Set to be officially revealed on September 5th, at least one person has allegedly managed to get their hands on the DJI Neo. This ultra compact drone reportedly sports a 4K camera with a 1/2-inch sensor and a single-axis gimbal for ultra smooth footage.
The Mercedes-AMG PureSpeed roadster started out as a concept a few months ago, and now, it has just completed its final road test ahead of production. This open-top supercar with no windshield will be limited to 250-units and sport an F1-inspired halo.
At first glance, some may confuse the EmuDeck for a SEGA Dreamcast, but this device is actually a mini PC designed for retro gaming. The base model EM1 feature an Intel N97 Alder Lake-N processor, integrated Intel UHD graphics, and 8GB of RAM.
The 4TB Samsung T7 Portable SSD is perfect for content creators who can never have too much storage, and you can get one for $279.99 shipped, originally $479.99. It’s embedded with PCIe NVME technology, which provides blazing fast read / write speeds of 1,050 MB/s and 1,000 MB/s respectively over USB 3.2 Gen 2. Product page.
A Game Boy Color sewing machine? Yes, it exists, and called the Singer IZEK 1500. Put simply, this sewing machine came bundled with the handheld console, a built-in Link Cable and a small number of Game Boy Color cartridges for sewing design patterns onto clothes, like Mario Family.
Photo credit: Dea Labs
Sony is rumored to announce the PlayStation 5 Pro console next month, and according to France-based Dea Labs, this could be a first look at the console. They allegedly obtained a visual of the front of the final packaging box and the sketch you see is based on that image.
Photo credit: Alastair Philip Wiper
Photographer Alastair Philip Wiper recently got the chance to visit a unique underground house in Las Vegas that doubles as a nuclear bunker. It was originally built by multi-millionaire Jerry Henderson and his wife in the late 1970s, complete with a pool, sauna, bar area, BBQ, putting green, pool table, grand piano, fountain, as well as a guesthouse.
Long before the Meta Quest, there was the Aura Interactor, a VR backpack of sorts released in 1994. Priced at $100 ($212.24 in 2024), this wearable force-feedback system was developed by Aura Systems and compatible with both the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and SEGA Genesis.