I've been keeping an eye on the Sony WF-C510 before Prime Day – is now the best time to bag a bargain?
Getting a good deal isn't always as simple as finding a great product at a great price, chucking it into your basket and then sitting back and feeling smug about your savvy saving. Sometimes, it's all about timing.
That's certainly true if you want the best deals. The Sony WF-C510 wireless earbuds are down from £55 to £39 at Amazon and various other retailers, making them an attractive pick at a rather spicy price.
Should you hold fire, though, and wait for a better deal? Amazon Prime Day is just around the corner, meaning that the Sony buds could fall even further than they've ever dropped before.
For the uninitiated, Prime Day, along with Black Friday, is a sales event whereby many popular consumer electronics products tend to hit new price lows.
Sony earbuds tend to be part of every Prime Day, so they stand a great chance of dropping further, perhaps by an extra 10 to 20 per cent.
They're worth buying at these discounts. No current buds around this modest price come close to the C510, which deliver a pleasingly musical sound, a reliable build and an impressive feature set.
Highlights include 22 hours of total battery life, Bluetooth Multipoint and Sony's DSEE sonic upscaling tech. Very nice.
Sony's compact, comfortable earbuds deliver excellent sound quality that punches well above their budget price. With excellent battery life, Bluetooth Multipoint and a solid IPX4 water resistance rating, they're ideal for everyday listening on a budget.View Deal
So, what price do we expect to see this Prime Day?
The lowest they've ever been was £34 in late December of last year, and it's conceivable that they could sink to such depths when Prime Day rolls around. After all, they will have been on the market for almost a year by that point.
If it were me, I'd hold fire until Prime Day arrives on 8th July.
£39 is a nice price, but if you could save an extra fiver or possibly even more, why shortchange yourself? Assuming, that is, that you're an Amazon Prime member.
Just make sure to nab them before the sales event ends on 11th July, in case they jump back up to the full price of £55.
MORE:
Amazon Prime Day 2025: everything you need to know
Best wireless earbuds 2024: top pairs tested by our reviewers
12 albums from 2000 that are celebrating their 25th anniversary this year

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Engadget
17 minutes ago
- Engadget
macOS 26 beta preview: Spotlight's time to shine
I've learned not to expect much from macOS updates — not through sheer cynicism, but from the obvious reality that Apple pays far more attention to iOS and iPadOS than its desktop platform. I get it. macOS is a thing of the past, while smartphones and tablets are Apple's profitable present and future. But still, I think Mac users deserve more than just widgets, or the ability to merely mirror their iPhones (a feature that's not only genuinely useful, but also cements how crucial iPhones are to Apple and its users today). Now with macOS 26, Apple is finally showing a bit more love to its laptops and desktops. After testing the macOS Tahoe 26 developer beta for a few weeks, it definitely feels like a more substantial update than the last few versions. The revamped Spotlight alone will likely delight Mac diehards, since it makes it easier to find apps and perform all manner of tasks without requiring your fingers leave the keyboard. Add in a lovely visual refresh thanks to Apple's Liquid Glass design, as well as enhanced iPhone continuity features, and you have an operating system that feels like a genuine step forward for the Mac faithful. (Ed. note: Apple just released the public betas for iOS 26, iPadOS 26, macOS 26 and watchOS 26 . This means you can run the preview for yourself, if you are willing to risk potentially buggy or unstable software that could cause some of your apps to not work. As usual, we highly recommend backing up all your date before running any beta, and you can follow our guide on how to install Apple's public betas to do so.) I've never been a heavy Spotlight user, aside from the few times I've needed to quickly look for an app or file. But in macOS Tahoe 26, it's suddenly a lot more useful. Now Spotlight can also help you find specific files; search cloud file services and websites; run Apple shortcuts and automations; and even run basic commands, like looking up your recent screenshots when you type "/screenshot." Spotlight has become more than just a search engine for your Mac, it's practically a super-powered command line. (And notably, it has no real equivalent on Windows. So once again, Mac power users will be able to gloat about the supremacy of macOS.) Over the course of my testing, tapping the command key and space bar to trigger Spotlight practically became second nature. I'd bring it up to find files, as usual, but I noticed that it was better at unearthing what I was looking for than before. Spotlight also replaced my usual practice of typing in search strings in Safari or Chrome's address bar. It takes just a few seconds to bring up Spotlight, type "YouTube," hit tab to trigger the search box and type in the video I'm looking for. This intelligent site searching also works for Amazon and IMDB — hopefully, Apple will add more commonly used sites over time (or perhaps just the ability to map a site's internal search engine to Spotlight). If you're often buried by tons of tabs in your web browser, Spotlight can also quickly search through them. That helped me avoid getting distracted by social media and Slack conversations. I could just stay in my productivity flow, since I didn't have to sift through multiple app windows and tabs. The ability to trigger actions from Spotlight was similarly useful — it's a cinch to pop it up, start typing "Send Message" and jot out a quick text to my wife. Spotlight also learns your most common commands over time, so now I just have to type "se" for the Send Message action to pop up. I'm sure for a certain type of Mac power user, Spotlight will give them far fewer reasons to ever touch their mouse or trackpad. While Spotlight is the most powerful upgrade in macOS Tahoe 26, you'll notice the spiffier Liquid Glass interface first. As with iOS 26, it basically amounts to more transparencies and visual flourishes spread throughout the OS. The menu bar at the top of the screen is now fully transparent, instead of looking foggy like before. It's not much, but it does make your Mac's screen seem a little bigger (or perhaps that may have just been extra noticeable on the cramped 13-inch MacBook Air I've been testing on). Similarly, widgets and the Control Center dropdown have more glass-like visual elements that make them look a bit more modern. There's no real practical advantage, but to paraphrase a classic Marge Simpson quote, I just think it's neat. Apple Silicon-equipped hardware has more than enough graphics power to spare, so these visual upgrades also don't hinder performance at all. I didn't notice any slowdown during my testing, and according to Activity Monitor, there didn't seem to be a big hit to CPU or GPU usage. Even though you've been able to make phone calls on Macs for a while now through FaceTime, it's taken until macOS Tahoe 26 for Apple to debut a dedicated Phone app. The app itself is nothing special — it gives you a quick glance at your contacts and recent calls, all in a compact Liquid Glass window — but at least it's a more logical place for phone calls. Even better than the standalone app, though, is the addition of iPhone Live Activities appearing in the macOS Tahoe 26 menu bar. That makes it easier to keep track of an inbound Uber or Doordash order, without whipping out your phone. And if you need to tap into a specific activity, macOS will also automatically launch the app from your phone via iPhone mirroring. It's the sort of usability feature you'd expect from Apple, and notably it's also not easily replicable on Windows. (And sure, you can also view it as a way to keep iPhone users from straying to the dark side too.) The more I dug into macOS Tahoe 26, the more intriguing it became. Here are a few other updates worth highlighting: The Shortcuts app seems a lot more powerful now, especially with the addition of custom automations and Apple Intelligence-powered actions. You can have an automation trigger writing tools or Image Playgrounds, and there's also a new "Use Model" command that can tap into on-device AI models and ChatGPT. I'm still trying to wrap my head around building a complex automation, but conceivably it could let you do something like compare an audio transcript to text notes, according to Apple. Safari has received a Liquid Glass redesign that looks pretty polished. It's not nearly as transformative as the Safari iOS upgrade, which makes it easier to read websites on a small phone screen, but at least it looks nice. The Notes app now has Apple Intelligence-powered reminders whenever you share content to it. That could help you unearth some key tasks from a large email. The Photos app has also received the Liquid Glass treatment, and you can finally use Pinned Collections on Macs to keep your favorite photo groups handy. The Apple Music app can now use AutoMix to intelligently blend songs together, similar to a DJ. I've been using this feature on iOS 26 a lot, and it's honestly delightful — so long as you're not a total gapless playback purist.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Walmart bets on AI 'super agents' to boost e-commerce growth
STORY: Walmart is deepening its push into AI, unveiling four new "super agents" on Thursday, aiming to improve the shopping experience and better compete with rival retailers. Powered by agentic AI - which needs minimal human intervention - the super agents will serve as primary entry points for every AI interaction with Walmart shoppers, store employees, suppliers and sellers, and software developers. The new agents will replace several existing AI tools, and the retailer hopes they'll attract more shoppers away from Amazon, which has its own range of AI-powered tools. One of Walmart's agents, Sparky, is already available on its app as a Gen-AI powered tool, where it currently assists customers with product suggestions, such as athletic wear or the right ink for a printer. In its "super agent" form, Walmart says Sparky will be able to plan themed parties and offer product recipes by looking at the contents of a shopper's fridge through its computer vision. Another super agent, Marty, is being developed for sellers, suppliers, and advertisers in an effort to streamline the onboarding process, manage orders and create ad campaigns. Walmart declined to say whether the super agents would replace human jobs.


Gizmodo
an hour ago
- Gizmodo
Amazon's Only Color Kindle Just Got a Version That's a Little Bit Cheaper
Amazon's newest Colorsoft e-reader is downgrading storage so it can upgrade your bank account. A new version of the Colorsoft Kindle—Amazon's first-ever color e-reader—will come in a 16GB version that cuts the e-reader's storage in half compared to the first generation but also debuts at a slightly cheaper $250 compared to the first-gen's $280. There's not a ton going on here other than the lower storage for a lower price tradeoff, but if you're not someone who needs the whole 32GB of capacity on your Kindle, a $30 discount ain't a bad thing, I guess. If you're feeling so compelled to buy this cheaper version, it's available now and comes with three months of Kindle Unlimited. Probably the more interesting side of the latest Colorsoft release is the first-ever kids' version, which has an illustrated cover and a two-year warranty. That's definitely a good thing if you're letting your kids cart this thing around in the car or to dinner and tacitly putting it in harm's way. There are also some special educational apps designed for kids. Those include Vocabulary Builder and 'Word Wise,' which provides 'simplified definitions' for words, according to Amazon. On the safety front, Amazon's kids edition Colorsoft Kindle also provides parental controls for things like which content can be accessed and a hub for monitoring reading activity. Additionally, parents can set a device bedtime if they don't want their kids up all night getting smarter. Believe it or not, the Colorsoft Kids is somehow a little bit more expensive than the new adult version and has the same 16GB storage. Amazon's kid-centric color e-reader is available now for $269.99. I guess pacifying your kids with something that might actually be enriching is probably worth paying a premium, though.