Boston Dynamics’ Stretch robot shows why it excels at warehouse tasks in the company’s latest video. Unlike Spot (the four-legged robot dog) or Atlas (the humanoid acrobat), Stretch boasts a tall, slender frame mounted on a wheeled base, allowing it to navigate tight warehouse aisles.
The Atari Jaguar, released in November 1993, was the company’s final home console and marketed as the world’s first 64-bit gaming system. This was a bold claim to make at a time when 16-bit consoles like the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) and Sega Genesis dominated the market, with 32-bit systems just starting to emerge.
What sets the Verge TS Pro, a futuristic electric motorcycle, apart from the competition is its hubless rear wheel. Instead of a normal hub motor, it integrates its electric motor directly into the rim of the rear wheel. That’s right, electromagnets repel each other to spin the wheel to drive the bike forward.
The 1TB Lexar Professional Go portable SSD with hub is perfect for content creators, and you can get one for $152.88 shipped today, originally $239.99. It uses a USB 3.2 Gen 2 interface, offering read speeds up to 1050 MB/s and write speeds up to 1000 MB/s. This makes it fast enough to record high-bitrate video, such as Apple ProRes 4K at 60fps, directly from compatible devices without dropped frames. Product page.
After the production model made its debut in December, the first deliveries of the NIO ET9 executive flagship EV sedan have begun in China. Priced from $108,000 USD, or $90,000 under the Battery-as-a-Service (BaaS) plan with a monthly rental fee of $155, it’s the first mass-produced car in China with steer-by-wire technology.
Apple is reportedly set to launch their long rumored foldable iPhone in late 2026, possibly around the second half of the year. It’s purported to be in development with a book-style folding design, similar to the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold, rather than a clamshell style like the Galaxy Z Flip. This means it would likely have a larger inner display—rumored to be around 7.8 inches when unfolded—for a tablet-like experience, alongside a smaller outer display of about 5.5 inches for use when folded.
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captures a surreal image of an Einstein Ring in galaxy cluster SMACSJ0028.2-7537, located between 3 to 7 billion light-years from Earth. This might look like a single, oddly shaped galaxy at first glance, but it’s actually just an illusion created by two galaxies at vastly different distances from us.
Card radios, like the Casio RD-10, are basically compact, portable radio receivers designed to be roughly the size of a credit card or a small stack of cards, making them highly convenient for on-the-go use. These devices emerged during a time when miniaturization was a big trend in consumer electronics, particularly in the 1980s and 1990s, as companies pushed the boundaries of making gadgets smaller as well as more portable.
Corridor Digital 3D-printed every frame in this amazing short film that you’re about to watch. It follows a simple narrative: a character wakes up, gets out of bed, and walks outside, only to encounter a surreal twist where his dog encounters a seemingly evil robot vacuum.
Former Mythbusters host Adam Savage goes hands-on with a screen-used Mr. Fusion DeLorean time machine prop. This fictional power source was introduced at the end of Back to the Future and prominently featured in Part II and Part III, designed to convert household waste into the 1.21 gigawatts needed to power the DeLorean’s time circuits.