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There's no denying the Microsoft Surface Laptop is a stunning 13-inch laptop for everyday and productivity tasks, with some of the best battery life of any laptop its size. And right now, Microsoft Surface Laptop is down to $949 (was $1150) at Best Buy.
With a $200 saving on one of the more polished Copilot+ PCs on the market, this set-up features 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD, and a snappy Snapdragon X Plus chip that delivers around 17 hours of battery life during our own tests.
It also features a 2K touchscreen display. It might lack the performance of the M4-powered MacBook Air. But it's ultra-thin, lightweight, and a total joy to type on all day. And for every day business productivity, travel, and school work, we found the laptop hard to fault.
Today's top Microsoft laptop dealSnapdragon X Plus | 16GB RAM | 256GB SSD
A compact 13-inch Copilot+ PC built around Qualcomm's Snapdragon X Plus processor with integrated Adreno graphics. This configuration comes with 16GB of RAM and 256GB of storage, paired with a 2K touchscreen display (1920 x 1280) in a Platinum finish. Full Windows 11 Copilot+ AI features included.View Deal
In our 4-star review, we called it "a gorgeous laptop that is great for everyday and productivity tasks with some of the best battery life of any laptop of its size."
The Snapdragon X Plus is an 8-core ARM chip built for efficiency rather than outright speed, and that trade-off is the honest story of this laptop. It comfortably handles everyday tasks — browsing, Office apps, streaming, light multitasking — and native ARM support means Word, Excel, and other Microsoft apps run smoothly without emulation. Where it falls behind is in heavier, sustained workloads, where x86-based rivals with more powerful chips still have the edge.
What that efficiency buys you is battery life that's genuinely class-leading — in our testing, well over 15 hours on a single charge, comfortably outlasting most Windows ultrabooks and even some MacBook Air configurations. For anyone who's tired of hunting for an outlet during a workday, that alone is worth factoring into the value calculation.
The 13-inch 2K touchscreen is sharp and detailed for everyday use, and the 3:2 aspect ratio gives you noticeably more vertical space than a typical 16:9 laptop display — a real advantage for documents, spreadsheets, and web browsing. Build quality is where Microsoft's Surface line has always excelled, and the Platinum finish keeps things understated and office-appropriate.
One honest caveat: if your workload leans on demanding creative software or specialized Windows applications without native ARM support, you may run into occasional compatibility hiccups or emulation slowdown. For general productivity and everyday computing, that's a non-issue — but it's worth knowing before you buy.
For a beautifully built, all-day-battery Copilot+ PC at a genuinely discounted price, the Surface Laptop 13 is well worth a look.
Also consider: More Snapdragon laptop dealsSnapdragon X X1-26-100 | 16GB RAM | 256GB SSD
With a responsive mobile processor, this 14-inch HP laptop is tailored for running office software, browsing, and streaming. In our review, we praised its long battery life and "top-tier display". View Deal
Snapdragon X X1-26-100 | 16GB RAM | 256GB SSD
A similar set-up to the OmniBook above, this one boasts a larger 16-inch screen for when you need to key into the details while working or studying. Expect long-life battery thanks to the Snapdragon chip. View Deal
Gaming has officially reached its worst state in decades after PlayStation announced it will ditch game discs for PlayStation consoles starting in 2028.
It comes very shortly after Rockstar Games and its most anticipated game, arguably of all time, GTA 6, opened pre-orders.
Why is that relevant, you may ask? Well, in case you've missed it, there will be no discs available for 'physical' copies of GTA 6. Essentially, buying the highly anticipated game digitally or the physical edition at retailers means you won't have a hard copy of the game, as the latter comes with a code in a box.
Frankly, it's a reach to even suggest that GTA 6 has a physical edition at all, as a code in a game case definitely isn't a physical copy — and that's what makes things even more ridiculous.
Rumors recently suggested that there would never be any disc of GTA 6, and after PlayStation's disastrous announcement, it's safe to say that those rumors are accurate. We're not focusing exclusively on GTA 6 here, but if you're wondering what the future of gaming will look like from 2028 and beyond, GTA 6 is the example.
The PlayStation 'monopoly-like' behaviour begins(Image credit: Shutterstock / Wachiwit)To put it simply, that example of GTA 6 means that all of the games purchased from the year 2028 and beyond on PlayStation consoles will no longer be owned by consumers, because digital purchases are actually licenses.
That's a huge issue for several reasons. If PlayStation wanted to revoke a user's access to a game, it could do so at any time, which we've recently seen with the removal of over 500 movies from user libraries without refunds. If a user loses their account from an unwarranted ban (or even by being hacked), then their digital purchases are effectively gone for good.
With this in mind, Sony's behaviour feels very monopolistic. Of course, gamers can still choose to buy third-party games on other platforms, but since Sony has reportedly tried to make certain games like Crimson Desert a timed exclusive (reported by Forbes), and it's now cutting off another avenue of purchasing games, it comes across as unfriendly to gamers, even if its moves aren't exactly illegal.
Physical copies have always allowed consumers to buy, resell, or borrow games and get their hands on cheaper copies at retailers, whether brand new or second-hand.
The latter is what gives stores like CeX, Game (in the UK), and GameStop purpose, letting consumers find games that they didn't want to pay full price for at launch, or buy games for retro systems like the PS1 or PS2, since the libraries from those game consoles are severely limited on PS5 (and some are only available via streaming).
Since the PlayStation Store will soon be the only place to buy games on PlayStation consoles, consumers will effectively be forced to pay high prices for most titles — including both PlayStation exclusives and third-party games that have been available for years already.
$39.99 for GTA 5 in 2026? Really? (Image credit: Sony / PlayStation)The examples are clear to see above; GTA 5 is a 2013 game that has received multiple re-releases from PS3 to P55, and somehow still costs $39.99 / £59.99 / AU$89.95. The same applies to Uncharted: Legacy of Thieves Collection, a 2022 game, which costs $49.99 / £44.99 / AU$74.95, and the list goes on.
At CeX, GameStop, and multiple other video game retailers, games of their caliber will cost significantly less, without needing a sale or discount to make them affordable for consumers.
That affordability is seemingly what Sony is also trying to eliminate alongside game ownership. Streamlining all PlayStation game purchases to its PlayStation Store ensures you can't find a cheaper deal for a game anywhere else. If that doesn't sound monopolistic, then I don't know what does.
Sure, there will likely still be cheaper options via video game retailers for 'physical' games with a code in a case. However, the fact that discs will no longer exist for games will instantly discourage gamers from opting for those so-called 'physical' editions, since ownership will be out of the equation.
It's always been more expensive to pay for games digitally than it has been to buy them second-hand — especially with constant price increases and few steep discounts — and once second-hand games are gone in 2028, there will be no going back.
(Image credit: Naughty Dog)To make matters even worse, Sony is also shutting down the PS3 and PS Vita stores in 2027, leaving PS3 and PS Vita owners with no possible way to purchase any of the games on those two platforms.
Announcing such a drastic move at the same time as informing gamers that discs will cease to exist on PlayStation does the exact opposite of instilling faith in consumers that buying digitally is the right move.
When the PS5 or any other future PlayStation console eventually becomes a retro console, Sony may very well do the same thing and close the platform's store. Without discs or hard copies of games, you can essentially kiss them goodbye for good.
The warning signs have been there all along; physical media, specifically within the gaming industry, has seen a steady decline over the years, with publishers and game studios of particular games opting for digital releases, and on some occasions, later releasing physical editions.
As Hideo Kojima, a veteran gaming designer, once said, "eventually, even digital data will no longer be owned by individuals on their own initiative". That reality is now here — and unless gamers stand up to Sony's anti-consumer practices now, it'll be too late once 2028 arrives.
If you've been making the most of the sunny weather by getting out and exercising, then you'll no doubt have considered buying one of the best fitness trackers around. But with so many different brands and models to choose from, it can be difficult to decide which is best for you.
Well, maybe the decision became a whole lot easier because the Fitbit Charge 6 is now on sale at Amazon for just £79 (was £139.99). That's a spicy 44% discount for those interested in the numbers.
For the price, it has excellent exercise tracking, sleep tracking, ECG functionality, and irregular rhythm notifications, all of which add up to an impressive feature-rich smartwatch.
Today’s best Fitbit dealSave over £60 on a fitness tracker boasting over 40 exercise modes, Google Wallet compatibility, and Google Maps. Heck, it's even got built-in GPS, which is far from guaranteed at this price point. The deals end on July 24 or until promotional stocks last.View Deal
If you've had a look at our Fitbit Charge 6 review, then you'll notice that we only awarded it 3.5 out of five stars. That might put you off, but it's worth stating that the rating was given when we compared it to full-on fitness watches.
If you're only looking for a watch for occasional health tracking and some exercise tracking, then the Charge 6 is well worth a look, especially at this price.
Our reviewer actually concluded by calling it a “solid companion for all kinds of activities", and with a widespread array of features, including an ECG heart health reader and full GPS, there's a lot to commend it.
And let's not forget that it's a Fitbit, which means you get all the benefits of the Fitbit ecosystem with a six-month free trial to Fitbit Premium bundled in.
Still exploring your options? If you're a runner, then one of the latest Garmin deals is worth a look. Alternatively, if you want a better all-rounder with broader smartwatch integration, such as receiving and responding to texts, then have a look at the best smartwatch deals available right now.
I test over a dozen of the best coffee makers every year, but sometimes you just can't beat a good pour-over — and a large part of that comes down to the dripper you use. Lots of factors can change the way your coffee tastes (grind size, ratio of coffee to water, water quality, and temperature being just a few), but the design of your dripper has a big impact as well.
• See all coffee dripper deals at Amazon
For example, the size of the opening at the bottom affects the flow rate, the material (plastic, glass, metal, or ceramic) determines heat retention, and channels on the inside of the brewer can channel water over the whole bed of coffee.
Also bear in mind that different brewers take different filters, some of which are easier to find than others, or cost more. With all that in mind, here are 15 of the best coffee drippers to level up your brewing, with prices starting under $25.
The best brewers Kalita Mino 185 Ceramic Coffee Dripper - Sand Black HARIO 01 Glass Coffee Dripper - Olive Wood timemore Crystal Eye B75 Dripper - Clear HARIO Switch Immersion Dripper, Size 03 Kalita Wave 185 Dripper December Variable Coffee Dripper HARIO 02 Glass Coffee Dripper - Black ORIGAMI JAPAN Origami Ceramic Dripper - Small HARIO NEO - Black Orea 01 Brewer - Obsidian Steel OREA V4 Narrow Brewer ORIGAMI JAPAN Ceramic Dripper - Medium Kalita Mino 185 Ceramic Coffee Dripper - Sand Brown timemore Crystal Eye B75 Dripper - Amber Black Orea 01 Brewer - Smoke BlackFor more immersive work and study, I've uncovered a deal you won't want to miss, with the Samsung Odyssey G55C 32-inch curved monitor now $190 (was $330) at Amazon for Prime members.
This is the kind of monitor that usually gets overlooked in favor of no-name QHD panels selling for a similar price.
However, for my money, this is the better deal. The Odyssey G55C brings genuine Samsung panel engineering, a proper warranty, and specs that hold up under independent testing — something budget unbranded alternatives can rarely claim.
Today's top Samsung monitor dealScreen size: 32in
Resolution: QHD
A 32-inch curved VA monitor with a steep 1000R curvature, QHD resolution (2560 x 1440), and a 165Hz refresh rate. 1ms (MPRT) response time and AMD FreeSync keep motion smooth and tear-free, while HDR10 support and a 2500:1 contrast ratio deliver deep blacks for an immersive picture. Connectivity includes HDMI 2.0, DisplayPort 1.2, and a 3.5mm headphone jack.View Deal
QHD at 32 inches gives you 1.7x the pixel density of Full HD, which translates to noticeably sharper text, more detailed 3D textures, and more usable screen space for productivity — you can comfortably fit a full document page or dozens of spreadsheet rows on screen at once.
The 1000R curvature is the monitor's signature feature. It wraps the display around your field of view more aggressively than most curved monitors on the market, which either draws you deeper into games and movies or feels like a lot depending on your taste — it's worth knowing this is a steep curve, not a subtle one, before you buy.
165Hz and AMD FreeSync make this a genuinely capable gaming display, keeping motion smooth and largely tear-free with a compatible graphics card.
The VA panel also delivers strong contrast — Samsung rates it at 2500:1 — which means deep, convincing blacks that IPS panels in this price range typically can't match.
More Samsung monitor dealsScreen size: 27in
Resolution: FHD 1080p
A great deal for an IPS display under $100 here - it's not too large, which makes it ideal for office and home workspaces. It promises vivid colors if you're going beyond spreadsheets and emails, and even has a Game Mode if you're using it for work and play. View Deal
Screen size: 34in
Resolution: QHD Wide 1440p
For a bump in resolution, this 34in ultrawide display definitely got my attention. For business professionals, it boasts an Eye Saver Mode that should make it more pleasant to stare at during work hours. The 100Hz refresh rate and HDR10 are great extras. It's got dual HDMI ports and a DisplayPort port, too. View Deal
Screen size: 43in
Resolution: 4K UHD 2160p
This is an all-in-one screen that can be used for computer displays and as a TV - ideal for anyone working from home that doesn't want to bring in yet another device just for work. View Deal
Screen size: 49in
Resolution: Dual QHD
The Odysessy is one of my favorite Samsung monitors, delivering a genuinely immersive experience whether you're working or gaming. If you're staying extra productive, you can also view content from two separate sources at once.View Deal
Screen size: 57in
Resolution: Dual 4K
One for those with a lot of space, this ultrawide Samsung screen in the 32:9 ratio is tailored for immersion with a 57in display and dual 4K resolution. What I especially like is the inclusion of HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB Hub for connecting devices. View Deal
- Samsung is phasing out the Vascular Load feature on Galaxy Watch in the US
- It's replacing it with Blood Pressure Trend in late July
- Users believe this is due to FDA compliance issues
Samsung's range of smartwatches covers every base when it comes to fitness tracking, but the tech giant is pulling the plug on a health monitoring tool it rolled out only last year. Don't fret; a replacement feature is on the way.
The company’s experimental Vascular Load feature, a tool that was introduced alongside the launch of the Galaxy Watch 8 at last year’s Galaxy Unpacked 2025, will be phased out in the US by late July. Its removal aligns with the upcoming Samsung Health 7.0 and One UI 9 watch updates, but it appears that Vascular Load will still be available to users outside of the US following the changes.
When Samsung removes Vascular Load at the end of the month, you'll no longer be able to access this data in the Samsung Health app. However, you can download your existing data by opening the app and tapping Samsung Health Settings, then find Samsung Health Information to continue.
Users are currently being notified via the Samsung Health app, but the company has yet to issue a wider announcement, which is a little frustrating, as I can imagine users just want a bit of clarity. That said, Samsung isn’t leaving you high and dry.
Vascular load feature being removed in the US from r/GalaxyWatchTo make up for the loss of the Vascular Load monitoring tool, the company is offering an alternative: Blood Pressure Trend — which Samsung says will be available in the upcoming Galaxy Watch (we assume this is referring to the Galaxy Watch 9).
While Vascular Load uses your heart rate data to measure factors like changes in blood volume, Blood Pressure Trend is designed to monitor your blood pressure periodically and show you a trend over time. In addition to this, it will also offer you tips and tricks to help maintain healthy habits.
To get started with Blood Pressure Trend, Samsung highlights in the notification that you’ll need to use a blood pressure cuff with your Galaxy Watch, and then once every 28 days to maintain accuracy (according to Android Authority). The company also shared that Blood Pressure Trend “is for wellness only”, and “not for the diagnosis and treatment of any medical condition”.
It’s still early days, and Galaxy Watch owners are awaiting further information on the upcoming changes, which have sparked online debate regarding the reasons for its US removal.
A vast majority of the online commenters believe that Samsung is concerned about Food and Drug Administration (FDA) compliance — one user says that the FDA often drags out approvals like this. While this idea gives the removal credibility, Samsung has yet to detail the reasons for its decision to stop access to Vascular Load, so we have to take this speculation with a pinch of salt.
Forget BBQs, I'm all about outdoor pizzas this year. If you want to hop on the homemade pizza bandwagon (welcome, there's plenty of space!), then now's a good time to get yourself set up with a pizza oven. Making your own pizzas is fun and satisfying, and the results are so much more delicious than oven pizzas or takeaway. If you're short on time or not especially gifted in the kitchen, it's pretty easy to find premade dough base balls that you can just roll out and add toppings to (this is my preferred method).
When picking a pizza oven, your main decision will be the type of fuel you want it to run on. Most modern pizza ovens — including the one I have at home — run on gas, which is speedy, convenient, and easy to control by just adjusting a dial. Another option is to opt for wood, which gives that delicious smokey smell and taste (although your pizzas won't be cooking for very long, so the impact won't be massive), but requires more effort to control the temperature.
There are a few 'multi-fuel' pizza ovens that can be used with either wood or gas. Alternatively, you could opt for an electric pizza oven. These are ultra-convenient, easy to control and versatile too. However, they tend not to get as hot as the other options, and you lose that authentic experience and charred flavor.
Below, I've rounded up some of our favorite pizza ovens. If you want to see how these options compare, hop to the bottom of the page for a specs comparison table.
Gas pizza ovensI tend to think of gas pizza ovens as a 'happy medium' option. They can reach scorching temperatures, so you'll get those authentic charred edges, but are reliable to use and it's easy to adjust the heat up or down.
You won't get the 'smokey' wood-fired flavor — however, given your pizza's only going to be in there for a couple of minutes max, the difference isn't going to be nearly as noticeable as, for instance, using a gas versus charcoal BBQ.
Ooni Koda 16 Gas Pizza Oven Ooni Koda 12 Gas Pizza Oven ZANUSSI ZGPO1PC Gas Powered Pizza Oven Gozney Arc XL Pros- Larger pizzas
- More stable temperatures
- Digital thermometer
- Not portable
- No door for fast heat up
- No wood-fire option
Wood fired pizza ovens run on pellets. Like gas options, they can get super-hot, but controlling the temperatures is trickier — it requires adjusting the vents and adding fuel. You'll also need to deal with the ash leftover afterwards. However, you will get the delicious smokey smell, and a more traditional cooking experience.
GEORGE FOREMAN Outdoor 12-inch Wood Pellet Pizza Oven George Foreman Outdoor 16-inch Wood Pellet Pizza Oven Zanussi ZPO1BPC Outdoor 12-inch Wood Pellet Portable Pizza Oven Electric pizza ovensAn electric pizza oven won't give you that unique cooking experience; instead, it'll be a lot more like using an air fryer or regular oven. They also tend not to have a lower maximum temperature, so it's trickier to achieve those crispy bases and charred edges. However, what you lose in authenticity you gain in convenience — you can control temperatures precisely, and the results are very predictable.
Ninja Artisan Electric Outdoor Pizza Oven & Air Fryer MO201UK Ooni Volt 2 Electric Pizza Oven Ninja Woodfire 8-In-1 Electric Outdoor Oven, Pizza Oven & Smoker Multi-fuel pizza ovens Ooni Karu 2 Multi Fuel Portable Outdoor Pizza Oven Gozney Dome (gen 2) Multi Fuel Outdoor Pizza Oven Pizza oven specs compared- Daisy One: new headphones from a new brand — and they're not cheap
- No app, heavier than average build, smaller drivers…
- …but I truly think the dedicated on-ear 'Still Mode' button could be a winner
You’ve never heard of Daisy (the Californian tech company; you may have heard of the flower) but it wants you to hear of it. Or hear it…’s debut over-ear headphones, which are called the Daisy One.
These new cans retail at the not-insignificant price point of $399 / £364 (about AU$700), money which could, it's important to say, be buying you some Sony or Bose cans. So why buy these instead? Refreshingly, rather than play the heavy-hitters at their own game, Daisy's throwing out the rule book on how to convince you.
Take the cans’ audio chops; instead of using the same 40mm drivers that almost everyone opts for, Daisy’s gone for a 35mm option, tuned by former Harman engineers and weighted towards the low-end. That’s pretty uncommon in pricier wireless models, where neutral sound is the typically the goal.
Then there’s the design: it’s heavier than average, at 318g, and uses a more slender, metallic look than your average over-ears and comes in silver, dark green or blue (no traditional 'charcoal' option here).
Perhaps the biggest selling point — something many brands (and reviewers) could consider a minus — is the lack of an app. Instead, controls are done on the headphone, with a dial for volume controls and play/pause, and a dedicated button that plays soundscapes recorded from around California. And what a dial/button it is! It puts me in mind of Montblanc's bijou earbuds or indeed the tip of a Montblanc pen.
What this button offers is called the 'Still Mode', and it includes access to rainfall sounds, five-minute breathwork tracks, ocean tides and more, but from the headphones themselves — ie. without the need to open an app or keep your phone connected to its source device.
There is a noise cancellation listed on the spec sheet too, but perhaps Daisy knows it can't beat the class-leaders at that game. Where most flagship cans want to give you silence with ever-improved ANC algorithms, Daisy is pushing a different route straight to the desired effect of said silence: a calmer mind — and one that is better able to focus.
Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer, do(Image credit: Daisy)By turning traditional headphone flaws (see the lack of an app and a slightly smaller driver) into selling points, Daisy makes it clear that it’s trying something different.
It’s not clear if that’s by design, or by accident. In an interview with Wired, company CEO Jack Mulroe confirmed the designers were “from outside the audio industry”. So the brand brings some fresh perspectives, but potentially some shortcomings — Mulroe admits “I tweaked out on transparency for months” when trying to fix its issues.
In recent years, we’ve seen that headphone fans will welcome in new brands, perhaps more so than in other tech sectors. The likes of the CMF Headphone Pro, Nothing Headphone (a) and Soundcore Space 2 have proven popular (at least, I’ve seen people out and about wearing them) and you can see from the very end of the next train carriage that they’re not from the traditional Sony, Bose or Sennheiser roster.
We've seen other headphone startups try to help wearers stay calm and focus, albeit using very different tech. Take Neurable's 'brain-hacking' headphones, which monitor your brain activity while you wear them and thus aim to help you achieve a flow state. But Daisy's this approach is different again, and it does strike me that by taking a more hands-off approach (and leaving our gray matter alone) Daisy's approach perhaps sounds more conducive to calmness…
Ultimately, it’s always good to see a new brands step up to the plate, especially if it thinks it can do things differently to the big dogs. It’ll be very interesting to see what impact the Daisy One has, and where the company goes from here.
(Image credit: Daisy )If you look at where global skills demand is climbing fastest right now, two areas are pretty hard to ignore: artificial intelligence and cybersecurity.
According to the World Economic Forum's Future of Jobs Report 2025, AI and big data sit at the top of the fastest-growing skills ranking, with networks and cybersecurity directly behind.
These skills are increasingly being asked of the same person.
For most of the last decade, these were distinct careers.
Cybersecurity professionals attended cybersecurity conferences, earned cybersecurity certifications and worked in cybersecurity teams.
AI and machine learning sat elsewhere in data science org charts, research labs, product groups.
The two communities knew about each other. They rarely shared a calendar.
Security teams are now expected to manage AI systemsThat separation has collapsed in the last 18 months or so, mostly because security teams are now expected to deploy, oversee and defend AI systems as a routine part of their work.
Research finds that 87% of security teams are prioritizing agentic AI adoption, with 77% of cybersecurity professionals comfortable letting these systems take action without human review. Adoption is happening fast. Demand for people capable of managing that adoption is growing accordingly. And the talent pool, predictably, has not caught up.
“Hybrid skills” is the operative phrase right now. Research finds that 59% of security professionals expect demand for hybrid skills to climb over the next three to five years. What hybrid means here is pretty specific. You need someone who understands attack surfaces and can also interrogate why a model behaved the way it did.
That same person has to have compliance literacy and be able to evaluate whether a deployed system is drifting from its intended behavior. And also be able to talk to engineers about adversarial inputs in the morning and to a general counsel about regulatory exposure in the afternoon.
That's a lot of capability for one job description. But it’s what’s happening.
Active demand and under-suppliedThis profile barely existed as a hiring category two years ago. Today it's in active demand and naturally under-supplied. According to the World Economic Forum, only 14% of organization's have the skilled talent they need to meet their cybersecurity objectives.
And that figure becomes more uncomfortable when you remember that the bar keeps moving. AI literacy is now part of meeting cybersecurity objectives. A team that was adequate 18 months ago may not be adequate now, through no fault of their own.
External recruiting is not going to be a panacea for most companies. The supply of candidates who already combine deep security expertise with AI fluency and regulatory awareness is thin enough that aggressive hiring against this profile produces long, expensive vacancies and a lot of bruised hiring managers.
Which means most companies will have to grow these professionals internally. That looks like routing existing security staff through AI literacy training, embedding compliance professionals with model engineering teams, or rotating talent across both functions deliberately enough that the hybrid skill set develops as a byproduct.
This is a longer game than most CISOs and HR leaders want to play.
A real opportunity for cybersecurity professionalsUnderstandably, at least on the surface. It produces dividends in 12 to 24 months, in a discipline where the threat surface changes every month.
But the alternative is worse. Continuing to hire based on the old talent profile means continuing to deploy AI systems that nobody on the security team is fully equipped to govern, which means continuing to accumulate organizational risk that compounds quietly until it surfaces all at once. And it always surfaces.
There is a real opportunity buried in this for cybersecurity professionals reading the same data. It used to be that a career path like this one would plateau around senior analyst or security architect. Now it extends into AI risk leadership, AI governance, model security and adjacent roles that essentially didn’t exist as career destinations three years ago.
If you're a practitioner who adds AI literacy to existing security depth, you are positioning yourself for roles that are scarce, valuable and likely to remain so for at least the rest of the decade.
For employers, the takeaway probably feels less shiny, but it’s no less urgent.
The cybersecurity workforce of 2030The cybersecurity workforce of 2030 is being trained right now, mostly by companies willing to invest in development before the market makes it cheap to hire ready-made talent.
There may not be an explosion of market talent, because they’re already in house. That means you really can’t wait around for these unicorn skill sets to hit the talent market. Instead, you have to cultivate them.
Look at your existing security and compliance teams. Find the people with curiosity about how AI systems work. Invest in them now.
The organizations that move first will be the ones best prepared to secure what comes next.
We've reviewed and ranked the best HR software.
This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives, our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.
The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit


