It’s not everyday that you see a LEGO submarine, much less one with a motor and a somewhat functional inner hull. Riley Scott of Brick Science managed to build one with three goals in mind: make it waterproof, an inner hull large enough to fit minifigures, camera, etc., and a functional ballast to help it rise back up to the surface.
Priced at $2,500 ($5,153 in 2024) with matching 14″ CRT monitor, the very first Acer Aspire desktop PC (575LB) from 1995 that runs Windows 95 was much sleeker than the competition with its rounded case. It featured a Creative Labs Sound Blaster Vibra 16 sound card, Cirrus Logic GD5440 integrated graphics with 1MB of onboard memory, and more.
Hacksmith Industries is back at it again, and this time, the team builds a One Punch Man-inspired glove that can deliver a devastating blow. For those unfamiliar with the Japanese manga, it basically tells the story of Saitama, an independent superhero who can defeat any opponent with a single punch due to having trained himself to his peak condition.
NASA / ESA’s Hubble Space Telescope captured this glowing image of the Little Dumbbell Nebula, also known as Messier 76 (M76), located 3,400 light-years away in the constellation Perseus. This planetary nebula is basically an expanding shell of glowing gases that were ejected from a dying red giant star.
Google’s AI-powered DeepMind robot can now play table tennis and actually beat its human opponents. Training this AI model combined reinforcement learning in a simulated physics environment and using that data during real-world examples.
This pristine condition 1999 Honda S2000 from Japan with just 745 miles could be yours for a cool $120,000 USD, and it’s probably as close as you’ll get to picking one up off the showroom floor in 2024.