Photo credit: Matts RV Reviews
Coachmen RV just debuted the RVEX, an all-electric Class B motorhome. This van-sized rig comes from a company with a long history in the RV industry and arrives at a time when more people want to travel without the noise and emissions of a gas engine. Built for those long stretches between plugs, the RVEX has 270 miles on a single charge—enough to cruise backroads or chase sunsets without hesitation. At around $150,000, it enters a market where electric options seemed out of reach and silent, smoke-free camping becomes a reality.
Sagittarius B2, a giant cloud of gas and dust near the center of the Milky Way, is churning out stars at an incredible rate. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has trained its infrared eye on this star factory and has captured images that are both breathtaking and baffling. This region, just a few hundred light-years from the galaxy’s central black hole, Sagittarius A*, holds secrets about how stars are born that Webb’s advanced technology can only partly reveal.
Four years after a mystery teaser in a dank Madripoor pub, Insomniac Games revealed Marvel’s Wolverine at the PlayStation State of Play. The unveiling included an autumn 2026 release date for the PS5 exclusive and a teaser that goes down to the point: this is a game about a man who heals quickly enough to keep fighting.
Engineers at Unitree decided to test their latest robot upgrades the old fashioned way: by hitting it in the face. In a recent demo, the company’s G1 humanoid robot gets a chest-high kick and back shove, and falls each time but gets up before the dust settles. That’s thanks to a new feature called Anti-Gravity mode, which improves the robot’s balance.
Holiday travel means pure chaos, a time when a second screen could turn a cramped tray table into a makeshift office, or so we think. KYY’s 15.6-inch 1080p FHD USB-C portable monitor, priced at $69.98 (was $99.99), fits the bill here, slim enough to forget it’s in your bag, but large enough to do real work.
Luxury, from the weight of a fountain pen to the subtle sheen of a leather-bound diary, has always felt heavy in the hand. Montblanc, the company that makes those tools, has spent years perfecting the art of putting thoughts on paper. Now, with the Digital Paper, they’re fully invested in the world of screens that mimic paper’s patience.