logo
Prime Day Deal: I Can't Shut Up About This Cheap Lap Desk That's 22% Off on Amazon Right Now

Prime Day Deal: I Can't Shut Up About This Cheap Lap Desk That's 22% Off on Amazon Right Now

CNET09-07-2025
Amazon Prime Day sale: I've got a lot of nice things to say about Huanuo's adjustable lap desk, and it's a great time to check it yourself while it's $21 -- or about 22% off -- on Amazon for Prime Day.
At the end of every year my wife and I catalog important changes and milestones in a little journal. This year I'll probably mention my new role at work, more time commuting on the train, new progressive lens glasses and the joy of laptop-console game cross-saves. And for our "best new purchases" category there's my new lap desk, which makes all those things better.
The desk is made by some company I've never heard of called Huanuo, and I found it by randomly browsing Amazon, but I love it. It takes care of one thing I need, and it does it very well: It raises my laptop screen higher so I don't have to bend my neck down as far to see it clearly.
Without a lap desk, I find myself looking down uncomfortably at the screen. That became more of an issue when I got progressive lenses, which require me to bow my head farther to get the screen in focus. Raising it up to where I can see it better is a game-changer (literally, because I also play games on a laptop).
The Huanuo can raise the screen to different levels, and it's big and sturdy enough to handle my 2021 MacBook Pro 16. To save space, I like to stash my phone and charger in the gap created underneath. The lap desk has nice cushioned pads and collapses to fit inside my backpack. I also use it at home on the couch or in bed.
One downside is that the angle of the keyboard and touchpad can get awkward after a while. And I'm sure you could get a nicer lap desk for a bit more money, especially if you don't need it to collapse or fit on a single seat on a commuter train. But this one works great for me and the price is (very) right.
For more, don't forget to check out the best laptop deals and the best deals under $25 during Amazon's Prime Day sales event..
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Morning Bid: Who's afraid of a hot PPI?
Morning Bid: Who's afraid of a hot PPI?

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Morning Bid: Who's afraid of a hot PPI?

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Gregor Stuart Hunter Did you really think that the mighty U.S. stock market was going to be stopped in its tracks by a measly PPI print, even if it was a blowout? Despite the jump in wholesale prices, S&P 500 futures clung to a gain of 0.2% in Asian trading, even as Nasdaq futures slipped for a third consecutive day. The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury bond was down 2 basis points at 4.2732%. One consequence of the hot PPI print is that the market has given up on hopes of a jumbo 50 basis point rate cut from the Federal Reserve, according to the CME Group's FedWatch tool. But traders are still pricing in a 92.1% probability of a 25 basis point rate cut at its September meeting, compared with a 100% likelihood of a cut yesterday. In Asia, data from the region's two biggest economies showed Japan's economy running hot last quarter to keep shelves stocked ahead of Donald Trump's tariff deadline, while China indicated renewed signs of slack. Hong Kong stocks fell 1.2% after the release of weaker-than-expected Chinese economic data for July including retail sales and industrial production, while the large-cap CSI 300 gained 0.5% as traders speculated that the data may justify extra stimulus. Markets in India and South Korea are closed for public holidays. The Nikkei 225 rebounded 1.2% after snapping a six-day winning streak on Thursday with its biggest one-day selloff since April 11, as Japanese GDP data showed the economy expanding by an annualised 1.0% in the April-June quarter, beating analyst estimates and providing more signals to the Bank of Japan, which next meets on September 19. The dollar weakened 0.3% against the yen to 147.64. In commodities markets, Brent crude was down 0.1% at $66.79 per barrel, not far from a two-month low reached on Wednesday, ahead of a meeting in Alaska between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin on Friday. "The first meeting doesn't seem like a major market-moving event - it's more to set up a second meeting, which will likely be more important," said Marc Velan, head of investments at Lucerne Asset Management in Singapore. "If a ceasefire is reached, expect a positive reaction in the euro and a weaker dollar; the opposite if a ceasefire fails." Key developments that could influence markets on Friday: EU data: Euro zone reserve assets for July UK debt auctions: Reopening of 1-month, 3-month and 6-month government debt auctions (By Gregor Stuart Hunter; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman) Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

High-Capacity SSDs Will Enable AI Workloads But Also Drive HDD Demand
High-Capacity SSDs Will Enable AI Workloads But Also Drive HDD Demand

Forbes

time18 minutes ago

  • Forbes

High-Capacity SSDs Will Enable AI Workloads But Also Drive HDD Demand

At the recent FMS conference in Santa Clara, almost all of the SSD companies were introducing high-capacity SSDs, many over 200TB, with promises for large form factor SSD with 1PB capacities in the future. These SSDs leverage higher logical density, four bit per cell, or QLC flash memory and lots of chips to achieve these capacities. The SanDisk keynote differentiated a couple of different uses for SSDs to support AI workloads. One type are fast eSSDs to support high bandwidth DRAM memory, HBM. The other type are high-capacity storage eSSDs for a higher performance data lake than HDDs can offer. These two types of SSD are shown below. The slide below shows Sandisk's high capacity eSSD. It is a QLC BiCS8 NAND flash U.2 and EDSFF form factor SSDn that is expected to have capacities up to 256TB by 2026. The Sandisk Keynote showed a path to a 512TB version by 2027 and 1PB product sometime in the future. The composite image below shows the Kioxia, Micron and Samsung announcements of their high capacity QLC SSDs. All of the SSD companies are exploring product for near storage AI applications. Many of the higher capacity products are using the E3.S form factor, which can hold more NAND flash chips to enable higher capacities. The Silicon Motion keynote gave an illustration of a traditional representation of the memory and storage hierarchy showing trends for NAND flash supporting GPUs directly, like the HBF announcements by SK hynix and Sandisk at the FMS. It also shows an ultra-high-capacity SSD layer to support warm storage for AI applications. Silicon Motion supplies controllers for SSDs. Higher capacity SSDs can take less rack space than HDDs and they offer higher performance than HDDs offer. This can be an advantage for AI training and inference with RAG, but flash memory is currently about 6X more expensive per storage capacity than HDDs and is expected to remain so, for some time into the future, as shown in the image below from the WDC investor day last February. Seagate shows similar trends. For instance, by 2026 44TB HDDs should be in production, a 38% increase from the largest HDDs available today. This is because the expected storage capacity growth in HDDs has accelerated with the introduction of HAMR HDDs to roughly match the growth in SSD capacities. As a consequence, we consider these larger SSDs will be used for data lakes directly feeding the memory attached to GPUs for AI workflows. However, HDDs will continue to provide lower cost storage for longer term data retention and so these higher capacity SSDs will result in greater growth of HDDs as well. Coughlin Associates has updated its projections for storage capacity shipped for HDDs, SSDs and magnetic tape, shown below. This new projection increases our expectations for growth of SSD storage from prior versions out to 2030 with some reduction in HDD capacity shipments as a consequence. The Coughlin Associates projection for HDD storage capacity prices out to 2030 is shown below. If we assume that SSDs remain at 6X the cost per storage capacity by 2030 and the HDD price per GB of $0.0051 in 2026, the NAND flash price would be about $0.031 per GB. With the projections for shipping capacity of SSDs and HDDs of about 3.0ZB and 10.7ZB, projected revenue for SSDs and HDDs in 2030 is $93B and $55B respectively. The rising storage boat, driven by AI, is expected to result in significant revenue growth for HDDs as well as SSDs. FMS 2025 shows growth of high-capacity SSDs, up to 1PB as well as high-capacity HDDs to support the growth of AI workflows.

Edwards Lifesciences Stock: Analyst Estimates & Ratings
Edwards Lifesciences Stock: Analyst Estimates & Ratings

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Edwards Lifesciences Stock: Analyst Estimates & Ratings

With a market cap of $45.2 billion, Edwards Lifesciences Corporation (EW) is a global leader in innovative products and technologies for treating advanced cardiovascular diseases. The company specializes in transcatheter and surgical heart valve solutions, as well as critical care monitoring systems, serving patients across the United States, Europe, Japan, and worldwide. Shares of the Irvine, California-based company have underperformed the broader market over the past 52 weeks. EW stock has increased 17.1% over this time frame, while the broader S&P 500 Index ($SPX) has gained 18.7%. Moreover, shares of the company have risen 4.9% on a YTD basis, compared to SPX's 9.7% return. More News from Barchart Warren Buffett Warns Investing At 'Too-High Purchase Price' Even for 'an Excellent Company' Can Undo a Decade of Smart Investing BitMine Immersion Now Holds 1.15 Million Ethereum Tokens. Should You Buy BMNR Stock Here? Why Archer Aviation's (ACHR) Post-Earnings Tailspin Looks Like a Favorably Mispriced Opportunity Markets move fast. Keep up by reading our FREE midday Barchart Brief newsletter for exclusive charts, analysis, and headlines. Looking closer, Edwards Lifesciences stock has outpaced the Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund's (XLV) 12.1% decrease over the past 52 weeks. Shares of Edwards Lifesciences rose 5.5% following its Q2 2025 results on Jul. 24, with adjusted EPS of $0.67 and sales of $1.5 billion, both exceeding estimates and showing strong year-over-year growth. Segment strength was led by TAVR sales of $1.1 billion, TMTT sales of $134.5 million, and Surgical Structural Heart sales of $267 million. The company also raised its 2025 sales growth guidance to $5.90 billion - $6.10 billion and projected adjusted EPS at the high end of $2.40 - $2.50. For the fiscal year ending in December 2025, analysts expect EW's adjusted EPS to grow 2.9% year-over-year to $2.50. The company's earnings surprise history is promising. It topped or met the consensus estimates in the last four quarters. Among the 30 analysts covering the stock, the consensus rating is a 'Moderate Buy.' That's based on 15 'Strong Buy' ratings, one 'Moderate Buy,' 13 'Holds,' and one 'Strong Sell.' This configuration is more bullish than three months ago, with 12 'Strong Buy' ratings on the stock. On Jul. 25, RBC Capital raised its price target on Edwards Lifesciences to $89 with an 'Outperform' rating. As of writing, the stock is trading below the mean price target of $87.28. The Street-high price target of $101 implies a modest potential upside of 30% from the current price levels. On the date of publication, Sohini Mondal did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store