KOACKL’s Propane Torch Adjustable Flamethrower, priced at $42.99 with coupon (was $69.99), was designed for soldering pipes or just searing a steak. It definitely holds its own against pricier competitors like Bernzomatic and Tesla’s ‘Not a Flamethrower’.
MIT engineers have created a paperclip-sized robot that flies like a bumblebee and pollinates crops on Mars. This tiny marvel, from Kevin Chen’s Soft and Micro Robotics Lab, flies and hops.
In 1985, Buick showed a concept car that looked like it had been ripped from the set of the Running Man. Displayed at the SEMA show in Las Vegas, the Wildcat was a radical departure from the brand’s reputation for building soft, boring sedans. Its sleek, aerodynamic body, all-wheel-drive and McLaren-tuned V6 engine made it a showstopper that could hang with the era’s most outlandish supercars.
Frameworks’ new Laptop 16, the 2025 model, powered by NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 5070 graphics and AMD’s Ryzen AI 300 Series processors, aims to be a machine that evolves with you.
Zack Nelson of JerryRigEverything has put the new Google Pixel 10 Pro XL through his signature durability tests. This $1,200 phone is supposed to get 7 years of software updates, so can its hardware live up to the promise?
A robot walks into a UFC arena, its shiny body glistening under the lights. This isn’t a pay-per-view fight; it’s Unitree Robotics’ G1, a 4.6-foot, 77-pound robot making its debut in a promotional exhibition sanctioned by UFC president Dana White.
Photo credit: Evan Blass
Lenovo has a history of making laptops that look like they just stepped out of the set of Prime Video’s upcoming Blade Runner 2099 series. From see-through panels to scrollable displays, the company’s experimental streak is clear. Lenovo is going to show off its new creation at IFA 2025: the VertiFlex (courtesy of Evan Blass), also known as Project Pivo internally, a concept laptop with a screen that rotates 90 degrees from landscape to portrait.
Sony’s BRAVIA Theater U, a wireless wearable speaker, is $198 (down from $299.99) and feels like a quiet revolution in how we experience sound at home. It sits lightly on your shoulders and delivers surround sound that rivals a full home theater without cutting you off from the world around you.
Super Mario 64, released in 1996, is a nostalgic classic for many, but there’s a shocking truth beneath the surface: the game is memory hungry. Thanks to the work of modder Kaze Emanuar, we get to see how this legendary Nintendo 64 game used its 4 megabytes of RAM in ways that were, at times, surprisingly wasteful.