惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
博客园_首页
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
P
Proofpoint News Feed
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
P
Privacy International News Feed
A
About on SuperTechFans
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
I
InfoQ
S
Securelist
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
罗磊的独立博客
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
B
Blog RSS Feed
V
Visual Studio Blog
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Jina AI
Jina AI
腾讯CDC
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
博客园 - 【当耐特】
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
F
Full Disclosure
S
Secure Thoughts
博客园 - 司徒正美
J
Java Code Geeks
Y
Y Combinator Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Project Zero
Project Zero
T
Tenable Blog
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
T
Tor Project blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
小众软件
小众软件
K
Kaspersky official blog

Latest from TechRadar

Quordle hints and answers for Monday, April 13 (game #1540) NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, April 13 (game #771) NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, April 13 (game #1037) Morbid Metal developer explains why he ditched an origami art direction in favor of gritty sci-fi — 'It worked, but it didn't really feel like me' '71% of US households get routers from ISPs': Why new FCC rules could leave millions stuck with outdated,… 'The CPU is the system’s executive layer': Intel joins SambaNova as both face existential threat from… ‘More bang for your buck’: 7 easy ways to boost your MacBook Neo’s performance for free DJI Romo P vs Roborock Saros 10R — which robot vacuum comes out on top when it comes to dodging obstacles? I put… I spent 6 hours with Genshin Impact on the Galaxy S26 Ultra, and I can't believe how far mobile gaming has come What is the release date for The Testaments episode 4 on Hulu and Disney+? I reviewed the LG G6 for 3 weeks, and it's a fantastic OLED TV that's the new best option for brighter rooms Is your bird feeder camera doing more harm than good? 3 tips for using it safely as RSPB issues urgent disease warning Chelsea vs Man City Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025/26 from anywhere in the world, team news How to watch Alcaraz vs Sinner for FREE: TV Channels for Monte-Carlo Masters Final Sunderland vs Tottenham Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025/26 from anywhere in the world, team news Are these the best-designed workout headphones ever? I used them for a month to find out How to watch Snooker 900 John Virgo online (it's free) – stream O'Sullivan vs Higgins anywhere I've only just discovered the Walk With Frodo app on Garmin's Connect IQ store — and as as a huge LOTR nerd, it's going to make the next 1,800 miles fly by 'Just not sustainable': Why your monthly £25 broadband internet bill could soon hit £45 How to watch Paris-Roubaix 2026: Free Streams & TV Info as Tadej Pogacar chases third Monument How to watch Euphoria season 3 online – stream Zendaya & Sydney Sweeney drama from anywhere today '$15K bill destroyed a solo developer’s startup': How hackers are using leaked Google API keys to… There's a sneaky way to watch UFC 327 really cheap... NYT Connections hints and answers for Sunday, April 12 (game #1036) NYT Strands hints and answers for Sunday, April 12 (game #770) Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, April 12 (game #1539) Amazon's Ring cameras are the perfect solution to secure your home on a budget — shop today's best deals… I've tested every iPhone since the iPhone 12, and Ceramic Shield 2 is the first iPhone glass I fully trust UFC 327 live stream: how to watch Procházka vs Ulberg, start time, preview, full card We're officially getting the DJI Pocket 4 on April 16, but here's how Insta360 could beat it 'Today is the day you've been waiting for': eGPUs can now officially turn a humble Mac Mini into an AI… Linux pulls support for ancient CPU — unsurprisingly, Linus Torvald says there is 'zero real reason' to… Keanu Reeves' new Apple TV movie Outcome has been slammed by critics — watch these 4 highly-rated films with the beloved actor instead 'AI is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity': Amazon CEO Andy Jassy lays out his '6 truths' for the… How to watch Grand National 2026: Free Streams & TV Channels for Aintree National Hunt Race ‘I hadn’t verified a single thing’: Using ChatGPT for Iran war news changed how I trust information Want cafe-quality lattes at home without buying an expensive new coffee machine? Jura's new gadget upgrades your drinks with perfectly foamed milk every time 'A self-inflicted hit': Washington state just rolled back sales tax exemptions for AI data centers worth… Playing The Last of Us with friends made my favorite PlayStation game feel brand new again Mint Mobile's new Samsung Galaxy S26 series deal can save you up to $900 — enough to cover an entire device Not a squat, not a deadlift — the trap bar deadlift 'sits between' the two, builds muscle fast and is… Record Store Day 2026 starts soon! The date, the top vinyl drops, and everything else you need to know Women's Six Nations 2026 Free Streams: TV Channels, Preview, Table, Round 5 Fixtures, France vs England Time Beyond Paradise season 4 star would 'love' to do The Celebrity Traitors season 2 — and would be 'terrified' if one contestant came to Shipton Abbott 'There’s no one-size-fits-all office chair': Vari explains the design decisions behind its award-winning… I was a vacuum reviewer for two years — these are the 6 sub-£250 models I'd recommend in a heartbeat Save $200 and get the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra at its preorder price for a limited time at Amazon 'Small business owners have significant creative control from start to finish' — VistaPrint reveals the… TurboQuant isn't the RAM crisis savior you're hoping for, analysts say — as memory prices continue to… ICYMI: the 7 biggest tech stories of the week, from DJI's new robovac to Artemis II iPhone photos I matched the upgraded Meta AI against ChatGPT, and you can really tell which AI has social media roots Quordle hints and answers for Saturday, April 11 (game #1538) I created my dream coffee corner at IKEA for under $100 — and my mornings are about to get a lot cozier 'Experts' to rent for $1 per month: Hostinger debuts 7-person AI team to help SMBs save thousands on… The new MacBook Air has already dropped to a record-low price on Amazon I tested Turtle Beach's Mario-themed controller and headset for Nintendo Switch 2 — and they surprised me for… NYT Strands hints and answers for Saturday, April 11 (game #769) NYT Connections hints and answers for Saturday, April 11 (game #1035) After soaring 2,200%, DDR4 RAM prices finally fall — but don't get too excited It's "completely changed my home cleaning habits": The Dreame Z20 is a highly effective vacuum cleaner for even lsrger homes. Beyond no-log: Tor looks into seizure-proof servers that forget your data There's a sneaky way to watch IPL 2026 for FREE Microsoft hands Linux Foundation key Surface data to help fix laptop battery life Adobe Reader users beware — experts flag months-old security flaw using booby-trapped PDFs to scope out victims 'Shockingly good value': New rugged Android tablet has a built-in 1080p projector, night-vision camera, and… Stop the presses — Microsoft is actually cutting cloud PC prices for SMBs, promises to make it 'more cost-effective for small and medium businesses' Microsoft has begun stripping out AI from Windows 11 — but it's already being criticized for not going far… Euphoria season 3 episode 3 release date: when will it come out on HBO Max? 'If one piece of your supply chain is delayed, then your whole project can't deliver': Nearly half of US data centers planned for 2026 canceled or delayed — and things could soon get much worse ChatGPT’s hidden backup model just got smarter — as OpenAI adds a cheaper Pro option Forget Big Mistakes — new Netflix true crime series Trust Me: The False Prophet is the only TV show you need to… 'The problem is not AI’s capability...what won’t improve on its own is the human side': Major study claims white-collar workers are fighting back against AI in the workplace Introducing Perspectives — the new home for premium contributed content on TechRadar Pro ‘Computers are no longer a bicycle for the mind’: Frameworks founder says the Steve Jobs era is over and PCs are now a ‘self-driving car that takes you directly to the destination’ No, Elon Musk doesn't want to give you a $5,000 tax refund — it's a scam, here's what to look out… ‘It’s a potential national security threat’: Proton study finds over 3,500 US legislators’ official emails leaked and exposed on the dark web ‘I want to cancel’: YouTube Premium quietly hikes its US prices for the first time in three years, forcing… RTX 5090s and other high-powered graphics cards may carry risks of cable melting issues — but Asus thinks it has… Former Xbox exec thinks Naughty Dog's decision to cancel the 80% completed The Last of Us Online 'was the right call', but it shouldn't have greenlit it in the first place — 'The ambition was there, but the realistic upfront planning wasn't', she says West Ham vs Wolves Live Streams: How to watch Premier League 2025/26 from anywhere in the world Microsoft warns worrying security flaw exposed over 50 million Android users, says 'user credentials and financial… ‘Apple will grit its teeth and push through’ — new report suggests the iPhone Air 2 isn’t dead,… Google Chrome rolls out a new tool to try and stop infostealer malware in its tracks 'Two Hells collide' — Doom: The Dark Ages and Diablo Immortal unite in a limited-time crossover event,… Spotify is rolling out new video controls, and as someone who hates its in-app music videos, I know this will be a huge… 8 new movies and TV shows to watch on Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max, and more this weekend (April 10) AdGuard VPN has a new app for iPhone — and you can try it out for 7 days for free Currys refuses to end its Easter sale — I've found the 21 best tech deals that are still available Amazon is slashing prices on Garmin watches — save up to $350 on best-rated models for running, biking and hiking Inspired to start running this summer? Here are 8 brilliant running shoes I'd recommend for beginners NASA used a 12-year-old GoPro to capture a sight called the ‘greatest gift’ by Artemis II pilot — and… iPhone owners urged to change this key privacy setting after FBI recovers suspect’s deleted Signal messages How to read Murder in Purple and Gold online from anywhere Garmin's cashing in on the screenless Whoop-style smart band trend with its upcoming CIRQA — here's the… YouTube insists that a 90-sec, unskippable ad format 'isn't something we are testing' — but furious… ‘Everything is magenta’: This wild hack got Mac OS X Cheetah working on a Nintendo Wii, and I can’t… A new free-to-play Borderlands game gets surprise drop on mobile, which Zynga says is part of a 'limited-time… The Xiaomi 17 outmuscles the iPhone 17 and Galaxy S26 in several key areas — read our full review In a sea of PlayStation Portal cases, the one I value the most has yet to be beaten How to submit an article for TechRadar Pro Perspectives
A touch-screen case, Dolby Atmos and a posture test: I spent a month with Cleer
https://www.techradar.com/sg/author/tom-bedford · 2026-06-27 · via Latest from TechRadar

TechRadar Verdict

The Cleer Arc 5 have a great battery life, fantastic suite of features, and fit surprisingly well. However, for the money you're paying, you'd hope for the audio quality and volume to be better.

Pros

  • +

    Surprisingly reliable fit

  • +

    Useful case features

  • +

    Long-lasting battery

Cons

  • -

    Some of the priciest open earbuds

  • -

    Sound quality doesn’t match cost

  • -

    Max volume is too low

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you're buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Cleer Arc 5: Two-minute review

Almost every one of the best open earbuds I’ve tested, has been designed for sports users. They let you hear your surroundings at the gym, remain aware when running in a busy area, and keep alert when cycling on a road. I don’t think Cleer missed this memo – the brand’s intentionally going for something completely different.

The Cleer Arc 5 are open earbuds designed not for sports, but for the rest of us. I was skeptical when I first saw them, but they’ve surprised me — in both good and bad ways.

The presence of Dolby Atmos and THX Spatial Audio means these are suited for watching a TV show or movie on your commute, and their support for a range of better Bluetooth codecs, including LDAC and aptX Adaptive, shows Cleer is aiming for audiophile-quality earbuds here. Those are some exceptional features for a form factor that naturally competes with loads of extraneous background sounds.

Cleer’s app hides loads of other features too, including a posture test which uses the buds’ positional tools, and the ability to set sedentary reminders if you’re too often stuck in one spot.

The design department makes it clear that these aren’t sports buds. Though surprisingly sturdy during a run, the buds are much bulkier than your average svelte runners’ wear. And the presence of an on-case display, full of controls and settings, clearly signposts this as not for active users. When I go to the gym or for a run, the case is always left at home.

Unfortunately, despite the impressive specs and clear focus on listening quality, the Achilles’ Heel of these earbuds is the sound quality. There’s a real lack of expansie through the soundstage, and both treble and bass feel poorly defined. The open-ear form factor doesn’t help here, especially with a max volume that’s simple not loud enough, but many similar earbuds I’ve tested sound a lot better.

It’s a shame that these don’t sound fantastic, and is surprising too when you see the price tag. For some users, I see the feature set trumping the sound quality. The fantastic battery life, health features and spatial audio might trump below-average sound. But it begs the question who these are designed for, if not audiophiles or fitness fans.

Get daily insight, inspiration and deals in your inbox

Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.

Cleer Arc 5 review: Price and release date

The Cleer Arc 5 buds on a shelf, either side of its case.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Released in March 2026
  • Made their debut at $219 (about £170 / AU$340)
  • Some of the priciest within their category

The Cleer Arc 5 were announced on March 16, 2026, only four months after their predecessors. That was a quick turnaround!

You can buy the Arc 5 for $219.99 (about £170, AU$340 — no word on a release outside the US, as with the Arc 4). So these are some of the most expensive open earbuds out there.

To my mind only the Bose Ultra Open Earbuds and Shokz OpenFit Pro cost more, but they’re both explicitly designed for sports, while the Cleer is aimed at an audiophile market.

Cleer Arc 5 review: Specs

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Drivers

16.2mm

Active noise cancellation

No

Battery life

12 hours (bud), 60 hours (case)

Weight

11.5g (bud), 145g (case)

Connectivity

Bluetooth 6.0

Frequency response

65Hz to 40kHz

Waterproofing

IPX7

Cleer Arc 5 review: Features

The Cleer Arc 5 case, showing its Spatial Audio toggle.

(Image credit: Future)
  • 12-hour battery life, 60 with case
  • 8-band EQ, plus presets
  • Loads of features including posture test

If there’s an area where the Cleer Arc 5 stand out, it’s in the feature set — it seems that this is what the buds were designed to do.

It starts with the basics: the battery life here is great for open earbuds. You’re getting 12 hours of listening per charge, with 60 hours once you factor in the charging case itself. Beyond a few endurance-focused earbuds, those figures are at the top of their class.

Boot up the Cleer+ app on your phone, and you’re getting a smorgasbord of tools — admittedly in a pretty confusing lay-out. You can use the app to toggle spatial audio, change between EQ modes and create custom ones, change what the touch and gesture controls do, change the case wallpaper, edit what tools are available via the case, and more.

The equalizer is an 8-band one, giving you some control over your sound, though in this day and age I’d say that 10-bands were more common. I preferred using this over the presets, which didn’t have a noticeable impact on a song’s sound.

The charging port of the Cleer Arc 5.

(Image credit: Future)

The “and more” features I alluded to earlier are pretty out-there, hence needing a whole extra paragraph. They’re health ones: you can set up sedentary reminders to get you to move about, add volume limits to protect your hearing, and do a posture test which uses the gesture controls of the buds to evaluate whether you’re sitting straight.

For office workers, this latter is a genuinely useful feature, and I used it to ensure my seat and chair were level when working at my desk. However, for it to work properly, your phone needs to be at eye level too — I messed it up by leaving my mobile o,n my desk, and when I bent over to look at it, the test was ruined.

One feature you’re not getting in the Arc 5 is any kind of noise cancellation. It’s admittedly very rare in the open-ear space, but not unheard of (if you’ll pardon the pun).

  • Features score: 4.5/5

Cleer Arc 5 review: Design

The Cleer Arc 5 buds in their case.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Giant case has a touch screen
  • Earbuds are on the large side, but fit solidly
  • Only IPX7 protected

Let’s start with the Cleer Arc 5’s big new feature: its charging case. Big literally: it weighs 97g all on its own, and measures 8.3 x 6 x 2cm, making it one of the biggest earbud cases I’ve seen in years.

This size isn’t just to house some pretty big earbuds, but it does that with a few extra twists. It has built-in UV charging for the buds, and a mirror inside the case for some reason. For some reason, the left earbud is housed on the right, and vice versa, which was confusing for a while until I learnt to switch.

But no, the big selling point here is a screen build into the charging case. You can use it to flick between a few menus: battery, music controls, spatial audio settings, general settings, equalizer and remote camera shutter. The interface feels akin to a smartwatches’: very basic.

For changing quick settings like EQ or skipping songs, the case was quite handy: I didn’t need to dig my phone out of my pocket and get distracted by the 120 notifications from that group chat I forgot to mute. But you can’t use the case to change playlists, create an EQ or dig deep into settings, so it won’t replace your phone completely.

The Cleer Arc 5 bud face-down on a bookshelf, next to its case.

(Image credit: Future)

The earbuds also have touch controls too, which were quite easy to trigger with a tap anywhere on their body, yet never accidentally picked up an unintentional touch.

I suppose that brings us onto the earbuds. These are pretty huge, and heavy too, weighing roughly 24g each. I haven’t seen an open earbud quite this big, and was expecting them to fit pretty awfully; thankfully, I was totally wrong. I went on many runs with the Arc 5, and not once did they threaten to dislodge, or wobble more than the average open-ear does.

I’d put this down to some smart balancing of the bud and counterweight. They were always comfortable to wear, even if the weight didn’t exactly make them easy to forget.

The Cleer Arc 5 comes in black or white, and I tested the latter. They have an IPX7 rating, which makes them sweatproof but not suited to swimming. I would avoid taking them out in heavier rainfall too, just to be safe.

  • Design score: 4/5

Cleer Arc 5 review: Sound quality

The Cleer Arc 5 bud being held in a man's hand, in front of some books.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Large 16.2mm driver
  • Blunt and indistinct sound
  • Max volume is too low for open format

I was expecting the Cleer Arc 5’s sound to be its outstanding feature. Between its 16.2mm drivers, support for LDAC, aptX Adaptive and aptX Lossless, and high price, it seems like these could be some of the best open earbuds yet.

I’m quite surprised to report that I was wrong, and I didn’t really love listening to tunes on the Arc. The quality isn't terrible, but it's not on par with the expectations you'd have from those aforementioned specs.

Music sounds compressed, with neither the high-end nor low-end differentiated in a way that gives any sense of sound stage or distinction. Snare drums lack bite, distorted-guitar walls turn into crunchy puddles, bass wobbles over plenty of other low- or mid- instruments. The buds would perhaps sound better if they were in-ears, but hovering a few mm over your ears, it doesn't fly.

The Cleer Arc 5 on a man's ear.

(Image credit: Future)

Low-end is poorly defined yet too prominent in the mix: The Human Race by BYRNE starts with a harmony that sounded more like a glitching speaker than a bass singer. This line’s meant to repeat in the chorus with a bass guitar, and it completely overrides the harmony. In 311’s Good Feeling, the bass trips over all the other instruments, replacing the usually-energetic, fun chorus with the sonic equivalent of a stubbed toe.

Also affected is the treble, as vocals and higher lines lose prominence and energy. Take, for example, Morningsider’s Thinking it Over: a string motif is dropped in the mix in the introduction, and completely lost in the pre-chorus.

I’ll concede that if you listen to acoustic or folky music, you may not notice this issue as much. In songs like Caamp’s 26, the reduced instrumentation meant I could still basically hear everything.

Well, I could hear it until I stepped outside. The Arc 5 falls into a common trap with open earbuds: their maximum volume isn’t high enough to compete with noisy surroundings. When I was running near a main road, I could barely hear my songs.

  • Sound quality: 3/5

Cleer Arc 5 review: Value

The Cleer Arc 5 buds in a man's hand.

(Image credit: Future)
  • Features may go some way to justify price...
  • ... but audio quality doesn't

The Cleer has quite a few neat features. I really like what the case display achieves, and the fit is solid. Plus, the movie listening features offer tools that many other earbuds don’t.

However that’s a really high price for any earbuds, let alone open-style ones — and especially not for ones that, frankly, don’t sound amazing.

There’s no way that these buds offer you value for money; you can get better audio quality for a lot less, especially if you’re happy to buy non-open-style buds.

  • Value: 3/5

Should I buy the Cleer Arc 5?

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Cleer Arc 5 score card

Attributes

Notes

Rating

Features

There are loads of features available here, and most of them work flawlessly.

4.5/5

Design

They're bulky, as is the case, but it all somehow manages to work together well.

4/5

Sound quality

These don't have the quality, sound stage or vibrancy you'd expect for the price.

3/5

Value

Elsewhere, you can easily get more for your money.

3/5

Buy them if…

You need office earbuds
The open-ear form factor, easy case controls and health features might make these buds suitable for office workers who need to be attentive to their surroundings, but still want to listen to music.

You love case controls
Earbuds charging case controls seem to be surging in popularity – if you’re sold on this kind of tool, the Cleer are a fine example of the art.

You watch movies on your phone
The presence of Dolby Atmos and THX Spatial Audio are almost unheard of in open earbuds, possibly because it’s a weird marriage, but still some might appreciate it.

Don’t buy them if…

You’re an audiophile
I didn’t love the music quality here, and if you want great-sounding open earbuds, you’ll find plenty of better-sounding options.

You’re on a budget
Most open earbuds I’ve seen cost a good $100 / £100 / AU$200 less than the Cleer Arc 5. They’re a premium options, and you can easily find cheaper.

Cleer Arc 5review: Also consider

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Header Cell - Column 0

Cleer Arc 5

Huawei FreeArc

Shokz OpenDots

Drivers

16.2mm

17mm x 12mm

2x11.8mm

Active noise cancellation

No

No

No

Battery life (ANC on)

12 hours (earbuds), 60 hours (total)

7 hours (earbuds), 23 hours (total)

10 hours (earbuds), 40 hours (total)

Weight

11.5g (each bud), 145g (case)

8.9g (each bud), 67g (case)

5.6g (each bud), 52g (case)

Connectivity

Bluetooth 6.0

Bluetooth 5.2

Bluetooth 5.4

Waterproofing

IPX7

IP57

IP54

Huawei FreeArc
If you want comfortable, understated earbuds that sound fantastic, the Huawei FreeArc remain some of my favorites. They’re also much cheaper than the Cleer, especially because they’re a little older.
Read our full Huawei FreeArc review

Shokz OpenDots One
If you want any open earbuds, and don’t mind jumping to the slightly-different clip-on style, these Shokz will appeal to you. They cost slightly less than the Cleer, and feel much lighter. The clip-style format also lets you hear your songs a lot better.
Read our full Shokz OpenDots One review

How I tested the Cleer Arc 5

  • Tested for one month
  • Tested in a range of indoor and outdoor settings
  • Used for music, gaming, calls movies and TV

I used the Cleer Arc 5 for roughly a month before writing this review of them. In that time, they were paired to a succession of Android smartphones, mostly the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and Moto Edge 70 Fusion.

I listened to the Arc 5 on runs, walks around my neighborhood, office sessions, long trips on public transport and at home. I mostly streamed music via Spotify Lossless, and Apple Music, but also watched movies on a variety of streaming services, played games, and tested a few other music streamers.

I’ve been reviewing gadgets for TechRadar for over seven years now, including testing audio kit for nearly as long. In that time I’ve handled other Cleer gadgets as well as many, many other open-ear buds.

  • First reviewed in May 2026
Tom Bedford

Tom Bedford is a freelance contributor covering tech, entertainment and gaming. Beyond TechRadar, he has bylines on sites including GamesRadar, Digital Trends, Android Police, TechAdvisor, WhattoWatch and BGR. From 2019 to 2022 he was on the TechRadar team as the staff writer and then deputy editor for the mobile team.

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.