DJI Osmo Action 6 Camera Leak
DJI’s upcoming action camera will be the Osmo Action 6. Months of FCC filings and supply chain leaks have painted a clear image of this device, and it appears to be tough with a few tricks up its sleeve for connecting to your existing gear. According to rumors, the release date will be October 24, with pre-orders following shortly after and the product being available in stores by November.

Functional LEGO Game Boy Display Mod
Photo credit: There Oughta Be
The LEGO 72046 Game Boy set was introduced earlier this month, and many builders were satisfied with simply snapping together the 1,073 pieces to create a lifelike handheld. The device retains the clunky charm of the 1989 original, right down to the d-pad and A/B buttons, and features lenticular inserts that resemble a flickering screen from games like Tetris. But Sebastian L., the tinkerer behind the website There Oughta Be, wanted his LEGO Game Boy to play real games with a luminous screen in the 6×6-stud window.

Apple M5 MacBook Pro iPad Announcement Reveal
Photo credit: MacRumors | WCCFTech
Apple’s hardware schedule has been more predictable in recent years, and it appears that the company is preparing for one of those calm moments when the ground beneath our feet still moves. According to reputable sources, three devices featuring the new M5 chip will be announced as early as next week: the 14-inch MacBook Pro, the 11-inch and 13-inch iPad Pro, and the upgraded Vision Pro headset.

Stradex1 3D-Printed Violin
Brady Y. Lin treats the Stradex1 like an old friend; it’s been four years since he originally attempted to create a violin simulator – a box of buttons that created chiptune sounds. Lin, a beginner maker at the time, coaxed square waves out an Arduino, imitating strings with discrete presses that locked pitches into stiff steps. Lin is now halfway through his electrical engineering degree and has turned his aggravation into something playable, portable, and free for anybody to print and assemble.

Dacia Hipster EV Concept
Dacia debuted the Hipster last week, a small electric vehicle with four seats and a foldable trunk in a box less than ten feet long. The Romanian company, famed for its no-frills vehicles such as the Spring, has expanded on this idea with its latest prototype. Engineers began with daily commutes in mind – short excursions around town or to the suburbs, nothing more – and everything follows from there. The Hipster is slightly under 3 meters long, 1.55 meters wide, and 1.53 meters tall, making it ideal for parking in compact areas.