as a Matter controller is great news, but even better is word that the firmware update has activated the hub’s Thread radio.  Specifically, Reddit users and Matter Alpha are reporting that the Dirigera hub can now act as a Thread border router, a feature that allows the hub to directly connect to Thread-only Matter devices as well as expose them to the internet. Thread is a low-power wireless mesh protocol that’s a pillar of the Matter standard. With its new functionality, the Ikea Dirigera hub joins the Apple HomePod mini, Amazon Echo, and Google Nest Hub as devices that are both Matter controllers and Thread border routers.  A couple of Thread-enabled Ikea smart devices had already been leaked earlier this year: the Ikea Timmerflotte, a temperature and humidity sensor, and the Ikea Bilresa Dual Button, a smart switch.  The revelation of those two Thread devices had previously fueled speculation that Ikea might soon add Thread border router capabilities to the Dirigera hub, or perhaps release an all-new hub with a Thread radio.  Matter controller functionality for the Dirigera hub is still in beta, and you’ll need to update the hub as well as the Ikea Home app to give the feature a try. 
© 2025 PC World 2:45am 

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Google Chrome now checks if your PC can upgrade to Windows 11
Microsoft’s support for Windows 10 will expire on October 14th, 2025, after which users can get an extra year of security updates under certain conditions, such as having a Microsoft account or paying a $30 fee. Windows Latest reports that Google Chrome has already begun preparing for this by quietly checking whether a Windows 10 PC meets the requirements for Windows 11. This is not intended to block users, but to collect anonymous usage statistics. These results will likely help determine how many users are still running Chrome on devices that can’t be upgraded to Windows 11, which will influence how long Chrome continues to be supported on Windows 10. This data could affect when future updates roll out and how long users on older systems get full browser support and security patches. 
© 2025 PC World 3:05am 

Lexar NM1090 Pro SSD review: Fast overall, but slower among peers
At a glanceExpert's Rating Pros Good overall performance DRAM for fast random ops Nice-looking heat spreader Available with beefier heatsink Cons A tad off the PCIe 5.0/DRAM pace On the pricey side Our Verdict The Lexar NM1090 Pro was slightly off the pace of its rivals, but costs about the same. A good drive in the overall scheme, but on a lower rung of the PCIe 5.0/DRAM ladder. Price When Reviewed This value will show the geolocated pricing text for product undefined Best Pricing Today Best Prices Today: Lexar NM1090 Pro PCIe 5.0 SSD Retailer Price $127.98 View Deal Price comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwide Product Price Price comparison from Backmarket Lexar’s NM1090 Pro is a fast SSD in the overall scheme of things. However, it’s on the slow side for a PCIe 5.0 SSD sporting DRAM, while costing roughly the same as the faster competition. That places it firmly in the buy-at-the-right-discount category. Read on to learn more, then see our roundup of the best SSDs for comparison. What are the Lexar NM1090 Pro’s features? The specs for the NM1090 Pro sound fantastic: PCIe 5.0, 1GB of DRAM per TB of capacity, 232-layer TLC NAND, and a Silicon Motion SM2508 controller. The 2280 (22mm wide, 80mm long) form-factor drive also carries a slightly higher than usual 700TBW per TB of capacity rating to mitigate its five-year warranty. I have no complaints about the NM1090 Pro’s looks. I.e., it looks fast. TBW is roughly the guaranteed terabytes that may be written to an SSD before it goes into read-only mode. However, these are somewhat cynical numbers designed to ward off warranty abuse such as using consumer SSDs in high-traffic servers. How much does the Lexar NM1090 Pro cost? Lexar quoted us $180 for the 1TB capacity drive, $270 for the 2TB capacity, and $495 for the 4TB capacity we tested. However, the 1TB and 2TB capacities were on sale on Amazon for $139.49 and $224.49, respectively. Oddly, the 2TB version with a beefy heatsink was only $219.49. All of those prices are roughly on par for a PCIe 5.0, NVMe SSD utilizing DRAM. In other words, it’s not a super bargain, but it’s also not prohibitively pricier than the competition. That means it’s all about performance… How fast is the Lexar NM1090? Generally speaking, the NM1090 Pro performed well — though, again, not quite as fast as much of the PCIe 5.0/DRAM competition. There was also the occasional inconsistency: a slow performance in our 450GB write and wildly uneven performances in AS SSD. We did see some extremely varied performances in one test session, but that was likely the fault of the then state of our test bed which was recovering from a bad R-Drive Image backup. The NM1090 Pro was slightly slower than the competition in sequential transfers, as evidenced by the CrystalDiskMark 8 results shown below. This is not a bad performance in CrystalDiskMark’s sequential tests, but is not top of the heap either The NM1090 Pro was within shouting distance of the competition in CrystalDiskMark’s random tests. These are still much better 4K results than what you’ll see with PCIe 5.0 HMB (host memory buffer) designs. DRAM helps. The NM1090 Pro was within shouting distance of the competition, but generally a bit behind in CrystalDiskMark’s random tests. The 48GB transfer time below is the best case scenario — i.e., the fastest time the NM1090 turned in. On several occasions during our first look, the 48GB single file write was far slower. The NM1090 Pro was basically on par for our 48GB transfer tests The NM1090 Pro’s 450GB write time caught us off guard. The NM1090 I tested was a 4TB drive and should’ve been far more competitive with the XPG Mars 980 Blade and Samsung 9100 Pro. And this was its fastest performance; other 450GB writes in our first session took almost 4 minutes. This is a rather poor 450GB performance for a PCI 5.0 SSD. In the end, the NM1090 Pro finished 10th out of the 12 PCIe 5.0/DRAM SSDs I’ve tested. Lest you get the impression that it’s all bad, I should also note that the NM1090 Pro is still 15th fastest overall out of all 58 NVMe SSDs that have sat in our testbed. Lower tier among its direct peers, but upper tier in the grand scheme things. Should you buy the Lexar NM1090 Pro? The NM1090 Pro performed largely as advertised. However, the slowish 450GB write and slightly subpar synthetic benchmark performances place it behind the Samsung 9100 Pro, XPG Mars 980, and many other PCIe 5.0 SSDs on our to-buy list. Still, at the right price… How we test Our storage tests currently utilize Windows 11 (22H2) 64-bit running on a Z790 (PCIe 5.0) motherboard/i5-12400 CPU combo with two Kingston Fury 32GB DDR5 modules (64GB of memory total). Intel integrated graphics are used. The 48GB transfer tests utilize an ImDisk RAM disk taking up 58GB of the 64GB total memory. The 450GB file is transferred from a Samsung 990 Pro 2TB, which also contains the operating system. Each test is performed on a newly formatted and TRIM’d drive so the results are optimal. Note that as any drive fills up, performance will decrease due to less NAND for secondary caching, and other factors. The performance numbers shown apply only to the drive we were shipped as well as the capacity tested. SSD performance can vary by capacity due to more or fewer chips to read/write across and the amount of NAND available for secondary caching (writing TLC/QLC as SLC). Vendors also occasionally swap components. If you ever notice a large discrepancy between the performance you experience and that which we report (systems being roughly equal), by all means — let us know. 
© 2025 PC World 2:45am 

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