Category: 4. Technology

  • Future Shuts Down Laptop Mag As Portfolio Trimming Continues

    Future Shuts Down Laptop Mag As Portfolio Trimming Continues

    Future plc, the U.K.-based digital publishing company, shut down the 33-year-old consumer technology publisher Laptop Mag on Tuesday, a move that continues the company’s quiet consolidation of its brand portfolio. 

    Fewer than 10 staffers were affected by the closure, which was communicated Tuesday in a brief Zoom meeting with employees, according to a recording of the meeting obtained by ADWEEK. The Verge first reported the closure.

    A company spokesperson declined to comment.

    “After careful consideration and a review of our long-term strategy, we’ve made the decision to close the Laptop Mag business effective today,” Faisal Alani, global brand director at Future plc., told staff.

    The shutdown is part of a broader retrenchment strategy. In May, newly appointed chief executive Kevin Li Ying disclosed in Future’s half-year earnings that the company had shuttered 19 underperforming brands in fiscal year 2024, followed by four more in the first half of 2025. 

    The closures, which included niche verticals and smaller tech titles, were described as “immaterial to revenue and profit.” Laptop Mag, which reviewed computers, accessories, and consumer electronics, was one of those smaller brands. 

    The decision to wind down Laptop Mag comes amid ongoing commercial headwinds for Future. 

    In its May earnings report, the company revealed a 3% year-over-year decline in revenue, largely driven by softness in U.S. advertising and a weaker pound. And its business, which like other media firms built around Google search, has been impacted by dramatic shifts in consumer behavior, according to a person familiar with its traffic.

    The publisher has also made headlines for leadership turmoil. 

    Jon Steinberg, the former BuzzFeed and Cheddar executive who joined Future as CEO in April 2023, abruptly stepped down at the end of March 2025, less than two years into the role. Steinberg had helped lead the initial brand rationalization push, which aimed to streamline Future’s portfolio and double down on high-margin verticals.

    His departure prompted investor concern and a 10% drop in Future’s share price on the day it was announced. Chief Financial Officer Penny Ladkin-Brand also stepped down, adding to the uncertainty around the company’s direction.

    The shutdown of Laptop Mag fits squarely within the dominant M&A and restructuring trend seen across digital media this year: portfolio paring. 

    As publishers contend with declining referral traffic, shifting ad markets, and the rise of AI-driven content, many have moved away from volume and scale in favor of leaner, more profitable operations.

    “This is the year of cleaning house,” a media investment banker told ADWEEK in May. “Most of the M&A we’re seeing in 2025 is not expansion—it’s contraction.”

  • ‘Treasure Tail Shinjuku’ quest walkthrough in Persona 5 The Phantom X

    ‘Treasure Tail Shinjuku’ quest walkthrough in Persona 5 The Phantom X

    As part of the “Treasure Tail: Shinjuku” quest in Persona 5: The Phantom X, you’ll need to help the Orange Tabby Cat find their Orange Tabby Treasures around Shinjuku. The treasure hunt in Shinjuku requires you to pay close attention to each store front as these treasures will make you complete a couple extra steps.

    Here’s where to find every Orange Tabby Treasure in Shinjuku in Persona 5: The Phantom X.

    All Orange Tabby Treasure locations in Shinjuku

    To complete the “Treasure Tail: Shinjuku” side quest, you’ll need to find seven Orange Tabby Treasures. To help you in your search, we’ve made a map of Shinjuku that is marked with the location of each treasure.

    Additionally, you can find a more detailed description of each location in the sections below.

    Orange Tabby Treasure #1 — Beside grey bin

    For the first Orange Tabby Treasure, you’ll need to head up the stairs found northeast of the jewelry store. Walk up to the

    Orange Tabby Treasure #2 — Inside jewelry store

    The second Orange Tabby Treasure is found inside the jewelry store. Enter the store and finish the cutscene to receive the treasure.

    Orange Tabby Treasure #3 — Beside a garbage can

    The third Orange Tabby Treasure can be found beside a garbage can to the south of the capsule machine.

    Orange Tabby Treasure #4 — South of convenience store

    The fourth Orange Tabby Treasure is hidden behind a gray bin south of the convenience store.

    Orange Tabby Treasure #5 — Inside izakaya

    The fifth Orange Tabby Treasure is inside a yellow crate in the izakaya, which is just north of the ramen shop in the southeastern corner. Interact with the izakaya to receive the treasure.

    Orange Tabby Treasure #6 — Behind club sign

    The sixth Orange Tabby Treasure is hidden behind a club sign on the western side of the map.

    Orange Tabby Treasure #7 — Inside restaurant display case

    The seventh Orange Tabby Treasure is located on the northern side of the map in a restaurant’s display case. Interact with the window to head inside the restaurant and grab the treasure.

    Treasure Tail Shinjuku rewards

    Now that you have all of the treasure, return to the the Orange Tabby Cat and complete the quest to receive the following rewards:

    Continue Reading

  • Mercedes Bids Farewell To The AMG CLA 45 S With A Final Flashy Package

    Mercedes Bids Farewell To The AMG CLA 45 S With A Final Flashy Package

    With the new Mercedes-Benz CLA-Class having been revealed, it’s not a huge surprise that the company has prepared a send-off for the hottest version of the old model. It’s the Mercedes-AMG CLA 45 S Final Edition, and it gives the little sports sedan (or coupe as Mercedes insists on calling it) a bit of extra flash before leaving the dealer lots forever. What is a little surprising, and frankly a little funny, is that the US only just got the Edition 1, as in the first edition, of the CLA 45 S last year. It highlights a rather short run for the tiny monster in America.

    Mercedes-Benz

    Founded

    June 1926

    Founder

    Karl Benz, Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach, and Emil Jellinek

    Headquarters

    Stuttgart, Germany

    Owned By

    Daimler AG

    Current CEO

    Ola Källenius

    America Didn’t Get The CLA 45 S At First

    Now you may be a little confused as to why the US got the CLA 45 S Edition 1 so late in the sedan’s life span, afterall, we’ve had CLA 45s since 2020. Those didn’t have the all-important “S” suffix, which also came with more power. The regular 45 made 382 horsepower and 354 pound-feet of torque, whereas the 45 S made 416 horsepower and 369 pound-feet of torque. Mercedes didn’t see fit to give us the S until later. It announced the introduction with a light refresh in 2023, and the Edition 1 came along with it. Then, those Edition 1 cars didn’t arrive until 2024. As a result, the US will have only had the most potent CLA 45 for a couple of years, and we’re in the situation where we’ve seen first and final editions of vehicles launched within the same time frame.

    The Final Edition Isn’t Hugely Exciting

    There’s not really such a thing as a boring 400-horsepower compact sedan. However, the additions Mercedes selected for this Final Edition aren’t exactly exhilarating. It’s really just a styling exercise. The car is available in either matte grey or gloss black, and it features exclusive forged 19-inch wheels. The wheels are finished in gloss black with a yellow rim edges and matching center caps. They go along with black and yellow door graphics and yellow logos on black mirror caps. The design theme carries to the inside that features black leatherette and faux suede along with yellow constrast stitching and embroidery, plus aluminum dash trim. It even has matching black and yellow floor mats and side sills. No changes to the powertrain or suspension are offered, but there is an optional AMG Aerodynamics Package that gives the car a more aggressive body kit. It’s also available either as a sedan or a wagon.

    Related

    AMG Has A Secret Weapon To Fight The Next-Gen BMW M

    The next baby AMG will have as much power as an M3, punching way above its weight (figuratively anyway).

    Mercedes didn’t give any pricing for the car, but it is available to order now through the end of the year. This seems to indicate that the production number hasn’t been capped like some special editions. For instance, the CLA 45 S Edition 1 in the US was restricted to just 25 examples. The Final Edition hasn’t been announced for the US, though, so these Final Edition cars may be limited to just Europe.

    Continue Reading

  • Netflix and NASA partner to bring live streams to subscribers

    Netflix and NASA partner to bring live streams to subscribers

    Netflix subscribers and NASA superfans are getting a special treat just in time for the summer, as the two join forces to bring live space programming right to the streaming platform.

    Coming soon, subscribers will be able to watch NASA’s free streaming content, currently offered through its service NASA+, on Netflix, including rocket launches, astronaut spacewalks, mission coverage, and live views beamed down from the International Space Station (ISS).

    SEE ALSO:

    ‘Sinners’ comes to streaming this week with Black American Sign Language option

    The space organization launched NASA+ in 2023, a free, on-demand streaming service that provides space fans with a one-stop shop for all of the federal agency’s headline-generating missions, documentaries, and other original content. NASA+ is available on desktop and through the NASA app, as well as Apple TV, Fire TV, and Roku’s NASA channel.

    Mashable Top Stories

    Behind the scenes, Netflix has pivoted to more live content, including obtaining the rights to live sports coverage, like the 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup and WWE’s Raw. Netflix is also overhauling its user experience, which will involve a new, streamlined homepage and recommendations, AI-powered search, and a potential vertical video feed that will play show and movie clips similar to TikTok’s FYP.

    “The National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 calls on us to share our story of space exploration with the broadest possible audience,” said general manager of NASA+ Rebecca Sirmons. “Together, we’re committed to a Golden Age of Innovation and Exploration — inspiring new generations — right from the comfort of their couch or in the palm of their hand from their phone.”

    Don’t have Netflix? Want even more space content? Watch Mashable’s Earth livestream, brought to you by the ISS and a partnership with Earth/space live streaming company Sen.

    Continue Reading

  • Save 40% Off the Nintendo Switch 2 Compatible Gamesir Super Nova Wireless Controller

    Save 40% Off the Nintendo Switch 2 Compatible Gamesir Super Nova Wireless Controller

    As part of its 4th of July Sale, Best Buy is slashing 40% off the price of the GameSir Super Nova Wireless Controller. It’s normally $50, but right now the red and white model is down to just $29.99. This is a an excellent price for a controller packed with a plethora of practical features like Hall-Effect joysticks and triggers, tri-mode connectivity, button mapping, included charging dock, and more. This is a PC gaming controller at its core, but it’s also compatible with the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 consoles. The red and white color scheme that complements the Switch is a Best Buy exclusive.

    40% Off GameSir Super Nova Wireless Gaming Controller

    GameSir Super Nova Wireless Gaming Controller

    The GameSir Super Nova gaming controller is compatible with your PC, Nintendo Switch, and iOS or Android smartphone or tablet. It connects in one of three ways: wireless Bluetooth, wireless 2.4GHz, and wired via USB Type-C. For the best performance, stick with wired or wireless 2.4GHz, which both boast ultra-low latency with 1000Hz polling rate.

    Unlike most standard controllers (including first party ones), the GameSir Super Nova is equipped with Hall Effect joysticks and triggers to eliminate the dreaded stick drift. The thumbsticks also include anti-friction rings and the triggers offer two choices of travel length (short and long) with the flick of a switch. The back buttons are programmable and the ABXY layout can be swapped around to your liking. The controller contains a 1,000mAh battery (although no battery life estimate is given). The included dock has pogo pins so you don’t need to fumble around to plug in the controller.

    Other features include silent membrane buttons so you can play late at night without waking anyone, rubberized grips, detachable faceplates, RGB lighting, adjustable dual vibration motors, 6-axis gyroscope, and dead zone adjustments.

    Some of our older GameSir controller reviews:

    Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn’t hunting for deals for other people at work, he’s hunting for deals for himself during his free time.

    Continue Reading

  • OneAir Subscription for 94% Off With Our Exclusive Code Lets You Save Big on Hotel and Flight Bookings for a Lifetime

    OneAir Subscription for 94% Off With Our Exclusive Code Lets You Save Big on Hotel and Flight Bookings for a Lifetime

    Travel costs have gotten to the point that you can barely cross the street for $50. What you can do with $50, however, is lock yourself into ridiculously huge airfare and hotel deals with a lifetime subscription to OneAir Elite, the AI-powered service that routinely finds prices between 20% to 60% lower than the ones published on the big travel-deal sites like Expedia and Hotels.com.

    StackSocial’s 87% off deal on a lifetime subscription to OneAir Elite already takes the price down from $790 to just $100, and then when you use the code TRAVEL at checkout, that discounted price gets cut in half to just $50 (-94%), and it’s a one-time buy that gets you permanent access to OneAir Elite. Chances are it will take you only one booking to cover that $50 cost, and since OneAir Elite gives you up to 10% in credit back on each booking, you might end up getting your lifetime subscription basically for free after just one use.

    See at StackSocial

    Let AI Do the Legwork

    OneAir Elite is smart booking backed by AI that does powerful, lightning-fast deep dives into airline and hotel sites and even locates the unpublished prices that can usually only be found by travel agents. The price you see on OneAir Elite, which is often hundreds and even thousands of dollars below regular listed prices, is the price you get — there are no hidden fees or extra costs that pop up when you check out. A quick hotel search will send OneAir Elite’s AI engine into over 700 airlines worldwide and over 2 million hotels in search of the very best prices.

    Even after you book your trip, OneAir Elite is still working to save you money. OneAir Elite automatically tracks your existing reservations, and if the price drops or an even better deal pops up, it will automatically rebook the same hotel room at the lower cost, or re-ticket your flight, and refund you the difference. And don’t forget, you’re already getting up to 10% back in OneAir Travel Cash Rewards with each booking, so your next trip will somehow be an even bigger bargain.

    One Trip Covers Your Bill

    You could conceivably earn back your one-time purchase fee for a lifetime subscription to OneAir Elite even if you were to buy it at the full-retail price of $790, if you were to score a phenomenally big deal on airfare and a hotel. But when you’re only paying $100 after StackSocial’s 87%-off deal kicks in, it gets way easier to cover that one-time buy with the money saved on your travel bill. And when you use the code TRAVEL at checkout and cut that number in half to just $50, it’s virtually a lock that you’ll be making that back many times over with just one booking.

    See at StackSocial

    Continue Reading

  • Displays, imaging and sensing: New blue fluorophore breaks efficiency records in both solids and solutions

    Displays, imaging and sensing: New blue fluorophore breaks efficiency records in both solids and solutions

    Reaching 98% efficiency in a solid state and 94% in solution, the small fluorescent molecule’s design could cut down development time and cost for future applications

    The new TGlu molecule is a small but powerful single benzene fluorophore with a quantum yield—percent light re-emitted versus light lost as heat—above 90% in both solution and solid. Caption. Image credit: Jinsang Kim Laboratory

    A new blue fluorescent molecule set new top emission efficiencies in both solid and liquid states, according to a University of Michigan-led study that could pave the way for applications in technology and medicine.

    Able to absorb light and emit it at lower energy levels, fluorescent molecules called fluorophores glow in OLED displays and help doctors and scientists figure out what’s happening in cells and tissues. They need to be solid in displays and many sensing applications, but liquids are typically preferred for biological uses. Most fluorophores don’t work well in both forms, but this one does.

    “The fluorescent material reached record-breaking brightness and efficiency with 98% quantum efficiency in the solid state and 94% in solution,” said Jinsang Kim, the Raoul Kopelman Collegiate Professor of Science and Engineering in the U-M Department of Materials Science and Engineering who led the study, which is published in Nature Communications.

    Often, engineers designing fluorophores start in solution, exploring the optical properties of individual molecules, but run into problems in their solid-state applications when fluorophore molecules contact each other.

    “Fluorophores behave very differently in the solid state, which then requires more rational molecular engineering effort for structural modification,” Kim said “By investigating and establishing a molecular design principle to make fluorophores that are bright both in solution and solid states, we have reduced development time and cost for various future applications.”

    The initial discovery of the versatile fluorophore—called TGlu for short—was unexpected for lead author Jung-Moo Heo, U-M postdoctoral research fellow of materials science and engineering.

    “TGlu was an intermediate step for another chemical design, but during purification I found it was surprisingly highly emissive, not only in solution but also in solid state,” Heo said.

    The discovery led to the systematic study to establish the optimal design. The result was a simple design: a single benzene ring core—six carbon atoms joined in a hexagon. The researchers positioned two groups that give away electrons, called donor groups, across the ring from one another. Next to the donors, they placed two acceptor groups, which withdraw electrons, across the ring from one another.

    “This so-called quadrupolar structure symmetrically distributes charge across the molecule, providing stable emission in various environments,” Heo said.

    Because the ring has only six points, donor and acceptor groups are positioned next to each other. This spatial arrangement reduces the energy gap compared to other similar molecules within a compact framework, which means the fluorophore needs a relatively small amount of energy to move an electron from the ground state to an excited state—similar to jumping up a rung on a ladder.

    However, the molecule’s small size means overall conjugation length remains limited—meaning electrons cannot spread out too far across the molecule. This keeps the absolute energy gap—the distance between ladder rungs—wide enough to emit blue light instead of shifting towards narrower energy gap colors like red.

    Typically, small band gaps come with an efficiency drawback. When in the excited state on the higher rung of the ladder, an electron can either emit light as it comes back down to the ground state or lose energy as heat through vibration. Often, small band gaps mean more heat loss, reducing the quantum yield—an efficiency metric expressed as the percentage of absorbed UV light that gets reemitted as visible light relative to the amount lost as heat.

    After trying a series of acceptor groups, the researchers found one that stabilizes the excited state. Even with the small band gap, this acceptor group prevents heat loss by restricting access to what are known as conical intersections, which function as “exit doors” for energy leakage. This unexpected behavior, called an Inverted Energy Gap Law, was confirmed both by experiments and quantum chemical simulations.

    In the solid state, the acceptor groups, which were intentionally designed to be bulky, prevent the molecules from getting too close to one another which causes fluorophores to lose brightness as energy escapes as heat instead of light, a phenomenon known as quenching.

    The small, highly-efficient fluorophore is simple to produce—only requiring three steps—which increases its scalability while reducing production costs.

    The current TGlu design fluoresces blue light. As next steps, the researchers will adjust the band gap, and thus the color. Further, while a high quantum yield from light excitation is promising, device performance under electrical excitation requires separate testing due to additional loss mechanisms. Heo also plans to work toward a phosphorescent version of the molecule, as phosphors are overall more energy-efficient than fluorophores, for use in display technology.

    Autonomous University of Madrid, University of Valencia, Eberhard Karls University Tübingen and Seoul National University also contributed to this research.

    Continue Reading

  • Google makes it easier to let friends and kids control your smart home

    Google makes it easier to let friends and kids control your smart home

    Google Home’s latest update will make it easier to decide who in your household can control your smart home. It comes with a new feature, which Google first started testing last year, that will let you assign people “Admin” and “Member” roles.

    People with Admin status have full control of all the devices, services, and users within their smart home, while Members can only use “basic” device controls, like watching the live view of a security camera. However, admins can grant Members additional privileges by giving them “Settings” access, allowing for control over device and home-wide settings. Admins can also turn on “Activity” access so Members can keep tabs on device history and recent events, such as a visitor picked up by a doorbell camera.

    Google is also simplifying the process of adding a child under 13 to the Home app. Once you set up your kid with a Google account through Family Link, you can invite them to your Google Home, which will add them as a Member by default.

    The previous process involved using either Family Link, Google Home, or Google Assistant settings to add your child’s voice to your smart home before inviting them to your home, and many users struggled to get it to work. It seems Google is now streamlining the process by letting you invite a child to your home through the Google Home app, so long as you add them to your Google family group.

    Continue Reading

  • Crucial T710 2TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSD Review

    Crucial T710 2TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSD Review

    Crucial T710 2TB

    Today, Crucial has sent over their brand new T710 2TB Gen5 NVMe SSD for review. This is the successor to the very fast Crucial T705 that I previously reviewed. Like that drive, the T710 is making a play for the high-end Gen5 SSD market and intends to push the limit of the Gen5 interface, and Crucial is claiming some big performance uplifts from the T705. The high-end market space now has ample competition, so I am interested to see how the T710 holds up. Let us get to the review!

    Crucial T710 2TB PCIe Gen5 NVMe SSD

    The Crucial T710 2TB comes in a single-sided M.2 2280 (80mm) form factor.

    Crucial T710 2TB Front
    Crucial T710 2TB Front

    The T710 is available both with and without a heatsink, and as you can see my test drive is the bare drive. The controller is a key difference compared to the T705. The T710 includes a Silicon Motion SM2508 controller, whereas the T705 was based on a Phison chip. This controller is paired with Micron TLC and a 2GB DRAM cache.

    Crucial T710 2TB Back
    Crucial T710 2TB Back

    The backside of the Crucial T710 2TB contains nothing but labels.

    Crucial T710 2TB SSD Specs

    The Crucial T710 2TB is available between 1TB and 4TB capacity points.

    Crucial T710 2TB Specs
    Crucial T710 2TB Specs

    This 2TB model is rated for 14500 MB/s sequential reads and 13800 MB/s writes. These numbers put the T710 at the top-end of claimed Gen5 performance and outpace both the T705 and the Samsung 9100 PRO, at least on paper. Endurance sits at 600TBW per 1TB of capacity, or 1200TBW for my 2TB drive which is perfectly in line with my expectations. And the warranty is the industry standard 5-years for a top-end drive. All of the specs position the T710 at the very top-end of Gen5 drives, and Crucial is also a very long-lived and respected brand.

    Crucial is claiming 42% higher random writes, 28% higher random reads, and 9% higher sequential write performance compared to the T705. They are also claiming a 24% reduction in average power use. When we get to testing we will see how the two stack up.

    Crucial T710 2TB CrystalDiskInfo
    Crucial T710 2TB CrystalDiskInfo

    CrystalDiskInfo can give us some basic information about the SSD and confirms we are operating at PCIe 5.0 x4 speeds using NVMe 2.0.

    Test System Configuration

    We are using the following configuration for this test:

    • Motherboard: MSI MAG X670E Tomahawk
    • CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7900X (12C/24T)
    • RAM: 2x 16GB DDR5-6000 UDIMMs

    Our testing uses the Crucial T710 2TB as the boot drive for the system, installed in the M.2_1 slot on the motherboard. This slot supports up to PCIe Gen 5 x4. The drive is filled to 85% capacity with data, and then some is deleted, leaving around 60% used space on the volume.

    Next, we are going to get into our performance testing.

    Continue Reading

  • Free Photo Manager digiKam Gets Major New Update With AI Tools

    Free Photo Manager digiKam Gets Major New Update With AI Tools

    The digiKam team has announced the official release of digiKam 8.7.0. The major update for the free open-source digital photo manager promises significant improvements to face management capabilities, GPU processing, AI-driven tools, and overall system performance.

    PetaPixel has followed digiKam’s journey from inital release and rise, to recent updates. The software is a completely free option for photographers in a space where big software names with high-cost subscriptions and cancellation fees begin to wear on users. Additionally, as a free software available in 16 languages, digiKam offers photo management with little to no barrier to entry, whether through price, language, or skill level.

    What Exactly Is digiKam?

    digiKam is a powerful open-source digital photo management software designed for photographers and photo enthusiasts. It provides a comprehensive suite of tools for organizing, editing, and sharing photos. With new 8.7.0 features like face recognition, metadata editing, and support for a wide range of image formats, digiKam makes it easy to manage large photo collections. Additionally, it offers advanced capabilities for RAW image processing, batch editing, and integration with external plug-ins. Whether organizing a personal photo library or managing a professional archive, digiKam promises users an intuitive and customizable solution for photo management needs.

    After four months of maintenance and bug fixes, digiKam 8.7.0 is now available, offering an improved user experience for both hobbyist photographers and professionals alike.

    Key New Features and Improvements

    Enhanced Face Management

    digiKam 8.7.0 introduces several upgrades to its Face Management feature, which utilizes artificial intelligence to automatically detect and tag faces in images. A new setting enables the automatic start of face recognition whenever a new face is confirmed or tagged, streamlining the tagging process for users. Additionally, improvements to the face recognition workflow now allow for better match suggestions and an overall more reliable tagging experience.

    Screenshot of digiKam's configuration window, focused on Miscellaneous Settings. Several options are checked, and a red warning says, "Warning: These settings makes startup slower!" at the center of the panel.
    digiKam Face Management tool settings panel

    AI Auto-Rotation Tool

    One of the most notable additions is the AI Auto-Rotation Tool, which utilizes deep learning to automatically correct the orientation of images in batches. This feature significantly enhances the efficiency of processing large sets of photos, saving users time and effort compared to manual rotation methods.

    Screenshot of digiKam's Batch Queue Manager showing auto-rotate selected as the assigned tool. The interface has image lists, tool settings, and a control panel displaying various image processing options.
    Batch Queue Manager, with new AI plug-in to automate orientation detection

    OpenCL and CUDA GPU Support

    For users with compatible hardware, digiKam 8.7.0 now supports OpenCL and CUDA acceleration, allowing the software to take full advantage of the GPU for faster processing. By utilizing GPU resources for tasks such as resizing and color format conversion, this new functionality boosts performance, especially when working with large image libraries.

    Screenshot of digiKam’s Miscellaneous Settings showing an AI GPU test result. The test failed, stating the system is not able to use GPU acceleration for the AI models due to missing or incompatible hardware or drivers.
    digiKam OpenCL management panel

    Internal Updates and Bug Fixes

    DigiKam 8.7.0 also includes updates to several key internal components. The RAW decoder has been updated to the latest Libraw snapshot, supporting over 1260 camera models. The ExifTool has been updated to the latest 13.29 release for better metadata management, and the Qt framework has been updated to versions 6.8.3 (Linux and Windows) and 6.9.0 (macOS).

    Additionally, the update includes various bug fixes aimed at improving the software’s stability, including fixes for issues related to face management workflows, database functions, and application crashes. Over 240 bugs were resolved in this release, further enhancing the user experience.

    Screenshot of digiKam image editor showing a red rose photo. The left panel lists image files, the center displays a software info popup, and the right panel shows editing tools, a histogram, and adjustment options.

    Future Plans and Upcoming Releases

    Looking ahead, the digiKam team is already planning for future improvements. The next maintenance update, targeted for October 2025, will focus on additional bug fixes and feature enhancements. The team also aims to explore the use of deep neural networks for tasks such as noise reduction and color adjustments. Another exciting development is the potential integration of a Large Language Model (LLM) engine, which would enable natural language queries for searching image collections.

    Screenshot of G'MIC-QT plug-in in GIMP showing the 'Montage Geometric Figures' filter applied to a landscape photo, creating a hexagonal tile montage on the right panel. Various montage settings are visible on the left.

    Major Step in Free, Open Source Solutions For Photographers

    digiKam 8.7.0 represents a major step forward for the open-source photo management software, bringing cutting-edge AI and GPU support to the forefront of its feature set. The improvements in face recognition, batch editing, and hardware acceleration are sure to enhance the workflow for both casual users and professional photographers. The update is available for Linux, Windows, and macOS and can be downloaded from the official digiKam repository.


    Image credits: digiKam

    Continue Reading