Apple’s Brand New 13-Inch M5 iPad Pro Is $130 Off for Black Friday

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Black Friday sales officially start Friday, November 28, and run through Cyber Monday, December 1, and Lifehacker is sharing the best sales based on product reviews, comparisons, and price-tracking tools before it’s over.

  • Follow our live blog to stay up-to-date on the best sales we find.

  • Browse our editors’ picks for a curated list of our favorite sales on laptops, fitness tech, appliances, and more.

  • Subscribe to our shopping newsletter, Add to Cart, for the best sales sent to your inbox.

  • Sales are accurate at the time of publication, but prices and inventory are always subject to change.


Discounts on brand new Apple devices don’t come around all that often, but the M5-powered 13-inch iPad Pro is an exception: The 1TB version of this excellent tablet is now down to $1,769 on Amazon. That’s still a significant investment, but it’s a drop of $130 on a tablet that only launched last month.

I haven’t had the pleasure of getting my hands on the latest M5 model, but I have tested previous iPad Pros, and can vouch for their superior build quality, lighting-fast performance, and supreme versatility (there are so many great iPad apps out there, with more arriving every day).

Despite the best efforts of Android manufacturers, and the other slates in Apple’s line-up, the iPad Pro remains the best tablet out there, period. Sure, it’s also the most expensive, but sometimes paying more is worth it—and thanks to this Black Friday discount, you’re not paying quite as much as before.

Add in a keyboard cover and perhaps an Apple Pencil too, and you’re looking at a powerful portable workstation that may even be able to replace your laptop. This is the lowest price that the 13-inch iPad Pro (M5, 1TB) has even been on Amazon—in its short history—so it’s a deal worth taking advantage of at your earliest opportunity.

Does Amazon have Black Friday deals?

Yes, Amazon has Black Friday sales, but prices aren’t always what they seem. Use a price tracker to make sure you’re getting the best deal, or refer to guides like our live blog that use price trackers for you. And if you have an Amazon Prime membership, make the most of it.

Are Black Friday deals worth it?

In short, yes, Black Friday still offers discounts that can be rare throughout the rest of the year. If there’s something you want to buy, or you’re shopping for gifts, it’s a good time to look for discounts on what you need, especially tech sales, home improvement supplies, and fitness tech. Of course, if you need to save money, the best way to save is to not buy anything.

Are Cyber Monday deals better than Black Friday?

Black Friday used to be bigger for major retailers and more expensive tech and appliances, while Cyber Monday was for cheaper tech and gave smaller businesses a chance to compete online. Nowadays, though, distinction is almost meaningless. Every major retailer will offer sales on both days, and the smart move is to know what you want, use price trackers or refer to guides like our live blog that use price trackers for you, and don’t stress over finding the perfect timing.

Our Best Editor-Vetted Black Friday Deals Right Now


Amazon Fire HD 10 (2023)



$69.99

(List Price $139.99)


Sony WH-1000XM5



$248.00

(List Price $399.99)


Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Plus



$24.99

(List Price $49.99)

Deals are selected by our commerce team

Charity fundraiser and mental health advocate Amy Hudson wins BikeRadar and Cycling Plus’ 2025 Road Rider of the Year award

Amy Hudson has been crowned as BikeRadar and Cycling Plus magazine’s 2025 Rider of the Year.

Hudson has enjoyed a remarkable year, riding every stage of the Tour de France – plus transfers – to raise money for Shout, a mental health charity that offers a 24/7, text-based service.

Now her achievement has been recognised at our annual Rider of the Year awards, supported by Lezyne, with Hudson winning the public vote.

The numbers behind Hudson’s ride speak for themselves: 6,554km covered, with 74,863m of elevation, and £76,767 raised for Shout, having started with a £10,000 goal. Her story captured the hearts of the public and the attention of the media, with the BBC reporting on her ride when she arrived in Paris in July.

“You can’t really compute that amount of money,” said Hudson won the public vote from a shortlist of nominees that included Tadej Pogačar. “Hopefully, it’ll help a lot of people. That’s why I did it.”

Hudson started cycling in 2021 after suffering from a breakdown. Hudson’s husband bought her a bike and cycling played a key role in her recovery. She embarked on a series of increasingly ambitious challenges – the North Coast 500, Land’s End to John o’Groats and then the 1,200km Paris-Brest-Paris audax – before being inspired to undertake her 2025 challenge, having watched a documentary about Lachlan Morton’s ‘Alt Tour’.

Cycling Plus Rider of the Year 2025 shortlist

  • Alex McCormack
  • Amy Hudson
  • Imogen Cotter
  • Molly Weaver
  • Sarah Ruggins
  • Tadej Pogačar
  • Will Pomeroy

Back for a third year and run in conjunction with our sister titles, Cycling Plus and MBUK magazines, Rider of the Year is our annual celebration of the riders who have defined 2025.

The event sees winners crowned in our Rider of the Year and Newcomer of the Year awards, both of which are decided by a public vote, as well as a Lifetime Achievement Award, decided by our expert panel. Winners are crowned for both road cycling and mountain biking.

Cycling Plus Newcomer of the Year – Archie Atkinson

Archie Atkinson is already a star of British para-cycling – but the sky’s the limit for the 21-year-old from Stockport, our 2025 Newcomer of the Year winner.

Our newcomer category celebrates the sport’s best up-and-coming riders, and Atkinson is no doubt one of those. He burst onto the scene in 2023, winning World Championship gold on the track in the C4 scratch race. Further world titles followed on the boards in 2024 and 2025, while Atkinson also has a Paralympic silver medal to his name.

Atkinson came agonisingly close to winning gold in the C4 individual pursuit at Paris 2024 but crashed going into the final lap of the 4,000m event.

He’s making his name on the road, too, having won World Championship bronze medals in 2023 and 2025, and has his sights set on topping the podium next year.

“I’d like to get a stripey jersey on the road,” he says, with the UCI Para-Cycling World Championships in Huntsville, Alabama, in September front of mind. “I’ve not done that yet. That’s the big goal.”

Remember the name.

Cycling Plus Lifetime Achievement Award – Geraint Thomas

Geraint Thomas needs no introduction. Over the course of an 18-year professional career, the Welshman became a star on the track, winning two team pursuit gold medals at the Beijing 2008 and London 2012 Olympics, before focusing fully on the road.

The rest, of course, is history, and Thomas’ crowning glory came with overall victory at the 2018 Tour de France.

The 39-year-old’s palmares includes many of the most prestigious races in cycling, with wins at Paris-Nice, the Criterium du Dauphine, the Tour of Romandie, the Tour de Suisse and more. In 2010, he was crowned the British road race national champion; in 2018, he added the time trial title to his record.

Thomas also finished second and third overall at the Tour de France, in 2019 and 2022 respectively, and stood on the podium of the Giro d’Italia twice, too (2023, 2024). Now, having retired from the peloton after September’s Tour of Britain, he’ll start a new role as Ineos-Grenadiers director of racing.

“Huge thanks to the Cycling Plus and BikeRadar team. It’s an honour to be recognised. I’ve had a lot of time over the past 18 years, am proud of what I’ve achieved, and am looking forward to what comes next in retirement,” said Thomas.

Cycling Plus Lifetime Achievement shortlist

  • Bonnie Tu
  • Chris Boardman
  • Chris Froome
  • Gary Imlach
  • Geraint Thomas
  • Lizzie Deignan
  • Wout Van Aert

Previous Cycling Plus Rider of the Year winners

2024

  • Rider of the Year – Siraj Balubaid
  • Newcomer of the Year – Daisy Barnes
  • Lifetime Achievement Award – Maurice Burton

2023

  • Rider of the Year – Craig Maxwell
  • Newcomer of the Year – Imogen Wolff
  • Lifetime Achievement Award – Duncan Dollimore

Major AI Conference Flooded With Peer Reviews Written Fully By AI

An analysis of submissions to next year’s International Conference on Learning Representations has found that roughly one in five peer reviews were fully generated by AI, a discovery that came after researchers including Carnegie Mellon’s Graham Neubig grew suspicious of feedback on their manuscripts that seemed unusually verbose and requested non-standard statistical analyses.

Neubig posted on X offering a reward for anyone who could scan the conference’s submissions for AI-generated text, and Max Spero, CEO of detection tool developer Pangram Labs, responded the next day. Pangram screened all 19,490 studies and 75,800 peer reviews submitted to ICLR 2026, finding that 21% of reviews were fully AI-generated and more than half showed signs of AI use. The conference had permitted AI tools for polishing text but prohibited falsified content. Each reviewer was assigned five papers to review in two weeks on average — a load that senior programme chair Bharath Hariharan described as “much higher than what has been done in the past.”


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy Live is an enjoyable mess

The following contains mild spoilers for The Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy.

Following its birth as a 1978 BBC Radio sitcom through its many and varied adaptations, Douglas AdamsThe Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy has become an enduring part of our culture. Despite the fact its satire centers on the anxieties of Britain at the tail end of the ‘70s, its unique wit and surrealism have brought it worldwide fame. It is a rite of passage for at least one subset of British teens and their anglophile cousins, as well as a tech culture shibboleth that has embedded itself in the broader culture. Now, it has been reborn as a live immersive theatre production at London’s Riverside Studios that preserves the series most singular quality: Its messiness. 

Given it started as a half-hour radio comedy, Hitchhikers’ plot is surreal, episodic and prone to (what appear to be) digressions. But the broad shape of each version of the story sees Arthur Dent waking up to discover bulldozers about to demolish his home to make way for a new highway. He is distracted from his protest by his friend Ford, who reveals he is not an out-of-work actor, but an alien researcher for a book called The Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy. Minutes later, the Earth itself is demolished to make way for a new interstellar highway, but Ford and Arthur hitchhike onto one of the ships demolishing the planet. 

The “book” itself is in fact a small tablet containing a Wikipedia-style trove of knowledge that acts as the series’ narrator. Still wearing his pajamas, Arthur is dragged across the universe in various adventures which culminate in meeting a group of multi-dimensional aliens looking to discover the ultimate meaning of life, the universe, and everything. Subsequent radio series and novels take the same characters forward, backward and sideways with diminishing returns. Adams’ love of the long shaggy dog joke means that the ultimate question and the ultimate answer is… “What do you get if you multiply six by nine?” “Forty-Two.” (God’s final message to his creation is a similar tale, revealed as “We apologise for the inconvenience.”) 

Image of the Vogon Cargo Hold, one of the immersive sets.
Image of the Vogon Cargo Hold, one of the immersive sets.
Jason Ardizzone West / Hitchhikers’ Live

Each adaptation is twisted and turned to suit its new format, so there’s only a handful of essentials. Arthur, Ford, The Book, 42 and the Eagles’ Journey of the Sorcerer (the chorus of which is the theme) are the only mainstays. It should come as no surprise then that generous liberties have been taken here to compress the sprawling journey narrative into a format suitable for a live immersive theatre show. [If you’re unfamiliar, rather than sit and watch the action unfold on a stage, you’re instead walking around an environment with the story taking place in front of you. You can even engage with the actors directly at points, although only if you want to.] Here, you’ll be loitering in the bar of the Horse and Groom pub, the cargo hold of the Heart of Gold, the… cargo hold of the Vogon destructor ship and the factory floor at Magrathea. 

Fenchurch and Arthur lock eyes at the Horse and Groom.
Fenchurch and Arthur lock eyes at the Horse and Groom.
Jason Ardizzone West / Hitchhikers’ Live

To try and impose some degree of conventional narrative on the story, Hitchhiker’s Live takes the beats of the first story (in all its forms) and the romance from the fourth novel, So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish. We spend most of our time with Ford (Oliver Britten), while Arthur (Robert Thompson) flits in and out of the narrative as part of his universe-spanning quest to reunite with his beloved Fenchurch (Kat Johns-Burke). We get to spend a little time with Zaphod Beeblebrox (Lee V-G) and Slartibartfast (Richard Costello), while (one form of) Trisha McMillan (Lenora Crichlow) only appears as a recorded voice identified with a photo that looks a lot like a publicity shot from Avenue 5 rather than one taken fresh for this show. 

Slartibartfast (Richard Costello) holds court on the factory floor of Magrathea.
Slartibartfast (Richard Costello) holds court on the factory floor of Magrathea.
Jason Ardizzone West / Hitchhikers’ Live

Hitchhikers’ digressive surrealism means it struggles against the limits imposed upon it by any and every medium it’s ever been made into. As someone who grew up with the novel version, I see that as definitive, but even the later works struggled to remain on the page. At times, the immersive theatre format works to the story’s detriment, meaning you’re likely to miss a beat or two if you’re not able to sprint to every corner of each scene. For instance, there were so many audience members gathering around the Jatravartids area that I thought I’d check out the emptier areas first. Which was a mistake, as Humma Kavula then engaged in a big song and dance number center stage that I’d missed the buildup for. Similarly, I didn’t even realize that the show featured Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged (Tom Bowen) until I read the cast list while writing this review.

The abbreviated nature of the storyline means you’re often missing not just the connective tissue but even a lot of the meat from the original. Some of the emotional weight of the set pieces feels unearned because the makers have elided a lot of the necessary everything. When you get to the big finish, it’s hard not to wish we’d seen some of the effort one character has made beyond their hair growing out to mark the passage of time. The more I watched the show, and its many musical numbers, the more I wished its creators had simply made a more traditional stage musical. It would have made for a smoother, more cohesive show, especially given the source material’s thematic and narrative complexity. 

Marvin the Paranoid Android (Andrew Evans) is feeling very depressed.
Marvin the Paranoid Android (Andrew Evans) is feeling very depressed.
Jason Ardizzone West / Hitchhikers’ Live

The immersive format does have its strengths, including the ability to pepper the set with little visual jokes. The Vogon Complaints Office is packed full of gags hidden in boxes and filing cabinets, as are the little references on the screens in the Horse and Groom set. But best of all is any and all time you get to spend with Marvin the Paranoid Android (Andrew Evans), a masterful mix of design, acting and puppetry. Rather than cram Evans into a suit, the actor has the beautiful Marvin puppet on a chest harness, giving it a fluidity of motion and expressiveness that previous versions could only dream of. It helps, too, that Marvin’s perpetual misery beautifully undercuts the more saccharine parts of the story.

I also need to heap praise upon the guide segments, both in their animation style and for Tamsin Grieg’s narration. I’d say Grieg (Black Books, Episodes)  is the true heir to original voice Peter Jones’ crown, bringing a perfect blend of voice-of-God exposition and dry undercutting. In fact, you’ll struggle to find a bad element in the whole production, especially in the well-choreographed set pieces where the cast acts against pre-recorded footage. It’s a technical marvel in several ways and it is obvious that every person involved in its creation is operating with a bottomless pit of love for the source material and Adams. It’s just that all of those elements don’t quite cohere enough to push the show from good and entertaining through to being a must-see. 

Consequently, I’d say if you’re local to London and are even vaguely familiar with Adams’ work, you should go and enjoy yourself. But I might warn Adams devotees from further afield they may find the production underwhelming if they’re making a big trip to go and see it. Like every other Hitchhikers’ adaptation, it’s a mess, but then the messiness has always been at least half the point.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/the-hitchhikers-guide-to-the-galaxy-live-is-an-enjoyable-mess-140000853.html?src=rss

Louise Ferguson hails the future of women’s mountain biking after winning BikeRadar and MBUK’s 2025 MTB Rider of the Year award

“The future of women’s mountain biking is bright,” said Louise Ferguson after the downhill pioneer won BikeRadar and MBUK’s Rider of the Year Awards, presented by Lezyne, on Thursday.

Ferguson topped the public vote from a shortlist of mountain bikers that included men’s downhill world champion Jackson Goldstone, Tahnée Seagrave, who won two rounds of the elite women’s downhill World Cup this season, and XC star Evie Richards. 

Ferguson made history in July when she became the first woman to complete a full top-to-bottom seeding and then timed race runs on the infamous Red Bull Hardline Wales course.

“Thank you so much for your votes,” said Ferguson. “I’m truly honoured. Thanks to my team – I’ve got such a great group of people around me, who made this year possible.

“To complete Hardline Wales really was a team effort. I’m really excited about where we’re going to go next year – and for the future of mountain biking. It’s also great to see all of the other women who have been nominated.”

Ferguson also extended her thanks to the Red Bull Hardline organisers, as well as Seagrave, who has helped pioneer the participation of women at the event, widely considered to be one of the hardest downhill races in the world.

MBUK Rider of the Year 2025 shortlist

  • Asa Vermette
  • Becci Skelton
  • Bernard Kerr
  • Ella Conolly
  • Evie Richards
  • Isla Short
  • Jackson Goldstone
  • Louise Ferguson
  • Tahnée Seagrave
  • Tom Isted

Back for a third year and run in conjunction with our sister titles, Cycling Plus and MBUK magazines, Rider of the Year is our annual celebration of the riders who have defined 2025.

The event sees winners crowned in our Rider of the Year and Newcomer of the Year awards, both of which are decided by a public vote, as well as a Lifetime Achievement Award, crowned by our expert panel. Winners are crowned for both road cycling and mountain biking.

Previous MBUK Rider of the Year winners

2024

  • Rider of the Year – Ronan Dunne
  • Newcomer of the Year – Ffi Pickstock
  • Lifetime Achievement Award – Greg Minnaar

2023

  • Rider of the Year – Casey Gemma
  • Newcomer of the Year – Morgan Pickstock
  • Lifetime Achievement Award – The Athertons

MBUK Newcomer of the Year – Daisy Craig

13-year-old Daisy Craig is our Newcomer of the Year. Steve Sayers / Our Media

Our newcomer award shines a light on the year’s breakout stars, and the stars of the future – this year, that’s 13-year-old trial rider Daisy Craig.

Craig’s gold medal at this year’s UCI World Youth Games added to an impressive tally that includes eight trials national titles.

“This year has been amazing – winning the World Youth Games was a big achievement for me – but I never expected to be nominated for something like this,” Craig told MBUK. “It’s really special to be recognised by MBUK and to represent the bike trials community, who’ve been so supportive.”

Craig comes from a long line of trial riders and her dad, Billy, appeared in the pages of MBUK in the mid-90s, in a feature about the short-lived discipline of ‘speed trials’. He’s been riding trials (both motorcycle and bike) since the early-80s, when he was six years old, and his dad rode, too. It’s a trials-mad family.

Ten riders made up the 2025 Newcomer of the Year shortlist, including future World Cup star Charlotte Lawton Silva and passionate downhill racer Oscar Shipway.

MBUK Newcomer of the Year shortlist

  • Alex Storr
  • Asa Vermette
  • Charlotte Lawton Silva
  • Daisy Craig
  • George Cawdell
  • Haidn Gaskell-Fury
  • Katie Allsop
  • Louise Ferguson
  • Nathan De Vaux
  • Oscar Shipway

MBUK Lifetime Achievement Award – Steve Peat

Steve Pete is one of the sport’s most loved characters. Steve Sayers / Our Media

Following in the footsteps of 2024 winner Greg Minnaar and The Athertons, who won the inaugural award in 2023, Steve Peat took to the stage this time around to collect the 2025 Lifetime Achievement gong.

‘Peaty’ is a bona fide mountain bike legend: nine-time British national champion, 17-time winner of the UCI Downhill World Cup circuit, a three-time overall World Cup champion and, after earning silver medals in 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2008, the 2009 world champion.

“I’m honoured,” said Peat upon receiving the award. “It’s been a massive journey, and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it. I’m very lucky to have found mountain biking in the early days. “

The 51-year-old continues to be heavily involved in the spot, both as the head coach of the Santa Cruz Syndicate race team, whose riders include 2025 downhill world champion Jackson Goldstone, and as the founder of MTB accessories brand Peaty’s.

Peat earned the nod from our expert panel, which included MBUK editor James Costley-White. The Sheffield-born rider beat off competition on a star-studded shortlist that included Nino Schurter, who retired in September after an XC career that included 36 UCI Cross-Country World Cup wins and ten trips to the top step of the World Championship podium.

MBUK Lifetime Achievement shortlist

  • Brendan Fairclough
  • Evie Richards
  • Hattie Harnden
  • Josh Bryceland
  • Matt Jones
  • Nino Schurter
  • Scott Beaumont
  • Steve Peat
  • Tahnée Seagrave
  • Tracy Moseley

The Best Black Friday Deals on Home Gym Equipment Brands Like BowFlex and PowerBlock

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Black Friday sales officially start Friday, November 28, and run through Cyber Monday, December 1, and Lifehacker is sharing the best sales based on product reviews, comparisons, and price-tracking tools before it’s over. 

  • Follow our live blog to stay up-to-date on the best sales we find.

  • Browse our editors’ picks for a curated list of our favorite sales on laptops, fitness tech, appliances, and more.

  • Subscribe to our shopping newsletter, Add to Cart, for the best sales sent to your inbox.

  • Sales are accurate at the time of publication, but prices and inventory are always subject to change. 


Black Friday sales are in full swing, and if you’ve been dreaming of building or upgrading your home gym, now is the perfect time to invest in quality strength training equipment. “Quality” being the key word here, since plenty of gadgets on sale are more trendy than they are useful. Whether you’re a seasoned lifter or just starting your fitness journey, here are some of the best Black Friday deals on strength training equipment to help you make the most of your budget.

These adjustable dumbbells are $110 off

I’ve tested plenty of pairs of adjustable dumbbells, and no matter which brand you ultimately choose, I highly recommend investing in a set. The math alone makes it a no-brainer: Buying individual pairs of dumbbells from five to 80 pounds in five-pound increments would cost well over $1,500 and eat up valuable floor space. Adjustable dumbbells deliver the same versatility for a fraction of that price.

Right now, the PowerBlock Elite EXP Adjustable Dumbbells are on sale for $339.51 on Amazon, down from their usual $449 price tag. That’s a solid $110 savings on these PowerBlocks, which regularly feature at the top of pretty much every “best home dumbbells” list.

If you aren’t ready to give up the familiarity of traditional free weights, you could go for this CAP barbell rubber coated dumbbell weight set with a vertical rack (normally $189.99, currently on sale for $139.99).

These kettlebells are discounted, too

If you don’t yet own a kettlebell, definitely check out this guide from Lifehacker’s own Beth Skwarecki. Even if you do own one, you probably need another: a heavy kettlebell for swings, and a light one for presses and snatches. 

Here are some solid kettlebell deals I’ve seen for Black Friday:

  • Yes4All Powder Coated Kettlebell: $24.01 (normally $30.01)

  • Fitvids Wide Grip 3-Piece or 4-Piece Kettlebells: $44.99 (normally $59.99)

  • BowFlex SelectTech 840 Adjustable Kettlebell: $125.98 (normally $149.99)

Beef up your home gym with a squat rack

For anyone ready to invest in a complete home gym setup, all-in-one systems are a savvy move.

So, if you’re trying to upgrade your home gym setup to more than a set of dumbbells in the garage, you can snag the Major Fitness Drone3 Squat Rack on sale for $465.49 (normally $659.99).

While my colleague Beth Skwarecki and I typically approach Amazon’s house brands with healthy skepticism, the Drone3 has earned genuine credibility where it counts most: among actual users. The r/homegym community—notoriously discerning when it comes to fitness equipment—has consistently vouched for Major Fitness as a brand that delivers on its promises.

You could also spring for this all-in-one Drone3 Smith Machine for $1,215.80, 28% off its normal price of $1,679.99. With this sort of system, you get a power cage, cable crossover, squat rack, and pull-up station—meaning you can do well over 100 exercises from your own home gym.

Get a weight bench to go with those new free weights

A good bench is a must-have for strength training at home. This highly-rated Flybird bench is currently on sale for $109.99 (normally $162.48).

Holiday sales are also a great time to stock up on lifting accessories like belts, straps, wraps, and resistance bands. For more deals on home gym equipment like Pelotons, rowing machines, and treadmills, check out our favorite deals here.

Remember that while discounts are important, the best equipment for you is what you’ll actually use consistently. Focus less on temporary sales, and more on finding versatile, durable pieces that work with your available space.


How long do Black Friday deals really last?

Black Friday sales officially begin Friday, November 28, 2025, and run throughout “Cyber Week,” the five-day period that runs from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday, December 1, 2025. But Black Friday and Cyber Monday dates have expanded as retailers compete for customers. You can get the same Black Friday sales early, and we expect sales to wind down by December 3, 2025. 

Are Black Friday deals worth it?

In short, yes, Black Friday still offers discounts that can be rare throughout the rest of the year. If there’s something you want to buy, or you’re shopping for gifts, it’s a good time to look for discounts on what you need, especially tech sales, home improvement supplies, and fitness tech. Of course, if you need to save money, the best way to save is to not buy anything. 

Are Cyber Monday deals better than Black Friday?

Black Friday used to be bigger for major retailers and more expensive tech and appliances, while Cyber Monday was for cheaper tech and gave smaller businesses a chance to compete online. Nowadays, though, distinction is almost meaningless. Every major retailer will offer sales on both days, and the smart move is to know what you want, use price trackers or refer to guides like our live blog that use price trackers for you, and don’t stress over finding the perfect timing.

Our Best Editor-Vetted Black Friday Deals Right Now


Amazon Fire HD 10 (2023)



$69.99

(List Price $139.99)


Sony WH-1000XM5



$248.00

(List Price $399.99)


Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Plus



$24.99

(List Price $49.99)

Deals are selected by our commerce team

25% off Magicshine’s super-versatile dual-lens Hori road light

A reliable, high-power headlight is an absolute essential if you cycle through winter. Magicshine makes some of the best value lights on the market, scoring consistently highly across all categories.

The Hori 1300 is a compact light designed for road cycling packed with useful features for darker months – and better still, it’s on sale this Black Friday with up to 25 per cent off.

Magicshine Hori 1300S – up to 25% off

Magicshine Hori 1300
The light can be mounted above or below the bars. Magicshine

The Hori 1300S uses Magicshine’s Duo Optics System, pairing a low beam with a sharp cut-off for glare-free commuting with a high beam that reaches over 200 metres for unlit road riding.

Offering a significant power increase over the Hori 900, its low-profile design means it can be mounted above or below your handlebars thanks to the dual-position mount.

A smart sleep mode automatically powers the light down after five minutes of inactivity and wakes it with a tap when you set off again.

Magicshine’s wireless LightSync remote is supported for easy, hands-on-the-bars mode changes, while the app allows basic configuration and battery checks.

With up to 1300 lumens and a claimed 9.5-hour runtime, the Hori 1300S is a tidy, versatile upgrade for winter riding – and well-timed for Black Friday.

Fanless AIM101 Edge System Integrates Intel Processor N150 and PCIe AI Accelerator Support

Axiomtek’s AIM101 is a compact fanless edge computer built around Intel’s Processor N150, offering PCIe-based AI acceleration, dual 2.5GbE networking, wide-range DC input, and extended-temperature operation for industrial, machine-vision, and real-time inference workloads. The system is powered by the Intel Processor N150, a quad-core N-series SoC with clock speeds up to 3.6GHz. This platform integrates […]

There aren’t any Black Friday deals on RAM this year, and you can thank AI for that

I sat down to write this story hoping to point people to deals on RAM kits for their gaming PC builds, but after an extensive search, I’m sorry to say there aren’t any promotions worth even considering. Sure, if you visit Newegg or Amazon, you’ll find plenty of bundles listed as Black Friday specials, but following a quick visit to PCPartPicker or CamelCamelCamel, you’ll find many of those aren’t deals at all. 

Take this 32GB kit of 6,000MHz DDR5 RAM from G.Skill I found on Newegg. It’s one of the few “good” deals I found, but there’s a catch. It’s listed at $20 off its current $400 MSRP, with an additional $30 off if you use a promo code. To sweeten the deal, Newegg is even throwing in a NZXT all-in-one liquid cooler valued at $160. But here’s the thing, according to PCPartPicker, that same kit cost $155 a couple of months ago. Unless you can make use of the free cooler, you don’t need me to tell you $50 off a RAM kit that used to cost less than half of what it costs now is not a great buy. 

And it’s not just that one set of sticks from G.Skill — nearly every kit of DDR5 RAM I could find has increased in price in recent months. For instance, Amazon has listed this 32GB bundle from Crucial at $322. A little more than a month ago, you could get that same kit for $175

If it feels like the pandemic all over again, when it was impossible to buy a GPU at MSRP, you’re not far off the mark. Once again, there’s a component shortage, but this time around, it’s not cryptomining causing an insatiable demand for parts. Instead, it’s the booming AI industry buying up every RAM stick it can for their data center builds. Unless you’ve been living under a rock, it’s been hard to ignore the amount of money that’s been thrown around by NVIDIA, Microsoft and others.  recently. Much of it has been of a seemingly circular nature, but that hasn’t done anything to dent demand for both short and long-term memory. 

The problem is that many of the companies that produce consumer-grade memory, including heavyweights like SK Hynix and Samsung, also make memory for AI servers, and most of the RAM coming off those production lines is going straight to high-volume clients like OpenAI and Anthropic. In fact, demand for RAM has been so strong that even the price of some DDR4 memory kits has gone up — if you can even find the older format in stock.      

Price Changes Coming December 7th 2025, Due To Market Conditions �‼️ pic.twitter.com/et0HADhc08

— CyberPowerPC (@CYBERPOWERPC) November 25, 2025

A statement CyberPowerPC posted earlier this week gives a sense of just how dire the situation is right now. “Recently, global memory (RAM) prices have surged by 500 percent and SSD prices have risen by 100 percent,” the company said on X, adding it would be forced to increase the price of its pre-built PCs.

As a consumer, there’s little you can do at the moment. You can either buy now and pay extra, or wait in hopes the price of RAM will stabilize sooner rather than later. Unfortunately, with no signs of the AI boom cooling down in the immediate future, it’s hard to know when things might change. Save a bubble pop, the price of RAM is likely to remain high into early 2026, with the possibility of a trickle effect to SSD and GPU pricing.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/there-arent-any-black-friday-deals-on-ram-this-year-and-you-can-thank-ai-for-that-130000335.html?src=rss

The EU says Apple Maps may be big enough to be considered a DMA gatekeeper

Two more Apple products, specifically Maps and Ads, could be big enough to be designated as gatekeepers under the European Union’s Digital Markets Act (DMA). The EU has announced that it has received notifications from the company that those services meet DMA thresholds. It will now have 45 days to decide whether to designate Apple as a gatekeeper for either of them.

Under DMA rules, services that have 45 million monthly active end users and 10,000 yearly business users in the past three financial years can earn the “gatekeeper” designation. That means to say, they’re considered to have a significant impact on their markets. Apple already has several products with the designation, namely the Safari web browser, the iOS and iPadOS, as well as the App Store. As such, it has to adhere to a strict set of rules for those services and is prohibited from favoring its own products over rivals and from locking users into its ecosystem.

Apple has submitted an official rebuttal and will discuss with the EU why Maps and Ads shouldn’t be designated, according to Reuters. The company said Maps sees very limited usage in the EU compared to its competitors, such as Google Maps. It also denied the Apple Ads is a major player in the bloc’s online advertising industry and said that it has minimal share compared to ad services by Google, Meta, TikTok and even X. “We look forward to further explaining to the European Commission why Apple Maps and Apple Ads should not be designated,” Apple said in a statement.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/the-eu-says-apple-maps-may-be-big-enough-to-be-considered-a-dma-gatekeeper-130000965.html?src=rss

Notable Zwift Events for the Weekend of November 29-30

Winter is a great time to put in long miles to build endurance and aerobic performance! We’ve chosen several long rides this weekend, with a mix of banded rides, races, and a “fun race” fondo!

� zFondo Series on Gran Fondo

✅ Bonus XP  ✅ Popular  ✅ Endurance Challenge  ✅ Jersey Unlock

This is the third weekend of Zwift’s popular monthly Fondo Series, and its the longest so far this season, on Watopia’s Gran Fondo (97.8km, 1196m). Join others for a big day out!

Read all about the Zwift Fondo Series >

Multiple timeslots this weekend
Sign up at zwift.com/events/tag/zfondos

�Charityride Gipfel fur German x Fahrrad DENFELD Radsport

✅ Popular  ✅ PRL Full  ✅ Banded Ride

What’s that? You still don’t have your PRL Full badge?! Well… this is the easiest possible way to get it. A banded ride on London’s PRL Full, the longest route in Zwift (173.km, 2625m)! (Since it’s banded, you’ll stay with the group as long as you keep pedaling. Push the pace on the front, or hang with the chillers in the back. It’s up to you.)

This is a charity ride for a man named German – read his story.

Saturday, November 29 @ 9am UTC/4am EST/1am PST
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/5203740

�VirtuSlo 4Endurance League 2025

✅ Popular  ✅ Stage Race  ✅ Mass Start

VirtuSlo’s popular 4Endurance League is on stage 4 this weekend with a race on Makuri Islands’ Shisa Shakedown (53.5km, 555m). While many riders are racing every stage to complete for the GC, you can race individual stages as a one-off if you’d like.

Sunday, November 9 in two different timeslots
Sign up at zwift.com/events/tag/virtuslo

� Beth’s Banded Badge Hunt

✅ Banded Ride  ✅ Beginner-Friendly  ✅ Endurance Challenge

Beth’s Badge Hunt is a series of monthly rides taking on big Zwift routes. Led by Wobble Cycling Club’s Beth Phillips, these are banded rides, so everyone can ride at whatever effort level they’d like.

This weekend’s ride is on New York’s new Fuhgeddaboudit, the longest NYC course available (79km, 838m).

Saturday, November 29 @ 7am UTC/3am ET/12am PT
Sign up at zwift.com/events/view/5217679

� Zwift Epic Race – Double Parked

✅ Long Race  ✅ Unique Event

Zwift’s Epic Race series tackles challenging race routes each week, and this weekend’s races are on two laps of New York’s Double Parked for a total race length of 84.4km with 659m of climbing.

These races are categorized using Zwift Racing Score, but all racers begin together, so you can try to hold onto stronger riders as long as possible. Good luck!

Multiple times Saturday and Sunday
Sign up at zwift.com/events/tag/zwiftepic

How We Make Our Picks

We choose each weekend’s Notable Events based on a variety of factors including:

  • Is the event unique/innovative in some way?
  • Are celebrities (pro riders, etc) attending/leading?
  • Are signup counts already high, meaning the event is extra-popular?
  • Does the ride include desirable unlocks or prizes?
  • Does the event appeal to ladies on Zwift? (We like to support this under-represented group!)
  • Is it for a good cause?
  • Is it just plain crazy (extra long races, world record attempts, etc)?
  • Is it a long-running, popular weekly event with a dedicated leader who deserves a shout out?

In the end, we want to call attention to events that are extra-special and therefore extra-appealing to Zwifters. If you think your event qualifies, comment below with a link/details and we may just include it in an upcoming post!

Here are the best Black Friday deals we can find

Earlier in 2025 we celebrated Prime Day—the yearly veneration of the greatest Transformer of all, Optimus Prime (in fact, Optimus Prime is so revered that we often celebrate Prime Day twice!). But in the fall, as the evenings lengthen and the air turns chill, we pause to remember a much more somber occasion: Black Friday, the day Optimus Prime was cruelly cut down by the treacherous hand of his arch-nemesis Megatron while bravely defending Autobot City from attack. Though Optimus Prime did not survive the brutal fight, the Autobot leader’s indomitable spirit nonetheless carried the day and by his decisive actions the Decepticons were routed, fleeing from the city like the cowardly robots they truly are and giving over victory to the forces of light.

Although Optimus Prime’s death was tragic and unexpected, things are often darkest just before dawn—and so, even though today is called “Black Friday” to remind us of the day’s solemnity, we choose to honor him the way we honor other important historical figures who also laid their lives upon the altar of freedom: we take the day off to go shopping!

Below you’ll find a curated list of the best Black Friday deals that we’ve been able to find. Stand strong in the shadow cast by that long-gone noble Autobot, for by his sacrifice the day was won. Now, as Optimus would say, transform, my friends—transform and buy things.

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