When the delivery truck pulled up to the Linus Tech Tips’ studio, anticipation was already running high. Linus Sebastian, the host, was ready to unbox Hisense’s 116-inch UX RGB Mini-LED TV—a screen so big it could be a wall.
A dump truck, or tip truck in Australia, isn’t the first thing that comes to mind when you think of a tiny home. It’s a workhorse, designed to move dirt and tools, not to live in. Steve and Jade, a creative couple from Australia, have turned this industrial beast into a tiny, useful and just beautiful tiny house. Their design is a work of genius, measuring only 8 square meters (86 square feet).
A group of Vietnamese tuners called NHET TV has turned a 1990s Nissan Cefiro into a stunning copy of the Lamborghini Revuelto. This is a labor of love that requires skill, patience and being able to see potential where others see trash.
A vape that runs DOOM? Sounds like a fever dream from a tech enthusiast’s late night Reddit scroll, but Aaron Christophel made it real with the PIXO Aspire, a $35 vaping kit that’s more than just a nicotine delivery system. This tiny device, with its 323×173 pixel touchscreen and Puya PY32F403XC microcontroller based on a Cortex-M4 core, can almost run DOOM natively.
AirPods Pro 3 just launched this week and have already been discounted to $239 (down from $249). These wireless earbuds are a game-changer, with unmatched noise cancellation, comfort and sound in a package that feels effortless.
Photo credit: Ugur Sahin Design
Automotive designer Ugur Sahin has a habit of drawing cars that Porsche executives wish they had thought of sooner. From his workshop in the Netherlands, this digital artist turns idle what-ifs into sparkling visions, and his latest creation, the Porsche 960 GT RS, is not an official idea, but a secret challenge.
Zack Nelson, the mastermind behind JerryRigEverything, has a reputation for putting smartphones through their paces, and Apple’s new iPhone Air—its slimmest design ever at 5.6mm—just got put to the test. Fans of Nelson’s YouTube channel know what to expect: scratches, flames, and bends that test equipment to their limits.
Mark Rumsey eases the collective lever forward, and the Mirocopter SCH-2A takes flight from a cleared spot in La Cresta, a quiet neighborhood nestled in the hills near Murrieta, California. The rotors above him—two sets piled one on top of the other, whirling in opposite directions—hum steadily as he steers the nose northward. With only 6.5 miles to his destination, Lake Elsinore, this isn’t a long journey.
Labubu monsters, those little toothy creatures from Pop Mart, are taking over and we can’t get enough of them. One maker chose a different approach: fire up the 3D printer and build one from scratch.