Jacob R acquired this bizarre PS2 Super Slim from Aliexpress, and it requires a memory card to play games, as there is no disc drive. This console is roughly half the size of a PS2 Slim, but adds an HDMI port as well as a microSD card slot.
Inventor Matthew Perks of DIY Perks has built a modern projection TV with near infinite contrast, and using only upcycled parts. What do you need? An old, yet functional, HD projector and an LCD screen.
Set to be unveiled at MWC 2025 in Barcelona next week, the TECNO SPARK Slim just might be the world’s thinnest smartphone with a 5,200mAh battery. It measures just 5.75mm thin, complete with a brilliant 6.78″ 3D Curved AMOLED display with a 144Hz refresh rate as well as a peak brightness of 4,500nits.
Star1 is designed to go running in extreme environments like the Gobi Desert, while 1X Technologies’ NEO Gamma humanoid robot wants to make your life easier at home. Not only can it walk with a natural human gait and arm swings, but Gamma can also squat down to pick things up from the ground as well as sit in chairs.
The 256GB SanDisk Extreme microSDXC UHS-I memory card comes with an adapter for use on various devices, whether it be smartphones, cameras, or tablets, and you can get one for $18.91, originally $27.99. Mobile videographers will appreciate that it’s 4K and 5K UHD-ready with UHS Speed Class 3 (U3) and Video Speed Class 30 (V30). Product page.
Another month, another handheld game console, but this one, the Retroid Pocket Flip2, is definitely no slouch. Right off the bat, you’ll notice its brilliant 5.5″ 1080p AMOLED display, which is just a bit smaller than the 7-inch Switch OLED screen.
Amazon Ocelot is the company’s first quantum computing chip, and it uses a novel design for its architecture, building error correction in from the ground up. This novel design is called cat qubits, named after the famous Schrödinger’s cat thought experiment, and when combined with additional quantum error correction components, a microchip that can be manufactured in a scalable fashion using processes borrowed from the microelectronics industry is the result.
Louis Vuitton is no stranger to Apple accessories, but this iPod-inspired ‘Music Player Wearable Wallet’ bag is most certainly the geekiest product we’ve seen yet. Form factor wise, it looks very similar to the luxury fashion house’s ‘Amazone’ cross-body bag, which retails for $2,180 USD.