Hyundai’s not chasing shiny humanoid bots or pie-in-the-sky delivery drones with its latest robotics push—it’s tackling the soul-crushing grind of parking. In an eye-opening demo at a high-tech office building in Seoul, Hyundai WIA, the carmaker’s manufacturing arm, rolled out parking robots that could make squeezing into tight urban spots feel like a breeze.
The Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 (44mm) smartwatch is the best choice for those on the Android ecosystem, and you can get one for $229.99 shipped, originally $329.99. Featuring a circular aluminum case that feels both premium and lightweight at 33.8 grams. Its 1.5-inch Super AMOLED screen, shielded by sapphire crystal, blasts out vivid colors and a crisp 480×480 resolution, cranking up to 2,000 nits so you can check your stats even in blazing sunlight. Product page.
Samsung’s diving headfirst into Blade Runner technology with its latest digital signage, and the 32-inch Color E-Paper display, model EM32DX, is the real deal, ready to shake up how businesses talk to their customers. This thing’s a tech marvel, blending the nostalgic charm of paper with the digital screen’s chameleon-like flexibility, and it’s got the hardware to make you rethink what a sign can do.
In 1993, a game slipped into the world with barely a whisper, known only to a handful of players in Japan. Officially called TRIPITAKA 玄奘三蔵求法の旅 (Xuanzang Sanzo’s Journey for the Buddhist Scriptures), it emerged as a sequel to the cult classic Cosmology of Kyoto. Decades later, this obscure title has been resurrected from the brink of oblivion, thanks to the tireless efforts of video game academic Bruno de Figueiredo.
Porsche has a knack for turning racetrack dreams into asphalt reality, and the 963 RSP, unveiled this morning near the legendary Circuit de la Sarthe, is a mind-blowing case in point. This one-off hypercar takes the championship-crushing Porsche 963 LMDh racer and spins it into a street-legal beast, paying homage to the iconic 917 driven by Count Gregorio Rossi di Montelera half a century ago. It’s a tribute to motorsport, stuffed with cutting-edge tech and polished for the open road.
Nintendo’s Switch 2 has barely hit shelves, and already it’s sparking clever workarounds that make you wonder why you didn’t think of them first. One standout discovery? You can turn your iPhone into a webcam for the console, sidestepping the $55 official Nintendo camera. It’s not as simple as plugging in a cable, but with a few affordable accessories and a free app, you can have your iPhone beaming your face into Mario Kart World or video chats with friends.
A classic franchise is sneaking back into the limelight, and it’s packing a virtual reality punch that might just change how we slink through the dark. Thief VR Legacy of Shadow, hitting PlayStation VR2, Meta Quest, and PC VR in 2025. Developed by Maze Theory with Vertigo Games and Eidos-Montreal, this game plunges you into the grimy, steampunk-soaked streets of The City like never before.
On a crisp June morning in 2025, a battery-powered beast of a truck rolled backward across a racetrack in Oschersleben, Germany, and into the record books. Mercedes-Benz Trucks, with its eActros 600, didn’t just nudge the bar for the longest distance driven in reverse by an articulated truck—it obliterated it, covering 124.7 kilometers and snatching a Guinness World Record.
Zack Nelson, the destruction wizard behind JerryRigEverything, has set his sights on the Nintendo Switch 2, putting the handheld through his brutal gauntlet to see how it holds up. With his full toolkit unleashed, Nelson’s durability test reveals a console that’s tougher than it looks but not without some quirks—like a screen that’s a magnet for scratches.
A table clock priced at $240,000—enough for a Lamborghini Urus or a snug condo—sounds like pure fantasy, but the Bugatti Calandre Table Clock, born from a collab between Jacob & Co., Bugatti, and Lalique, is no ordinary timepiece. Limited to just 99 units, this desk-dwelling stunner fuses automotive luxury, crystal artistry, and watchmaking wizardry into a jaw-dropping showpiece that’s as much a statement as it is a clock.