LincStation S1 NAS has an Intel 97 processor and supports 4 HDDs and 2 SSDs (crowdfunding)

Last year LincPlus launched a compact network attached storage (NAS) device called the LincStation N1 that featured support for up to six drives thanks to four M.2 2280 slots for PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSDs and two bays with support for 2.5 inch SATA hard drive…

Last year LincPlus launched a compact network attached storage (NAS) device called the LincStation N1 that featured support for up to six drives thanks to four M.2 2280 slots for PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSDs and two bays with support for 2.5 inch SATA hard drives or SSDs. When Ian reviewed the NAS he found that […]

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Here are all 10 Formula 1 team liveries for 2025

F1 makes a splash with first preseason livery extravaganza for 2025.

Formula 1 racing turns 75 this year. The sport has been under new management for a few years and is now owned by an American entertainment company that's interested in trying new things to grow the sport—a refreshing change from the previous regime that did little but get rich at everyone else's expense. Among the new things it's not afraid to try was last night's F1 75 Live event, a star-studded extravaganza held under the dome of London's O2 Arena.

The idea behind F1 75 was to gather all 10 teams together to reveal each one's new look to the fans and make something of a splash about it. It's the first time the sport has attempted such a thing. In years past, teams would simply wait until the start of preseason testing to reveal that year's livery, although more recently, individual teams have started holding season launch events themselves.

F1 has started broadcasting some of that preseason testing on its streaming platform, but evidently, the bosses don't want to wait that long to start recapturing the attention of the fanbase, hence F1 75 Live in mid-February.

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Here are all 10 Formula 1 team liveries for 2025

F1 makes a splash with first preseason livery extravaganza for 2025.

Formula 1 racing turns 75 this year. The sport has been under new management for a few years and is now owned by an American entertainment company that's interested in trying new things to grow the sport—a refreshing change from the previous regime that did little but get rich at everyone else's expense. Among the new things it's not afraid to try was last night's F1 75 Live event, a star-studded extravaganza held under the dome of London's O2 Arena.

The idea behind F1 75 was to gather all 10 teams together to reveal each one's new look to the fans and make something of a splash about it. It's the first time the sport has attempted such a thing. In years past, teams would simply wait until the start of preseason testing to reveal that year's livery, although more recently, individual teams have started holding season launch events themselves.

F1 has started broadcasting some of that preseason testing on its streaming platform, but evidently, the bosses don't want to wait that long to start recapturing the attention of the fanbase, hence F1 75 Live in mid-February.

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Dozens of things you can do to clean up a fresh install of Windows 11 24H2 and Edge

If you start using Windows 11 this year, you’ll want to know how to clean it up.

Windows 11 made our recent roundup of our least favorite "enshittified" products, which will come as no surprise to those of you who have followed our coverage of it over the years. What began as a more visually cohesive coat of paint for Windows 10 has given way to a user experience that has gradually coasted downhill even as it has picked up new features—a "clean install" of the operating system is pretty annoying, at a baseline, even before you consider extra software irritations from your PC, motherboard maker, or Microsoft's all-encompassing push into generative AI.

We'll never stop asking Microsoft to put out a consumer version of Windows that acts more like the Enterprise versions it gives to businesses, with no extra unasked-for apps and less pushiness about Microsoft's other products and services. But given that most of us are saddled with the current consumer-facing versions of Windows—Home and Pro, which treat their users basically the same way despite the difference in cost and branding—we're updating our guide to cleaning up a "clean install" to account for Windows 11 24H2 and any other changes Microsoft has made in the last year.

As before, this is not a guide about creating an extremely stripped-down, telemetry-free version of Windows; we stick to the things that Microsoft officially supports turning off and removing. There are plenty of experimental hacks that take it a few steps farther—NTDev's Tiny11 project is one—but removing built-in Windows components can cause unexpected compatibility and security problems, and Tiny11 has historically had issues with basic table-stakes stuff like "installing security updates."

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