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| PC World - 18 Jun (PC World)TL;DR: Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2022 is down to just $27.97 (reg. $499), giving you access to premium development tools without the premium price tag.
Whether you’re building your first app or managing large-scale software projects, having the right tools makes all the difference. Visual Studio Professional 2022 gives developers a powerful, flexible environment for writing, debugging, testing, and deploying code across multiple platforms, and right now, it’s available for a one-time price of just $27.97.
This isn’t a trial or a watered-down version. It’s the full suite of Microsoft’s flagship IDE, ready to support Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, and web development. You can work with .NET MAUI to create cross-platform apps, use Blazor to build interactive UIs with C#, and even run and debug C++ or .NET code on Linux.
Speed up your workflow with modern features:
Hot reload: apply code changes without restarting.
IntelliCode: offers AI-assisted code suggestions and autocompletions.
CodeLens: insights on references, changes, and test results without leaving your code.
Live Share: collaborate with teammates in real time with no screen sharing required.
If you’re looking to level up your development stack or need a reliable platform for professional coding projects, this deal is a no-brainer. Just don’t wait too long—licenses are limited, and once they’re gone, they’re gone.
Get Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2022 now for just $27.97 (reg. $499) while these codes last.
Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2022 for WindowsSee Deal
StackSocial prices subject to change. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 18 Jun (PC World)One of the most prominent features of this year’s spate of graphics card launches—from both AMD and Nvidia—is the pricing issues they’ve faced. Due to various factors, GPUs that launched at modest MSRPs are selling with price tags several hundred dollars beyond.
Though some newer and more affordable cards are bucking the trend, like AMD’s Radeon RX 9060 XT, most gamers are simply being priced out by the latest GPUs. Anyone looking to upgrade is likely having a hard time, and a new study by Liquid Web suggests these prices are sending gamers toward cloud gaming in greater numbers than ever before.
Liquid Web (admittedly a cloud hosting company) polled 1,000 gamers of various ages and backgrounds on their recent PC upgrade interests and intentions. Some of the results are quite stark.
PC gamers are being priced out
Over half of all polled gamers said they had been so affected by price hikes and scalping on GPUs that they’d been forced to delay—or even cancel—their PC upgrading plans altogether. In fact, 43% of respondents said that life expenses (e.g., rent and bills) had forced them to skip graphics card purchases. You have to imagine there’s a lot of crossover there.
The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 Founders Edition is incredible, but its exorbitant price puts it out of reach of just about everyone.Foundry
That’s no surprise considering the sky-high graphics card prices we’re seeing. Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 5090 was supposed to sell at $2,000, but it quickly rocketed to over $3,000 at most retailers. Even much-more-affordable cards, like the RTX 5070 Ti and 5070, ended up retailing for hundreds of dollars north of their MSRP in the weeks following launch.
The downside of rapidly rising GPU prices isn’t just that PC gamers miss out on next-generation gaming experiences—it disillusions them to the idea of upgrading at all. Among gamers who were ready to upgrade, 39% said they would wait at least another one to two years to upgrade their graphics cards, while a further 37% said they’d run what they have into the ground and only replace it when it dies.
Then again, maybe by that time they won’t feel the need to upgrade anymore. Liquid Web’s study also shed insight on gamers switching to cloud gaming, where upgrades aren’t dependent on hardware availability or retail pricing. And there were an impressive number of respondents who were keen on the idea.
Will the cloud replace hardware?
Cloud gaming has come a long way over the past decade, and today it’s a relatively solid alternative to native play. Geforce Now, Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation Plus—they all offer relatively affordable options for playing large libraries of PC and console games without needing to own the proper hardware… or, in some cases, even the games.
As of this writing, cloud gaming is far from replacing local gaming. There are a number of factors as to why that is, but for the gamers in this study, it’s mainly due to latency problems. 62% of respondents (mostly Millenial and Gen Z) said they would switch to cloud gaming full-time instead of playing on their own hardware if latency were “eliminated.”
Cloud gaming makes gaming anywhere with anything a lot easier.Muha Ajjan / Unsplash
Unfortunately, that’s just not going to happen. While modern hardware and networking is fast, there’s just no beating the physical immediacy of local rendering on your own machine.
However, when the question was asked more broadly of respondents, a sizeable number (42%) said they’d skip upgrading their graphics cards if “their needs were met” with either cloud gaming or AI upscaling. That’s a much more achievable goal for cloud providers who want to deliver a premium remote gaming experience.
Around 20% of Millennial and Gen Z gamers believe that high-end GPUs will become less essential in the next three years because of cloud gaming and the growing improvements to AI upscaling like DLSS and FSR. Meanwhile, nearly 60% who are still holding out for a GPU upgrade to improve their gaming experience.
I’m not entirely sold on the idea of AI upscaling being everything, but frame generation has made some impressive leaps lately. If Nvidia keeps its focus on AI and can’t figure out how to keep its GPUs in better stock, we may all be relying on more cloud and AI features before long. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | RadioNZ - 17 Jun (RadioNZ) Customers lost internet for up to an hour. Read...Newslink ©2025 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | Stuff.co.nz - 17 Jun (Stuff.co.nz) The Downdetector site shows reports of outages across the North Island. Read...Newslink ©2025 to Stuff.co.nz |  |
|  | | RadioNZ - 17 Jun (RadioNZ) Outage website Downdetector shows a spike in reported outages for One, Spark and 2Degrees. Read...Newslink ©2025 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | Ars Technica - 17 Jun (Ars Technica)The soaring price of copper makes networks tempting targets for thieves. Read...Newslink ©2025 to Ars Technica |  |
|  | | Stuff.co.nz - 17 Jun (Stuff.co.nz) The internet mogul has moved back to Queenstown, after spending months in Dunedin recovering from a stroke. Read...Newslink ©2025 to Stuff.co.nz |  |
|  | | PC World - 17 Jun (PC World)At a glanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Online storage, multi-device sync, and mirroring
Fantastically affordable lifetime plans
Extremely secure and private
Free 2TB account
Cons
Could use better help and task feedback
The backup is actually one-way sync/mirroring
Our Verdict
Internxt’s intuitively blended web access, file sync, and backup (mirroring) services are impressive. However, the incredibly affordable lifetime plans are by far the most outstanding aspect. The docs, client interface, and backup feedback could be better, but, by Grapthor’s hammer — what a savings!
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Best Prices Today: Internxt Drive online backup
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Though Internxt Drive rightfully touts its 256-bit encryption and dedication to privacy, there’s no feature in particular that sets it apart from the crowd. As with services such as Dropbox, Sync.com, OneDrive, iDrive, etc. there’s sync and storage. There’s also backup, though it’s not true inviolable backup, but mirroring.
Internxt presents its features in a largely intuitive fashion, but what wholly distinguishes itself from the hoi polloi are its incredibly affordable lifetime plans.
Read on to learn more, then see our roundup of the best online backup services for comparison.
How much is Internxt?
When I last reviewed Internxt, I said you might want to hop on its super-affordable lifetime plans before they disappeared. Happily, here we are two years later, and Internxt lifetime plans are still imminently affordable — albeit a bit different than before. Read this discussion carefully.
I first tried the free plan with 1GB of storage (formerly 2TB). Sadly, you can no longer increase the free plan’s capacity to as much as 10GB through various actions such as inviting friends to the service.
The company Will of course try to upsell you, but you can still have 1GB for free.
Beyond that, things have changed a bit since my last look in 2023. Gone are the $0.89-per-month 20GB and $3.49-per-month 200GB plans. Subscriptions now start at $1.65 a month for 1TB and $3.30 monthly for 3TB billed annually. Mind you, these rates are discounted from $10.99 and $21.99 per month, respectively, and might not last. Those prices are also approximate and subject to change as they reflect conversion to dollars from Euros.
So Internxt can be a tad pricey on an annual basis when not on sale. But if you’re willing to commit for life (is that even a thing anymore?) Internxt morphs into uber-affordable. See below. (Note that all stated prices are even lower using the links to purchase in this review.)
Internxt’s lifetime plans are currently an incredible bargain. Foundry
If you’ve priced online storage at any time, these lifetime deals are eye-popping. As mentioned, the 3TB forever plan (assuming the company lasts, of course) is only a bit more per-gigabyte than I pay for 1TB with OneDrive for two years.
As to the company lasting, while I hate to be that guy, my job description requires that I point out that Internxt is now only five years old and online storage is a very competitive landscape.
That said, I made that same caveat two years ago, when the company was just three years old, and it’s still here. It’s reassuring that the company employs the well-known OVH storage infrastructure. Worst case, your data will still be available for download after any corporate failure, and the lifetime pricing is more than worth a roll of the dice in my book. My being particularly risk-averse makes that a hearty endorsement.
Note that features vary with the cost of the plan, not surprisingly. Most notably, the backup function is not available for free accounts.
If you’ve priced online storage at any time, these lifetime deals are eye-popping.
Internxt Drive features
Internxt’s features are basically four-fold: sync, backup, sharing, and a recent addition — antivirus. The first three are located in a menu tree to the left of the web interface, and also the Internxt desktop app which resides in the system tray. The AV is only available in the local client, while sharing is done online.
Syncing works like services such as Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive, etc. You drag or add files to a local folder/virtual drive that Internxt created, and they’re synced between your devices and the Internxt online storage. There are apps for iOS and Android.
The pay plans also let you create a backup plan that will fire off automatically at a rate as granular as one hour. Add any files or folders that you want backed up regularly, set the schedule, and forget about it. Backups don’t sync.
You can schedule backups as granularly as per-hour. This is the Mac client.
Though I stupidly referred to it as such in my first review, Internxt’s backup isn’t true backup. A true backup is never altered, using versioning to reflect changes. With Internxt, any files that change overwrite older files. This is actually a form of one-way sync known as mirroring.
The company is considering versioning (saving older files) but has not implemented it at the time of this writing. I’ve never needed it, and for most users, current-state backup will be fine.
As mentioned, Internxt now includes antivirus with the paid plans. On both Windows and my Mac it proved extremely thorough — and aggressive. One scan registered 114 percent when I stopped it. I appreciate enthusiasm, but let’s stop at 100 percent please.
This was from the Windows AV scan. 113 percent effort?
I clicked on the above notice with some trepidation, fearing it would simply trash files out of hand. However, it only takes you to a list that you can then select items from. There is no quarantine, only remove. Be doubly sure before you remove stuff. There’s also a custom scan that will let you narrow the scope to a single drive or folder.
The antivirus is also very aggressive, so be careful — there were quite a few false positives. Actually all them were, though I understand why most were selected.
Internxt has ditched the Photo backup I tested for the last review, although you can still upload photos from your phone’s camera roll to the Family folder. For free accounts this is limited to 25 files per operation. Yup, a teaser.
There’s also a separate section where shared files are kept—i.e., files shared with others, not among the Internxt sections. The separation reduces user confusion, even if it might waste a bit of space due to duplication.
How easy is Internxt Drive?
I’ve never seen an easier sign-up than Internxt. Provide your email, enter a password a single time, and you’re online with two sync folders (Family, Personal) ready to go. There’s an email verification to remove the yellow exclamation point next to your account level, but…
The layout and overall structure of the website make it very easy to set up and use. As easy, or easier than any I’ve experienced. It’s got a clean look as well. The help that I complained about last time is also improved.
But the app, while easy once you know it, is not particularly intuitive. Who looks for the backup function under “Preferences”? Maybe “Settings”… Then there’s “Change folders” for your backup when “Add/Remove folders” would be much clearer. And of course there’s the aforementioned paranoia-inducing “Remove Malware” button. To be fair, these might be translation issues as Internxt is in Europe.
So why isn’t Backups on the main menu? Antivirus, a more ancillary function is.
Open the Windows app after it’s installed, and there’s an icon to take you to the local Internxt sync folder. It’s on your C: drive in the same location as your user folders (Documents, etc.), but the name is a rather verbose affair with a hash value tagged on — “InternxtDrive – b44b4d7a-a509-4fd8-98d6-14429611abaa” in my case.
Internxt should find a more attractive method of hashing it’s virtual drive folders.
I suppose the hash is to allow multiple accounts on the same PC, as I logged on as three different users and two more of these folders appeared, but it’s an ugly naming convention.
The Internxt web interface is easy to decipher and browse. But gone is the photos section, and you can no longer upgrade the capacity of the free account by inviting friends, etc.
Overall, I give Internxt a B+ for its interfaces. They’re good-looking and functional, though there’s certainly room for improvement.
How does Internxt Drive perform?
Internxt fixed at least one of the bugs I spotted last time. Formerly, when adding the folder “1. Midi files” the folder showed up in the list as “1” and wouldn’t back up because it couldn’t be found. No such error now occurs. I also didn’t see any false error messages during backups. Nice.
Sync across devices was generally fine performance-wise, though I didn’t go much beyond 1GB of files. Uploading photos from my iPhone was rather tedious with each one being encrypted. I didn’t see a setting to disable encryption.
Backups also went off without a hitch on both Windows and the Mac for over a week, so I give Internxt an A for reliability.
This is from the Mac client .
Speaking of logs, Internxt keeps them and provides a link in the app, but they contain every operation. There should be a separate log for errors so you don’t have to search through 10MB of text to find them. The Mac client at least divides the logs into separate tasks.
Also, I’d love more granular info on what and how much data has been copied. It seemed when I had two folders selected for backup, it considered the job 50 percent complete when one folder was copied, even though it was only 10MB while the remaining one was 7GB.
Internxt should also implement bandwidth throttling. Backups came too close to maxing out the upstream traffic for my taste, slowing or creating issues for other tasks on occasion. I connect to the software Test Bed using Microsoft Remote Desktop and I was continually kicked off by Internxt backups.
The Windows Internxt system tray popup lets you know that it’s on the ball.
One thing I noticed was that Internxt doesn’t copy zero-byte files. If you sometimes use the name of a zero-byte file as a label for the contents of a folder or some such, it won’t be copied. This should be optional.
Success is always the bottom line, and all the backups and syncs completed, so good on ya’, Internxt. But more info would be appreciated.
Is Internxt Drive worth it?
There’s no way around the fact that Internxt’s discounted lifetime plans are the flat-out steal in the industry at the moment. The client software could use some grooming, but hey, it works and it’s the best online storage deal in town for the long term.
Further reading: How PCWorld tests cloud backup services Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 16 Jun (PC World)With a brain that’s swimming in a cocktail of neurodivergence, one of my most persistent enemies has always been procrastination. I was once told that my attention span is, on a scale of 1 to 10, either 15 or random. But as hard as it is to overcome—a condition that feels more nature than nurture—it’s something I’m learning to manage.
Weeks ago, I decided I couldn’t get arbitrary brain chemistry get in the way of productivity, and so I took matters into my own hands. I needed to stop being so distracted and to change some habits, but I wasn’t going to do it alone. I was going to use technology to help me.
Now, a couple of weeks on from implementing these tweaks, I feel like it’s been moderately successful. Here’s what I did.
Stop procrastination dead in its tracks
The first and most impactful change I knew I could make was to cut out a bunch of social media usage. I’m no voracious user, but I’m a sucker for scrolling through subreddits and diving into deep discussions on the minutiae of my various hobbies and interests.
As much as I’ve learned doing that over the years, I’ve also developed unhealthy habits of following politics far too closely—and the news cycle is nothing but a doomscroll hole waiting to happen in 2025.
So, I took drastic measures. I installed the BlockSite extension on every web browser (except one, in case I need to check Reddit or Twitter for work) and completely blocked the most distracting sites. I did the same on my phone too, as it’s that little black mirror that’s probably to blame for most of my procrastination. I also installed NoScroll on my phone to block shorts and reels. That stuff is crack to an ADHD brain.
I use the BlockSite extension to block distracting sites. The block screen is mildly mocking, but I don’t mind it. I probably deserve it.Jon Martindale / Foundry
If you’d rather take a less puritanical approach to managing the sites and services that tempt you to procrastinate, extensions like StayFocusd can make it easier to limit your time rather than block entire sites permanently. If you’re like me, though, excising the whole habit cold turkey is an easier change to make than having a lesser drip feed of it.
Whatever the case, cutting out distractions leaves me with little to do but focus on the task at hand—and it works to encourage greater focus.
The carrot alongside the stick
The first time I sat on the toilet after blocking everything, I had a bizarre moment where I was staring at my phone with my mind telling me there’s something interesting there to do. But I’d blocked everything I usually do. What was I even looking at this thing for?
That was a prime opportunity to not just hinder my bad habits but to reward the good ones. How am I going to improve my attention span? By doing things that require greater attention.
Mozilla
So I stocked my bathroom with a cheap e-reader with a few novels I’ve been neglecting. I also installed Pocket on my phone. While Firefox recently announced that it’s discontinuing Pocket, there are similar alternatives and the premise is all the same: save articles and web content to read or watch later when you have time.
Now when I have time to kill, it’s with something more mentally nourishing than Reddit or TikTok. At the very least, I come out of it with less brain rot; at best, I’m developing better attention.
Boring and silent are friends of focus
Modern electronics and software are designed to grab and hold our attention with colors, lights, quick hits of compelling content, snazzy animations, etc. For me, it wasn’t enough to avoid social media and other distracting sites. A part of me was still drawn to the pretty icons and animations on my phone—so I decided to make it boring, too.
Enter Minimalist Phone, a paid app (with a free trial) that turns your phone into a boring brick of black, overhauling the entire OS to look as dull and uninteresting as possible. That means no more icons, only text for everything, and it’s all black and white, yet you can still manage apps and services with ease thanks to its intuitive navigation.
Check out my minimalist phone. It isn’t pretty, but that’s the point.Jon Martindale / Foundry
But Minimalist Phone goes further than that. It also has an app blocker that lets you restrict certain apps to a schedule, or set mindfulness pauses before running certain apps, or even create an entirely separate work profile with different behavior when you’re “in focus mode.” It can also filter unimportant notifications so you aren’t distracted by alerts.
I personally made a point of disabling all unnecessary notifications on Teams, Slack, and other work communication tools. For the ones I kept, I made the notifications monochrome and silent. That means I only know if someone sent me a message when I choose to check in—not when the app wants me to know—and that makes it easier for me to stay on task.
Speaking of staying on task, I also have ChatGPT send me occasional reminders using its scheduled tasks feature. It’s just little things like a notice in the morning to start my day or a prompt to make sure I get done a certain task by a deadline. Could I use a traditional reminder app? Sure, but ChatGPT’s organic variations make me less likely to skip them. Plus, I’m already paying $20 per month for ChatGPT Plus. Might as well use it!
A better way to procrastinate
Breaking old habits isn’t easy. Even with blocks in place, I still feel the urge to procrastinate—and even when I’m reminded not to, I still want to find workarounds. For me, it isn’t plausible to never procrastinate. That’s why I allow myself to procrastinate in better ways.
Maybe when I complete a task, I fire up my Chess.com account for a quick game. In between writing projects, I might give myself a few minutes with my preferred idle game: Ropuka’s Idle Island. Yes, it’s still a game, but at least it’s designed for drip entertainment. It doesn’t hook me for hours and hours, and the chill lo-fi soundtrack keeps it mellow.
Jon Martindale / Foundry
On dog walks, I’m making myself listen to audiobooks rather than shorter-form brain-rot content. And don’t underestimate the power of analog activities! I took up a new hobby in knitting. I won’t pretend it doesn’t feel like a whim for now, but I’m giving it a go as a way to detox from tech and procrastinate in a more productive way. Every second away from my phone helps to train away my urges to procrastinate.
Jon Martindale / Foundry
Overcoming procrastination is a long-term project, one that will probably remain a struggle for the rest of my life. But I already feel some of the positive benefits of these mitigating techniques. I’m less hooked on scrolling and more content overall. I’m a little more focused and a little more effective. We’ll see how long it lasts. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 16 Jun (PC World)TL;DR: Turn ideas into full-length books with AI—lifetime access for just $49.
Writing a book takes time—something most of us don’t have between inbox chaos and back-to-back meetings. But what if all you needed was an idea? That’s where YouBooks steps in. This AI-powered tool helps you generate full-length nonfiction books with just a few prompts, and right now, you can lock in lifetime access for $49 (reg. $540).
YouBooks pulls from several top-tier AI models, like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini, and combines them with live web research to build out detailed, structured manuscripts up to 300,000 words. Whether you want to write about productivity, startup culture, parenting, or personal finance, feed in your topic and let the AI do the heavy lifting.
Why is Youbooks for you?
150,000 credits per month (1 word = 1 credit)
Downloadable formats: PDF, DOCX, EPUB
Commercial rights so that you can sell, share, or publish your books
Custom style options to match your tone or brand
It’s a serious time-saver if you’ve been sitting on an idea forever or want to build a content empire without writing every word yourself. Plus, unlike many AI tools, YouBooks gives you full ownership of the content you create.
Snag a lifetime subscription to YouBooks for $49 and start turning your thoughts into fully formed nonfiction books: no ghostwriters, no subscriptions, and no gatekeepers.
Youbooks – AI Nonfiction Book Generator: Lifetime SubscriptionSee Deal
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