This seemingly normal-looking armored truck is actually hiding a cutting edge ASUS ROG gaming room, thanks to the work of the Hacksmith team. This mobile command center of sorts can easily withstand rounds from a rifle and has bullet-resistant glass windows that can handle a barrage of bullets or projectiles.
Another day, another humanoid robot, but Astribot S1 is actually useful around the home. Not only can it make waffles using a standard grill, but the robot can also feed a cat or even pour you a cup of tea.
Boston Dynamics’ electric Atlas 2.0 can perform numerous tasks, including push-ups, thus earning it the nickname of ‘BRATlas’, or so the company calls its newest humanoid robot. This was made possible due to the advanced control system and state-of-the-art hardware, which gives Atlas even more power as well as balance.
The VIOFO WM1 2K QHD Smart Dashcam includes a GPS logger as well as instant smartphone notifications, and you can get one for $49.99 shipped with coupon code: WM1BSDEAL at checkout, originally $99.99. It comes equipped with a Sony STARVIS IMX335 image sensor capable of recording ultra sharp 1440P footage at 30fps. Product page.
For a track-ready race car that won’t break the bank, look no further than the 2025 Toyota GR Supra GT4 EVO2. Power comes from a 3.0L in-line six-cylinder engine with a single twin-scroll turbocharger generating up to 487 lb-ft of torque, mated to a 7-speed modified ZF automatic transmission with paddle shifters.
Northwestern University researchers have discovered a method to create natural cement at beaches to prevent erosion by zapping sand with electricity. Technically speaking, they applied a mild electrical current that instantaneously changed the structure of marine sand, transforming it into a rock-like, immovable solid.
Netherlands’ Project Milestone is set to get two more 3D-printed homes, but unlike the first batch, these new structures will consist of several floors. Their structural properties are derived entirely from the printed concrete, but in the shape of a habitable ‘boulder’.
NASA / ESA’s Hubble Space Telescope captured this incredible image of the Triangulum Galaxy, also known as Messier 33 (M33), located around 2,730,000 million light years from Earth in the constellation Triangulum. It’s the third-largest member of our Local Group of galaxies and known to be a hotbed of starbirth, forming stars at a rate 10 times higher than the average of its neighbor, the Andromeda galaxy.