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The Best Monitors According to the CNET Staff Who Use Them


The Best Monitors According to the CNET Staff Who Use Them

Over the last few years, office workers across the world have found themselves having to work from their homes. While this has increased productivity and reduced a lot of stress for many, a lot of workers didn't have the right equipment to create a home office. Even here at CNET, we had to find new ways to make our space work. 

Having a good monitor, or even two, makes working from home much easier, as being hunched over a laptop can cause severe back pain and stresses you might not notice right away. It's much better to spend your day looking at a big screen than a little one.

Read more:  The Best Office Chairs According to the CNET Staff Who Use Them

The CNET team is full of diverse experts; people who spend their lives reviewing products and testing them, so we know how to pick a good product. We collected testimonials from the editorial staff and engineers about their favorite monitors and why you should buy one too.

Gigabyte

I got this Gigabyte monitor when I bought a new gaming desktop. I wanted a 27-inch screen with 1440p resolution and 144Hz refresh rate, and this was on offer for around $300 about a year ago. Never having heard of the brand, I took a punt on it.

I'm really happy with it. It looks great, day and night, with hardly any reflections. The bezel is super thin. It can be adjusted up and down, as well as tilted. And it has all the ports you'd probably need. The only thing I would change is that the power button is also a menu joystick and it's on the back, which is fiddly on the few occasions I need it.

-- Nick Hide, Managing copy editor

Asus

I love this monitor from Asus. Since I am a video editor by trade, who also edits a lot of photos in his spare time, having a monitor with excellent color rendition is super important, and this ProArt monitor does that really well.

It has a bit more resolution than a standard 1080p monitor which is fantastic as well, it adjusts easily into landscape and portrait mode, and it can move up and down for different desk setups.

But probably the biggest selling point is the price. It's more expensive than a standard monitor, but for what it delivers on picture and color quality, it's probably the most affordable monitor for professional photo and video folks. The ProArt is much more affordable than something from Apple. 

-- Owen Poole, Video producer

LG

This Full HD monitor is intensely basic for the price, but it's so easy to use and has gotten me through some of the busiest pandemic news cycles. With two HDMI ports, one audio jack and a D-sub connector, I've been able to seamlessly connect its 24-inch glory to my work Mac (for editing and digital production), as well as my former Windows laptop and current personal desktop (for video games) with minimal interruptions to my productivity. It's 6.8 pounds, which might be heavy for a monitor -- I wouldn't know -- but I've also taken to carting it into other areas of my house without issue. And it has... screen tilt!

-- Dawnthea Price Lisco, Copy editor

Sceptre

When we set up our home office, my wife and I used these Sceptre curved displays for a long time. The curve is gentle enough not to strain your eyes, while also making you feel like you have a wrap-around experience. I eventually changed out my monitors for something more gaming focused, but my wife loves her Sceptre. 

The color tone can be a little uneven and it took us a while to get them dialed in, but now that they are, they're worth the small cost. We ended up getting two for the full experience.

-- James Bricknell, Senior editor

HP

While I wanted to have good gaming monitors, I couldn't afford some of the bigger curved displays you see here. My gaming on a PC consists of 1080p resolution games anyway so 4K just wasn't needed.

I picked up two of these ultra-thin HP monitors as they have FreeSync for gaming, but are also low profile enough to leave room on my desk for the keyboards I test. Plus, the bezel-less display is fire.

-- James Bricknell, Senior editor

Lepow

For most of the pandemic, I couldn't work in the same spot in my house every day. Setting up a big monitor or even a regular desk to put one on was out of the question. Lepow's 15.6-inch portable monitor gave me just enough extra room to work, whether my "office" was in my dining room, living room or bedroom.

The display setup takes seconds with a single USB-C cable for both the picture and power though it does have an HDMI input if necessary. All the cables come in the box, too, along with a screen protector. It has a folio case that doubles as a stand (newer versions have a built-in kickstand for better positioning and use less desk space). It even has a headphone jack and basic built-in speakers so it can connect to a game console. When you're done for the day, it folds up and easily stores in a drawer or backpack. Easy.

-- Josh Goldman, Senior editor

LG

 A few years ago I upgraded to the LG Ultragear ultrawide, and everything about it makes me extremely happy. Its 3440x1440 resolution is the sweet spot for a 34-inch gaming setup since it doesn't tax a GPU as hard as a 4k monitor. It's 144hz, with Gsync and VESA adaptive sync (freesync) support. I play Final Fantasy 14 and Destiny 2 on a custom-built gaming rig, and the frame rates are amazing. 

Since I'm not even maxing out the specifications on this monitor -- a GPU upgrade in a year or two will let me max out the 144hz part of the monitor -- I'm going to be keeping this for a good long while.

-- Wesley Radcliffe, Engineering manager

CNET's Eric Franklin got me into ultrawide monitors, and for a long time I had an entry-level LG that did the job. When the pandemic hit though, I decided to go bigger and I'm so glad I did. I bought this one Used/Like New from Amazon, and it's been a dream to work with. 

I bought the 120hz because I don't game at higher refresh rates anyway, and most of the time I was relying on this for work. I also found a monitor arm for it that cleans up my workspace really well.

- Ian Sherr, Editor at large

More stuff we use every day


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Windows 11 has arrived, but here's why not everyone will get the upgrade yet


Windows 11 has arrived, but here's why not everyone will get the upgrade yet

Windows 11  started its wide rollout on Oct. 5 -- the first major upgrade in six years. Windows 11 is available as a free download for existing Windows 10 users, but it's not yet available for every compatible Windows device. And every major new feature promised isn't available right now. (Microsoft announced this in an August blog post). 

We've already tested and published a full review of Windows 11 (it's familiar but fresh, with a Mac-like design). You can expect a few new multitasking features, and the Start menu is in a new place. However, it will not include one of the most anticipated updates: support for Android mobile apps in its new app store. Microsoft also didn't offer a date for when Android apps would be available either, other than saying that it would roll out in a "preview" test "over the coming months," according to the post.

There's a lot to look forward to. But even if your device hasn't been prompted to update, you can still check to see if you meet the compatibility requirements. Heads up, (you'll need to be running Windows 10 first to do so -- here's how to download Windows 10 for free if you haven't yet). And just because you have a compatible Windows device doesn't mean you'll be able to run Windows 11 starting today. 

Microsoft said the launch will be "phased and measured," with new eligible devices getting the upgrade first and the rest getting offered the free upgrade sometime between October and mid-2022, depending on your hardware, age of device and other factors. You'll get a notification from Windows Update letting you know when Windows 11 is available to you, or you can check manually (here's more on how to download Windows 11 before your system asks you to). 

While you wait for Microsoft's new operating system to arrive, you can check to see if your computer will be able to automatically update to Windows 11 (you'll need to be running Windows 10 first to do so -- here's how to download Windows 10 for free if you haven't yet). But even if it isn't deemed compatible, there will be a way to manually download a version that is not supported by Microsoft. And here's how to set the default search engine, if you'd rather not use Bing.

You also don't have to upgrade to Windows 11 right away if you don't want to -- Microsoft will still support Windows 10 through October 2025. 

For more, check out the every big difference between Windows 10 and Windows 11 and what you'll need to do before you upgrade to Windows 11


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Motorola schools Android P on how to make swipe navigation good


Motorola schools Android P on how to make swipe navigation good

Google's upcoming Android P software has nothing on the humble Motorola Moto Z3 Play, Moto G6 and Motorola's other phones for 2018, for one simple reason. You can swipe left to go back.

Android P, now in its third and final beta, is Google's vision of the next version of its Android operating system. This is the software that will eventually run on most Android phones around the world. Android P embraces swipe gestures over the traditional three button navigation we've seen since the very beginning of Android phones. With Android P, a slider control lets you swipe right to open your recent apps and press it once to go Home. 

But if you want to go Back, you have to press a separate Back button to do so. Android P's Back button supports apps that require it, and it only appears when you can actually use it. Otherwise it doesn't show up.

This change is interesting and important because Android P will bring Android phonemakers a unified look and feel that they can riff on. Android P will also be the basis of 2018's Google Pixel phones, and of phones that run the more "pure" Android One operating system, which is about as Googly as you can get without being a Google phone.

Google's Android P swiping navigation lags behind Apple's novel iPhone X gestures by about a year. Those gestures -- added because Apple completely removed the iconic home button from the iPhone X's face to maximize screen size -- will no doubt be expanded to additional iPhone and iPad models as the iPhone X-style design moves further through Apple's line, as rumored.

Now as Google attempts to catch up to the iPhone in screen navigation and support for the notch screen design, a wave of Android phones will shift to adopt gesture navigation, too.  

But while Google hammered out what it wanted to do, phonemakers like Motorola, OnePlus, Xiaomi and others have already dreamed up their own formats for gesture navigation. Motorola's option, which it calls one-handed navigation, relies on a single virtual button that has an elegance and economy of movement that Android P's software lacks.

google-io-2018-android-p-7493

You can swipe right on Android P, but you can't swipe left.

James Martin/CNET

Gesture navigation helps free screen space of unnecessary digital and physical buttons. Swiping to get around can also feel more natural and fluid than hunting for buttons. 

But although Google's design works, in the strictest sense of the word, phones like the Moto Z3 Play manage to pack everything you want to do into a single onscreen slider button.

In comparison, the placement of Android P's back button on the left of the phone, next to a home button you can slide right, adds up to a clunky, asymmetrical experience.

On the Moto Z3 Play, the actions look like this:

  • Short press - Home
  • Long press - Launch Google Assistant
  • Swipe left - Back
  • Swipe right - Recent apps

Google Product Manager Allen Huang recently addressed the Android team's position on Reddit:

HOME and BACK are so central to Android navigation (both the system and the apps) - that ensuring the dependability of them via buttons with enough space led us to the current design. All that said - we really value both the aesthetic and functional appeal of a smaller nav bar / more gross-gesture navigation and are continuing to explore opportunities to bring that in.

It sounds like the Android P Back button could still get the heave-ho.

Once upon a time, Google owned Motorola. I used to credit that association with Motorola phones' long history of smart software additions. But Team Motorola, which is now owned by Lenovo, has proven it has its own ideas. It's clear that Google still has much it can learn about software from the hardware brand it once brought into its fold.

This story first posted July 31, 2018 and updated Aug 1.

Read now: Apple iOS 12 versus Google Android P: Guess who's winning now 

Read next: Google: We'll officially name Android P 'soon'


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Asus ROG Phone review: The best way to play games on Android


Asus ROG Phone review: The best way to play games on Android


If you can't tell from the angular lines, exposed copper heat sinks and pulsating light-up logo, the Asus ROG Phone is designed for gaming. While I can't say the looks are my cup of tea, there will be plenty of people who think this styling looks badass. And it's nice to see a phone maker go for something different.

But what exactly makes this a gaming phone? Well let's start with the AMOLED display that can refresh 90 times a second -- a first for any OLED phone. The higher refresh rate means less motion blur and faster response times. It's not as high as the Razer Phone 2's 120Hz LCD screen, but the fast refresh times are a noticeable improvement over other phones when playing certain games. And even though the ROG's screen looks nice, sometimes it was too dim even at its brightest setting.

Pressure sensitive buttons called AirTriggers

Perhaps one of the coolest and most innovative features on the ROG Phone is AirTriggers. These are pressure sensitive corners that double as bumper buttons for games. I've used phones with pressure sensitive features before like the Pixel 3 where you can squeeze the sides to open Google Assistant. But Asus' approach here is by far my favorite implementation of the technology on phones.

In landscape gameplay, the top right and left corners of the phone have pressure sensitive sensors that can be used as bumper buttons.

Aloysius Low/CNET

AirTriggers can be programmed for specific functions. For example in PUBG, I assigned one to fire a weapon and another to crouch. It's a curious solution to the lack of physical controls on phones and yet it's so well-implemented and feels so intuitive that I became much more immersed in the games I played.

The curved bezels and sides make the phone incredibly comfortable to hold especially in landscape. The speakers, dotted with copper colored grills, are wonderfully loud and sound fantastic. They're right up there with the amazing speakers on the Razer Phone 2 in terms of being able to produce bombastic high-quality sound.

(Top photo) With AirTriggers activated, a blue circle "L1" and red circle "R1" appear onscreen. (Bottom photo) I dragged the circles on top of controls for firing a weapon and crouching. Now when I tap the top right corner of the phone it throws a punch or fires a weapon.

PUBG

ROG X mode and AeroActive cooler

The ROG has two USB-C ports, one on the bottom and one on the side so when you're playing games in landscape mode the power cord doesn't get in the way of your hands. The side port also supports accessories like a detachable fan called the AeroActive cooler which comes with the phone.

Now, it might seem silly to attach a fan to the back of your phone, but it makes a big difference in terms of performance, especially if you're going to be playing a game for 20 to 30 minutes without a break. The fan keeps the phone from getting too hot to hold and along with a software setting called "X mode" lets the processor run at its highest speed for longer during gameplay.

The detachable AeroActive cooler keeps the phone cool during gameplay and along with Asus' X mode improves processor performance.

Josh Miller/CNET

Quick break for a Patrick thought: I'm neutral on the detachable fan. I have a strong fear I'd lose it, but the gain in performance is beyond impressive especially when I played a game for a long amount of time. But then, I am attaching a fan to my phone which seems like a clunky solution.

But don't get me wrong, you don't need the fan and X mode to use this phone in everyday tasks. The phone opens apps lighting fast, even big ones like the camera. Android animations are peppy and appear smooth. There's no lag when processing and saving photos.

I ran GeekBench 4 when I first got the ROG without the fan and X mode enabled and got a single-core score of 1,413 and a multi-core score of 5,592. Then I ran it again with the fan attached and X mode turned on and got 2,556 for single-core and 8,445 for multi-core. That ranks it up there with the Razer Phone 2, Galaxy Note 9 and OnePlus 6 as one of the fastest current Android phones.

However, Apple'siPhone XS is in another league in terms of raw processing power and performance -- and it doesn't require a detachable fan. Check out the results of our performance tests below.

3DMark Slingshot Unlimited

Asus ROG Phone 6,438 Razer Phone 2 6,526 Galaxy Note 9 6,344 OnePlus 6 6,275 iPhone XS 8,309
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited

Asus ROG Phone 62,751 Razer Phone 2 63,253 Galaxy Note 9 58,832 OnePlus 6 62,952 iPhone XS 76,823
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Geekbench v.4.0 single-core

Asus ROG Phone 2,556 Razer Phone 2 2,417 Galaxy Note 9 2,406 OnePlus 6 2,454 iPhone XS 4,816
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Geekbench v.4.0 multicore

Asus ROG Phone 8,445 Razer Phone 2 8,905 Galaxy Note 9 8,827 OnePlus 6 9,068 iPhone XS 11,585
Note: Longer bars indicate better performance

Camera and battery life

Then there's all the regular phone stuff. It has a 4,000-mAh battery that lasted an incredible 15 hours and 5 minutes battery life in CNET's battery lab test for continuous video playback on airplane mode.

Image quality from the dual rear cameras is good. They capture a nice amount of detail. HDR mode adds a bit more dynamic range without going over the top with highlights and shadows. Take a look at the photos below I took inside a cafe: one with HDR enabled and the other with it off. Notice how the HDR captures the details outside the door and windows whereas the non-HDR photo just shows a white blob of clipped highlights.

The second rear camera gives you a wider field of view so you can pack more into your frame. And it is really wide. I found it great for moments I wanted to take a panorama but didn't want to go through that capture process. I also liked putting the camera on the wide-angle setting and placing the phone super close to an object in the foreground to create a perspective effect.

This was taken with the ROG's main 12-megapixel camera rear camera.

Patrick Holland/CNET

This was taken with the second rear camera that is wide-angle. I was standing in the same place when I took this photo and the one above.

Patrick Holland/CNET

Video looks decent but definitely suffers in low-light situations. The ROG has slow motion in 1080p resolution at 240 frames per second. It's not as impressive as the iPhone XS, but it is definitely worth trying.

Below are some more photos I took with the Asus ROG Phone.

Here's a photo of Stella the cat. Notice the detail in her fur.

Patrick Holland/CNET

Even with HDR, the ROG doesn't have the dynamic range abilities of the Pixel 3 or iPhone XS. But it still does a decent job with this sunset over Twin Peaks.

Patrick Holland/CNET

The ROG handles this indoor shot of a Four Barrel cappuccino pretty well. I noticed the phone tends to protect highlights -- look at that foam.

Patrick Holland/CNET

The ROG has a tendency to underexpose images like this one of the California Street cable car.

Patrick Holland/CNET

This photo was taken at sunrise. Low-light shots aren't this phone's strength. Notice the noise in the building on the right.

Patrick Holland/CNET

Asus ZenMotion and (sigh) ZenMoji

There's also a cool feature called ZenMotion. When the screen is asleep you can draw a letter on it to launch an app. Draw a "W" to unlock the phone and open the weather app or a "C" to open the camera. Besides showing this feature off to my friends, I didn't find myself using it but once or twice.

For those of you inclined, there is an app called ZenMoji that maps an AR cartoon avatar of an animal like a horse, cat or bear over your face. The characters are pretty adorable and yet another entry in the animated emoji wars: Apple has Memoji, Samsung has AR Emoji, LG has animated emoji and Huawei has 3D Live Emoji. You'll never be at a loss of ways to express yourself.

The ZenMoji rabbit winking.

Asus

Asus designed a lot of gaming accessories for the ROG that really take it beyond just playing games on a mobile phone. Accessories include:

In the TwinView dock, the phone sits on top, while it runs the game on another display below. 

Aloysius Low/CNET

TwinView Dock: It transforms the phone into a Nintendo DS-like dual screen device and adds two physical shoulder buttons, a 6,000mAh battery and a selfie camera to stream and record yourself as you play.

The Gamevice controller for the ROG Phone.

Aloysius Low/CNET

Gamevice controller: The ROG fits in the middle of the vice like device which has dual joysticks, fire triggers, bumpers, a D-pad and all the buttons you'd expect.

WiGig Display Dock: Stream content wirelessly from your ROG Phone to a TV with minimal latency.

Here's how the ROG Phone sits in the Mobile Desktop Dock. 

Aloysius Low/CNET

Mobile Desktop Dock: Turn the ROG into a mini gaming rig complete with nearly every port you can imagine: HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C, USB-3.1, micro-USB, Ethernet, headphone jack and an SD card reader.

Professional Dock - It has less ports than the Mobile Desktop Dock but has HDMI for a monitor and two USB ports for a keyboard and mouse.

All of these are sold separately and there's currently no word on pricing or availability.

Asus ROG Phone is definitely for gamers

The Asus ROG Phone is designed inside and out for gamers. The 128GB model costs $899 which converts to £690 and AU$1,265 while the 512GB model is $1,099 converts to £840 and AU$1,545. The Razer Phone 2 costs $100 less, but you get less battery life.

I didn't expect to like the ROG as much as I did. The extras really do make a difference in how this thing performs: the AirTriggers, X mode and the fan actually work to enhance the gaming experience. But the ROG also has a solid camera and a great battery life.

While I wouldn't recommend this to nongamers (the Pixel 3, OnePlus 6 and Galaxy Note 9 are better all-around choices), if you're a gamer trying to decide between this and the Razer Phone 2, Asus has the edge when it comes to controls and optional accessories. Of course that edge comes at a higher price.

Personally I find the design of the Razer Phone 2 much more appealing as a phone and high-end mobile gaming device. And even without a fan, it beat the ROG in nearly every performance test I ran.

Yet as I write this, Apple is preparing to ship the iPhone XR which costs less than either the Razer or the ROG, has bonkers processing power -- although we've yet to test it -- and access to a larger library of games on iOS. It doesn't have a high-refresh rate display or pressure sensitive buttons, but it's definitely a worthy consideration for a gaming phone.

Spec comparison


Asus ROG Phone Razer Phone 2 Samsung Galaxy Note 9 OnePlus 6 iPhone XR
Display size, resolution 6-inch AMOLED; 2,160x1,080 pixels; 90Hz screen refresh rate 5.7-inch LCD; 2,560x1,440 pixels; 120Hz screen refresh rate 6.4-inch Super AMOLED; 2,960x1,440 pixels 6.28-inch OLED; 2,280x1,080 pixels 6.1-inch LCD Retina Display; 1,792x828 pixels
Pixel density 402ppi 514ppi 516ppi 402ppi 326ppi
Dimensions (Inches) 6.3x3x0.34 in 6.2x3.1x0.33 in 6.37x3.01x0.35 in 6.13x2.97x0.31 in 5.9x3.0x0.33 in
Dimensions (Millimeters) 158.8x76.2x8.7 mm 158.5x79x8.5 mm 161.9x76.4x8.8 mm 155.7x75.4x7.75 mm 150.9x75.7x8.3 mm
Weight (Ounces, Grams) 7oz; 200g 7.8oz; 220g 7.09 oz.; 201g 6.2 oz; 177 g 6.8oz; 194g
Mobile software Android 8.1 Oreo Android 8.1 Oreo Android 8.1 Oreo Android 8.1 Oreo iOS 12
Camera 12-megapixel standard with OIS, 8-megapixel ultra wide angle Dual 12-megapixel (standard with OIS and telephoto) Dual 12-megapixel (wide and telephoto) 16-megapixel standard, 20-megapixel telephoto Single 12-megapixel
Front-facing camera 8-megapixel 8-megapixel 8-megapixel 16-megapixel 7-megapixel with Face ID
Video capture 4K 4K 4K 4K 4K
Processor Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 (2.96GHz) Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 (2.8GHz) Octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor (2.8GHz + 1.7GHz), or Octa-core Samsung Exynos 9810 (2.7 GHz + 1.7 GHz) 2.8GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 Apple A12 Bionic
Storage 128GB, 512GB 64GB 128GB, 512GB 64GB, 128GB, 256GB 64GB, 128GB, 256GB
RAM 8GB RAM 8GB 6GB, 8GB 6GB, 8GB Not disclosed
Expandable storage None Up to 2TB 512GB None None
Battery 4,000 mAh 4,000 mAh 4,000 mAh 3,300 mAh Apple claims it will last 90 min. longer than iPhone 8 Plus
Fingerprint sensor Back Right spine Back of phone Back of phone None (Face ID)
Connector 2 x USB-C USB-C USB-C USB-C Lightning
Headphone jack Yes No Yes Yes No
Special features 90GHz screen, Sides of phone can be customized as buttons for games, ZenMoji 120GHz screen refresh rate, water resistant (IP68), wireless charging Water resistant (IP68); wireless charging; S-Pen; Iris and facial scanning, AR Emoji Dual-SIM, Dash Charging Water-resistant: IP67, dual-SIM capabilities (nano-SIM and e-SIM); wireless charging; Memoji
Price off-contract (USD) $899 (128GB), $1,099 (512GB) $800 $1,000 (128GB), $1,250 (512GB) $529 (64GB), $579 (128GB), $629 (256GB) $749 (64GB), $799 (128GB), $899 (256GB)
Price (GBP) Converts to £690 (128GB), £840 (512GB) £780 £899 (128GB), £1,099 (512GB) £469 (64GB), £519 (128GB), £569 (256GB) £749 (64GB), £799 (128GB), £899 (256GB)
Price (AUD) Converts to AU$1,265 (128GB), AU$1,545 (512GB) Converts to AU$1,105 AU$1,499 (128GB), AU$1,799 (512GB) AU$702 (64GB), AU$769 (128GB), AU$835 (256GB) AU$1,229 (64GB), AU$1,299 (128GB), AU$1,479 (256GB)

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Elon Musk Says Tesla's FSD Software Is Getting a Price Hike Soon


Elon Musk Says Tesla's FSD Software Is Getting a Price Hike Soon

Elon Musk on Sunday tweeted that Tesla will raise the price of its "Full Self-Driving" beta software in North America from $12,000 to $15,000 on Sept. 5. 

Orders made before that date will still cost $12,000, Musk wrote. The company has increased the price of FSD multiple times, most recently on Jan. 17, when the price went up by $2,000

Despite what its name suggests, FSD is not a fully autonomous system. Rather, the system is "intended for use with a fully attentive driver, who has their hands on the wheel and is prepared to take over at any moment," per Tesla. (You can't buy a self-driving car anywhere yet). Drivers who purchase FSD will have access to Tesla's driver assistance features included in Tesla's Autopilot and Enhanced Autopilot packages (automatic parking, automatic lane changes and more).

The price hike will follow the wide release of FSD beta version 10.69.2, Musk noted in the tweet. In a separate tweet, Musk wrote that FSD beta 10.69 had begun to roll out, and "10.69.2 in a few weeks should be good enough to provide to all FSD beta participants." According to TechCrunch, this version "boasts upgrades like improved unprotected left turns, a 17% improvement of velocity error for pedestrians and bicyclists, and a new 'deep lane guidance' module for smoother lane switches."

Musk also wrote that Tesla owners can upgrade their existing car to FSD in two minutes through the Tesla app.


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Netflix: All the TV shows and movies coming in March 2022


Netflix: All the TV shows and movies coming in March 2022

March is a pretty big month for Netflix, but every month is big for Netflix. 

Probably the most "important" release is Bridgerton's second season. The first season of Bridgerton went absolutely ballistic, becoming one of Netflix's biggest ever shows. Expect hype and bombast upon the release of season 2 when it drops March 25.

We've also got the fifth and final season of the consistently good The Last Kingdom. That hits March 9.

Here's everything coming to Netflix in March.

March 1

  • The Guardians of Justice 
  • Worst Roommate Ever 
  • 21
  • 21 Bridges
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
  • Battleship
  • Christine
  • Coach Carter
  • Due Date
  • Freddy vs. Jason
  • Gattaca
  • The Gift
  • The Green Mile
  • My Best Friend's Wedding
  • Public Enemies
  • Redemption
  • The Replacements
  • Richie Rich
  • The Shawshank Redemption
  • Shooter
  • Shrek
  • Shrek 2
  • Sorry to Bother You
  • Starship Troopers
  • Texas Chainsaw 3D
  • Top Gun
  • V for Vendetta
  • Where the Wild Things Are
  • Zoolander

March 2

  • Against The Ice 
  • The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure 
  • Savage Rhythm 

March 3

  • He-Man and the Masters of the Universe: Season 2 
  • Midnight at the Pera Palace 
  • The Parisian Agency: Exclusive Properties: Season 2 
  • Power Rangers Dino Fury: Season 2 
  • Surviving Paradise: A Family Tale 
  • The Weekend Away 
  • Whindersson Nunes: My Own Show! 

March 4

  • The Invisible Thread 
  • Lies and Deceit 
  • Making Fun 
  • Meskina 
  • Pieces of Her 

March 5

March 7

March 8

  • An Astrological Guide for Broken Hearts: Season 2 
  • Autumn Girl 
  • Chip and Potato: Season 3 
  • Last One Standing 
  • Taylor Tomlinson: Look At You 

March 9

  • The Andy Warhol Diaries 
  • The Bombardment
  • Byron Baes 
  • Queer Eye Germany 
  • The Last Kingdom: Season 5

March 10

  • DC's Legends of Tomorrow: Season 7
  • Karma's World: Season 2 
  • Kotaro Lives Alone
  • Love, Life & Everything in Between 

March 11

  • Formula 1: Drive to Survive: Season 4 
  • Life After Death with Tyler Henry 
  • Once Upon a Time... Happily Never After 
  • The Adam Project 

March 12

March 13

  • London Has Fallen
  • Adam by Eve: A live in Animation 
  • Catherine Cohen: The Twist…? She's Gorgeous. 
  • Marilyn's Eyes 
  • One Piece Film: Strong World
  • Team Zenko Go 

March 16

  • Pedal to Metal 
  • Bad Vegan: Fame. Fraud. Fugitives 
  • Hei$t: The Great Robbery of Brazil's Central Bank 
  • A Walk Among the Tombstones

March 17

  • Lee Daniels' The Butler
  • Rescued by Ruby 
  • Soil 

March 18

  • Alessandro Cattelan: One Simple Question 
  • Animal: Season 2 
  • Black Crab 
  • Cracow Monsters 
  • Eternally Confused and Eager for Love 
  • Human Resources
  • Is It Cake? 
  • Light the Night: Part 3 
  • Standing Up 
  • Thomas & Friends: Race for the Sodor Cup
  • Top Boy: Season 2 
  • Windfall 
  • Without Saying Goodbye 
  • Young, Famous & African 

March 21

  • Call the Midwife: Series 10
  • In Good Hands 

March 22

  • Jeff Foxworthy: The Good Old Days 
  • The Principles of Pleasure 

March 24

  • Love Like the Falling Petals 

March 25

  • Bridgerton: Season 2 
  • Transformers: BotBots 

March 26

  • Blade Runner 2049
  • King of Thieves

March 28

March 29

  • Thermae Romae Novae 
  • Mighty Express: Season 6 
  • Mike Epps: Indiana Mike 

March 30

  • All Hail 
  • Trust No One: The Hunt for the Crypto King 

March 31

  • Casual: Seasons 1-4
  • Super PupZ 

Date TBA


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