Finally some good news for RAM buyers — Corsair’s 32GB Vengeance DDR5-6000 kit is £126 off right now at Amazon

Save nearly 25% on the 32GB Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6000 kit right now, a rare win for RAM buyers.

HPE says it can change the terms (and price) of your contract depending on global hardware changes – is it just ‘protecting its margins’?

HPE is moving to agile pricing and shorter quote commitment cycles due to rising DRAM and NAND prices.

Boost your PC storage with Crucial’s 4TB P310 Gen4 NVMe SSD – get speeds up to 7100MB/s for under £300 in Amazon’s Spring Deal Days sale

Crucial’s 4TB P310 PCIe Gen 4 NVMe SSD delivers up to 7,100MB/s read speeds and is 17% off at Amazon for Spring Deal Days.

Anthropic launches a new code review tool to check AI-generated content – but it might cost you more than you’d hope

Anthropic will charge you around $15-25 on average per pull request for a full and detailed review to spot any issues or vulnerabilities.

Adobe Express and Acrobat are coming for business users in Microsoft 365 Copilot, ‘making creativity more accessible to everyone’

Adobe is making its Express and Acrobat tools available through M365 Copilot following success integrating them with ChatGPT.

The poison pill that malicious bots can’t digest

Could turning an adversary’s power against them be an affective tactic for cybersecurity?

Lenovo LOQ RTX 5050 laptop gets a huge £300 discount in Amazon’s Spring Deal Days sale — with a Core i5 processor, 24GB RAM, and 1TB SSD

Lenovo LOQ is a powerful laptop for creatives, students, and power users — and it’s £300 (25%) off in Amazon’s Spring Deal Days sale right now.

Want to store up to 32TB in a paperback-sized NAS? The TerraMaster F4 SSD is on sale right now for Amazon’s Spring Deal Days

The TerraMaster F4 SSD is a fast, compact storage upgrade for just £368 — a great option for anyone building a reliable home or small-office NAS.

Watch out Microsoft Teams users – hackers are spreading a dangerous new phishing scam, here’s what we know

Hackers are pretending to be solving a spam problem but are actually deploying backdoors.