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Art-ware Is the Dining Set That Never Has to Go in a Cabinet

Par : JC Torres
16 mai 2026 à 19:15

Tableware has always had a storage problem. A complete set of cups, bowls, and cutlery takes up a cabinet’s worth of space for the privilege of being used a few times a week. The rest of the time, it sits behind closed doors, out of sight and contributing nothing to the space around it. That’s a lot of material devoted to a fairly passive existence.

Michael Jantzen’s Art-ware prototype takes a different approach to the same set of objects. Rather than designing tableware that gets put away after a meal, he designed a system where the dishes, cups, and cutlery connect to each other and become something else entirely: freestanding abstract sculptures that live out in the open, doubling as décor when they’re not being used for eating and drinking.

Designer: Michael Jantzen

The key to the whole system is a set of male and female connectors molded directly into each piece. These are simple protrusions that stick out from the surfaces of the bowls, cups, and cutlery handles, allowing any component to plug into or stack onto any other. A bowl can lock onto a cup, a cup onto another cup, cutlery can stand upright in an opening or connect through a handle, and the whole assembly stays together without any separate hardware.

The configurations that result don’t look accidental. Cups stacked and plugged together form vertical columns; bowls assembled at various orientations create clusters that read as organic, almost biomorphic forms. Slide cutlery upright through the assembled pieces, and the resulting structure starts to resemble a piece of abstract art you’d find mounted in a gallery, not something you’d normally find next to a kitchen sink.

That’s precisely what Jantzen is after. The Art-ware set doesn’t need to be stored in a cabinet because the assembled form is meant to sit on a shelf or table as a decorative object, a sculpture that also happens to be a dining set. You pull it apart before a meal and reassemble it afterward in whatever configuration suits you that day. No two arrangements have to be the same.

The material is recyclable plastic, and Jantzen frames the concept in straightforward sustainability terms: one product that performs multiple functions uses fewer resources than two separate products doing the same jobs independently. There’s no dedicated storage unit needed, no extra display piece required. The dining set is the décor, and the décor is the dining set.

Art-ware is a prototype and the first in a planned series of designs that expand the idea further. The concept is broad enough to go well beyond tableware, and Jantzen has spent decades applying this kind of thinking to furniture, architecture, and public installations. The dining set is a compact version of the same logic: objects that commit fully to their function while quietly doing something else on the side.

The post Art-ware Is the Dining Set That Never Has to Go in a Cabinet first appeared on Yanko Design.

This Architect Built a 20m² Red Cabin on Her Family’s Greek Vineyard — and It’s the Antidote to Every Concrete Villa on the Island

16 mai 2026 à 17:20

Somewhere between the olive groves and vine rows of Zakynthos, a deep-red timber cabin sits quietly in the Greek countryside, and it’s one of the most considered small structures to come out of Europe this year. The Root Cabin, designed by London-based studio Kasawoo, is a 20-square-metre prefabricated retreat that challenges the very idea of what a holiday home in Greece should look like.

The project is personal. Co-founder Katie Kasabalis owns the land in the village of Vanato, a site that has been in her family for decades and still holds the ruins of her grandmother’s old stone house. Together with co-founder Darius Woo, she set out to build something that felt of the place rather than imposed on it. The result sits at just 2.5 by 8 metres, slipping gently between rows of vines without disrupting the agricultural and historical fabric of the land.

Designer: Kasawoo

Built off-site in Romania and transported to Zakynthos fully prefabricated, the cabin is road-legal and designed to be relocatable, a detail that speaks directly to its low-intervention philosophy. “Nothing is superfluous,” the architects told Dezeen. “The project’s generosity lies in what it refuses to add.” In a part of Greece where sprawling concrete villas are accelerating across the countryside, that kind of restraint is quietly radical.

The exterior is wrapped in deep-red timber planks, a shade drawn from the historic villas of Zakynthos, and topped with a gently angled roofline that echoes the island’s mountainous horizon. It’s a structure that has absorbed its context rather than competed with it. Inside, the atmosphere shifts to something warmer and more immediate. Plywood lines the walls, ceilings, and all built-in furniture, creating a near-seamless, cocoon-like interior in which a bed, compact kitchen, sofa, and bookshelves are integrated into the structure.

The layout places the bedroom and bathroom at opposite ends, with a central living space defined by large sliding glass doors that open directly onto the landscape. Red details carry through from the exterior, while the bathroom shifts to soft blue tones, a quiet nod to the Ionian Sea nearby. Objects sourced from Greek makers, including ceramics and textiles, add another layer of local grounding to a space that already feels deeply rooted.

Passive ventilation and operable openings allow the cabin to function off-grid, reinforcing what Kasawoo describes as a “different kind of luxury,” one that measures itself not by square footage or spectacle, but by the quality of what’s been left out.

The post This Architect Built a 20m² Red Cabin on Her Family’s Greek Vineyard — and It’s the Antidote to Every Concrete Villa on the Island first appeared on Yanko Design.

LUV1 modular bike replaces your car for daily errands with 120L storage and swappable batteries

Par : Gaurav Sood
16 mai 2026 à 15:20

Most electric motorcycles still behave like motorcycles first and utility machines second. They chase performance numbers, oversized displays, or aggressive styling while ignoring a simple reality: most urban riders just want something practical enough to replace short car trips. The ANY LUV1 approaches the problem differently. Instead of behaving like a sportbike with batteries attached, it feels more like a compact urban tool designed around everyday life.

Created by Belgian startup ANY Mobility, LUV1 is sandwiched somewhere between an electric scooter, cargo bike, and lightweight motorcycle. The company calls it a “Life Utility Vehicle,” and the name makes sense once you look beyond the styling. Nearly every part of the vehicle revolves around usability, whether that means carrying groceries, office gear, camera equipment, or handling the kind of short-distance errands people usually default to using a car for.

Designer: ANY Mobility

That practicality starts with its packaging. The integrated cargo compartment offers 120 liters of storage, which is significantly more useful than the tiny under-seat compartments found on most scooters. It is large enough to carry shopping bags, delivery equipment, or a backpack and helmet without forcing riders to strap everything externally. Front and rear cargo racks expand that flexibility further, while configurable dividers allow owners to organize storage depending on the task at hand.

The modular approach is where the concept becomes genuinely interesting. Instead of locking owners into one fixed setup, the LUV1 can be customized with interchangeable body panels, seating layouts, storage accessories, and optional weather protection. One configuration can prioritize cargo hauling during the week while another leans toward casual commuting on weekends. It follows the same logic that made modular furniture and adaptable workspaces appealing: people increasingly want products that evolve with their routines rather than forcing routines around the product.

Visually, the bike avoids the exaggerated “future mobility” look many startups lean on. The clean bodywork and restrained surfacing come from Granstudio, the Italian design firm led by former Pininfarina design director Lowie Vermeersch. That design pedigree shows in the proportions and detailing. Even functional components like the storage compartments and structural frame feel integrated into the design rather than added as an afterthought.

Underneath the bodywork sits a modular aluminum chassis produced using high-pressure die-casting, a manufacturing method more commonly associated with larger automotive companies. The setup helps reduce complexity while providing the platform with enough flexibility to support various accessories and future configurations. Power comes from an 11 kW rear hub motor paired with dual swappable lithium-ion battery packs totaling 6.5 kWh. ANY Mobility claims a range of 68 to 87 miles, depending on use, while the top speed is rated at 62 mph, making the bike suitable for both dense city streets and suburban commuting. Charging the batteries through a standard 220V outlet reportedly takes under four hours.

The LUV1 also keeps accessibility in mind. It weighs around 352 pounds and features a relatively approachable 30.9-inch seat height, making low-speed maneuvering less intimidating for newer riders and shorter commuters alike. According to reports, the company expects pricing to fall between €7,000 and €10,000 (approximately $8,150 – $11,600) depending on configuration, and reservations have already opened ahead of production plans.

What makes the ANY LUV1 stand out is not raw performance or futuristic gimmicks, but how realistically it understands modern urban mobility. Most people are not looking for an electric motorcycle to replace weekend entertainment. They are looking for something convenient enough to replace unnecessary car usage, and the LUV1 feels designed precisely around that idea.

The post LUV1 modular bike replaces your car for daily errands with 120L storage and swappable batteries first appeared on Yanko Design.

Objects With Opinions: Ronen Kadushin’s Pieces

Par : Ida Torres
16 mai 2026 à 13:20

There are designers who make beautiful things, and then there are designers who make things that make you think. Ronen Kadushin belongs firmly in the second camp, and his latest collection, Pieces, is proof that a home accessory can be both genuinely useful and quietly subversive.

The collection consists of three objects: a candle holder called Echoes, a tealight holder called Reality TV, and a Piggybank. On paper, that sounds like a fairly ordinary lineup for a home accessories range. In practice, it’s anything but. The Pieces collection is an elegantly formed, humorously thought-provoking group of home accessories that highlight the tension between function and cultural narrative.

Designer: Ronen Kadushin

Each piece starts life as a flat sheet of laser-cut stainless steel, executed with Kadushin’s signature Twist-Hinge detail, making them easy and intuitive to bend by hand. They invite you to engage with the designs and co-create pieces that are an aesthetic statement with an edgy commentary. It’s a deliberate choice, not a shortcut. By asking you to participate in the assembly, Kadushin is making a point about who gets to be part of the creative process. You’re not just buying a finished object; you’re completing it.

That philosophy runs through everything he does. Kadushin is a pioneer of Open Design, freely sharing his designs to promote creativity, personal expression, and a positive social and economic impact. He embraces a “from the machine to the customer” approach, where extra manual processes and finishes are minimal, with pieces self-produced in Berlin in small-batch runs from high-grade stainless steel. There’s no bloated supply chain, no mass-market compromise. Just precision fabrication and a designer who has thought very carefully about what he wants his objects to communicate.

And communicate they do. The Piggybank is perhaps the most pointed piece in the collection. A traditional object redesigned to reflect a reality where saving is an illusion, it wears its cynicism openly. The pig is rendered as a flat stainless steel silhouette with a coin slot at the top, but there’s no belly to hold anything. Your coins rest on the surface. It’s funny, and it’s bleak, and it manages to be both of those things at once in the way that only good design pulls off. At a time when most people are watching their savings get swallowed by inflation, putting this on your shelf feels less like irony and more like cathartic honesty.

The Reality TV tealight holder takes a different angle. Shaped like a boxy, retro television set, it frames a tealight where the screen should be. When the flame is lit, you’ve got a broadcast. “Reflecting reality live, 24/7.” The concept is sharp without being heavy-handed. It makes you smirk, and then, a moment later, makes you think about the fact that we genuinely do stare at glowing rectangles all day as a form of comfort. Having a warm, flickering version of that sitting on your dinner table feels like Kadushin winking at us all.

Echoes, the candle holder, is the most sculptural of the three. A nuanced sculptural object echoing iconic 60s and 70s aesthetics with a contemporary edge, it’s the kind of object that earns a second and third look. The stacked, interlocking forms feel almost architectural, like a detail pulled from a midcentury design catalogue and rebuilt in stainless steel. Placed on a shelf without a candle, it still looks like it belongs in a gallery. With one lit, it earns its keep.

What ties Pieces together is the refusal to be decorative for decoration’s sake. Kadushin’s work is sculptural and communicates clever wit and free expression, and he designs user-assembled pieces that are an invitation to enjoy and participate in the creative process. The objects are funny, but they’re not novelty items. They’re precise, considered, and built from high-grade stainless steel that will still look good long after the trend cycle has moved on.

If you’re the kind of person who thinks about what your home objects say about you, and more and more people are, then Pieces is a collection worth paying attention to. Good design doesn’t just fill space. At its best, it holds an opinion. Kadushin’s does both.

The post Objects With Opinions: Ronen Kadushin’s Pieces first appeared on Yanko Design.

Forget Your Old Loadout — 5 EDC Essentials Built for Summer 2026

16 mai 2026 à 11:40

Summer 2026 is a different kind of season for EDC. The carry conversation has matured past keychain gimmicks and bulk-heavy multitools into something sharper; gear that’s actually thought through, built from aerospace-grade materials, and designed with the same care as the objects that live on your desk. These five pieces represent the best of where that shift has landed: practical without being boring, minimal without being precious.

Whether you’re navigating festival crowds, weekend camping trips, or the daily urban grind, the right loadout isn’t about carrying more — it’s about carrying smarter. Each of the picks below earned its spot not through spec sheets alone, but through intentional design choices that make the experience of using them genuinely different. These are the five pieces worth making room for this summer.

1. Cubik Knife

Gravity-powered deployment sounds more cinematic than practical — until you hold the Cubik. Designed by IF and machined from aerospace-grade titanium, this pocket knife opens with a button-flick and the natural pull of gravity: no springs, no mechanisms to fail, no audible snap. At 2.6 inches long, 0.98 inches wide, and just 0.2 inches thick, it slips into a pocket and disappears. The Cubik looks more like a designer flash drive than a knife, which is exactly the point — and what makes it so easy to live with every single day.

The blade runs a standard trapezoid utility format — the same geometry used to slice linoleum, roofing materials, acrylic, and thin sheet metals. When one edge dulls, flip it; when both are spent, swap it. That interchangeable format turns a consumable item into something genuinely sustainable over time. A deep-carry titanium clip keeps it flush to the pocket edge, and a tungsten carbide glass-breaker on the rear makes it a legitimate lifesaver when it counts. At $59 with five replacement blades included, it’s one of the most sensibly priced titanium tools in the category.

What we like

  • Gravity-flick deployment is spring-free, meaning zero moving parts to fail over time
  • Swappable trapezoid blades make the Cubik cost-effective and sustainable for long-term carry

What we dislike

  • The utility blade format won’t appeal to collectors who prefer a dedicated knife steel
  • Gravity deployment requires a deliberate wrist flick that takes a brief learning curve

2. 8-in-1 EDC Scissors

Most EDC scissors ask you to accept a compromise — either you get a folding design that sacrifices cutting power, or you get a rigid tool that’s too bulky to pocket. The 8-in-1 EDC Scissors from Eiger Design, available through the Yanko Design Shop, sidesteps both problems. Made in Japan and compact enough to sit in a palm at just 13 centimeters (5.1 inches) closed, it packs scissors, a knife, a lid opener, a can opener, a cap opener, a bottle opener, a shell splitter, and a degasser into a single carry-ready object.

The scissors themselves are the real story — full-strength blades that don’t rely on a collapsible pivot to achieve their compact profile, which means they cut with conviction through materials that foldable scissors would snag or mangle. The remaining seven functions are genuine, not ornamental. For summer specifically — camping weekends, beach cookouts, farmers market errands, festival packing — this is the kind of tool that earns its weight early and keeps earning it. At $53 through the YD Shop, it’s the most versatile item on this list per dollar spent.

Click Here to Buy Now: $59.00

What we like

  • Eight independent tools in a 5.1-inch, palm-sized package that’s genuinely comfortable to carry daily
  • Made-in-Japan manufacturing brings real precision to both the scissors and every secondary tool

What we dislike

  • The scissors-first form factor means the secondary tools can feel secondary in actual day-to-day use
  • Not the right call if you’re shopping for a dedicated cutting tool rather than a multitool

3. NoxTi

NoxTi is the kind of object that makes you reassess what belongs on your keychain. Designed by Xedge and built from Grade 5 titanium, it measures just 45mm and weighs 10.7 grams. The core of the piece is a tritium vial — a sealed, self-luminous insert that glows continuously for 25 years without batteries, charging, or any external power source. Quartz glass protects the vial from impact, and the titanium housing supports interchangeable vial options alongside a glass-breaker tip at the rear, making it far more than a novelty.

In practical terms, NoxTi solves a problem most EDC setups don’t realize they have: passive orientation in the dark. When your keychain is at the bottom of a bag, buried in a jacket pocket, or left on a nightstand, the glow orients you without reaching for your phone. That always-on, zero-input utility is a design philosophy most gear claims but rarely delivers.

What we like

  • Tritium vial delivers 25 years of passive, battery-free illumination with no maintenance required
  • Grade 5 titanium housing and quartz vial protection make it exceptionally durable for keychain life

What we dislike

  • At 45mm, it’s compact but will add noticeable length to an already-loaded keychain setup
  • Tritium vials are radioactive (safely contained, but a consideration for buyers who prefer chemical-free carry)

4. HYZER

Exceed Designs doesn’t do anything conventionally, and the HYZER is the clearest proof of that. At its core, it’s a hatchet — but calling it that undersells the engineering. The handle is fully skeletonized and CNC-machined from a solid block of 6AL-4V Grade 5 titanium, available in two lengths: a full-size 9.75 inches or a compact 8.15 inches. The head runs on an infinitely modular nested system that lets you swap cutting formats without replacing the handle — a level of adaptability that no conventional hatchet even attempts.

For summer carry — backcountry hiking, basecamp setups, or serious van-life configurations — the HYZER changes the math on what a hatchet needs to be. The D2 steel axe head delivers serious chopping performance, while the titanium handle keeps the tool lighter than any steel-handled competitor in its class. The stonewashed finish gives it a visual identity that’s unmistakably premium without being precious about it.

What we like

  • The modular nested head system allows the HYZER to adapt to different cutting and splitting configurations
  • Full skeletonized Grade 5 titanium achieves meaningful weight savings without compromising structural integrity

What we dislike

  • The premium titanium and D2 material combination places this at a significantly higher price point than most seasonal carries
  • Two-handed hatchet operation demands dedicated pack space that the other four items on this list don’t require

5. BlackoutBeam Tactical Flashlight

A 2,300-lumen output in a tactical flashlight isn’t rare in 2026 — but a 2,300-lumen flashlight that looks like it belongs at a design exhibition rather than a military surplus store is still genuinely hard to find. The BlackoutBeam, available through the Yanko Design Shop at $90, pairs that blinding output with an industrial aesthetic that wears well whether it’s clipped to a backpack or sitting on a shelf. The 300-meter throw distance cuts through darkness with clinical precision, and the IP68 waterproof rating ensures it performs regardless of what summer throws at it.

Five operational modes — including strobe and pinpoint — give the BlackoutBeam tactical flexibility that goes well beyond on-off cycling. The 0.2-second instant-on response is the detail that separates tools built for designers from tools built for actual use: in a power outage, a trail emergency, or any situation where you need light immediately, that activation speed matters in a way that a spec sheet can’t fully communicate. With longer days turning into late evenings outdoors and camping season running hot, the case for a serious flashlight in your summer kit has never been more straightforward.

Click Here to Buy Now: $89.00

What we like

  • 2,300-lumen output with a 300-meter throw distance puts it firmly in professional-grade territory
  • A 0.2-second instant-on response time makes it genuinely dependable when the situation demands it

What we dislike

  • The tactical aesthetic reads as aggressive for carry setups that lean toward minimalist or everyday styling

The Best Loadout Is the One You Actually Think About

What these five pieces share isn’t material or price point…it’s intention. Every one of them was designed by someone who cared enough to solve the actual problem rather than approximate a solution. That’s the standard worth holding EDC to in 2026, and it’s becoming a higher bar to clear as the category matures and the market fills with near-misses. The best loadout is never the one with the most gear. It’s the one with the right gear.

Summer tends to be the season when carry gets edited down; lighter layers mean fewer pockets, and heat means less patience for bulk. These five designs all pass that test. They’re compact enough to disappear when you want them to and capable enough to matter when you don’t. Whether you pick up one or all five, the upgrade from whatever you’re carrying now is real.

The post Forget Your Old Loadout — 5 EDC Essentials Built for Summer 2026 first appeared on Yanko Design.

The Memdock G3 Is the 13-Port Dock You Don’t Have to Hide Anymore

Par : JC Torres
16 mai 2026 à 01:45

Modern desks have never looked better. Sit-stand tables, cable management trays, and ultra-thin laptops have turned the average workspace into something worth showing off. But for all the effort that goes into making a desk look clean and intentional, the accessories that actually power it are often still a mess, and docking stations, in particular, tend to be boxy, generic things that most people try to hide.

That habit of hiding docks makes sense, since most of them aren’t exactly something you’d want on display. The Memdock G3 takes a different approach. It’s a 13-in-1 docking station that doesn’t look the part in the way most docks do, and that’s a compliment. With a rounded aluminum body and a physical volume knob at one end, it’s designed to sit on the desk, not behind it.

Designer: Memdock

Click Here to Buy Now: $89 $189 ($100 off). Hurry, only 135/200 left! Raised over $50,000.

The aluminum shell is both light and sturdy. Weighing just 175g and measuring 17cm in length, it won’t crowd any desk. The silver-white finish sits comfortably alongside a MacBook or a Surface without looking out of place. A one-touch power switch keeps things simple, while the knurled volume knob doubles as a status indicator with a blue ring glowing softly at its base.

Where the G3 separates itself from generic hubs is with its dual HDMI outputs, both capable of 4K at 60Hz. Whether you’re juggling two monitors or spreading your workspace across screens, the setup doesn’t need extra adapters or complicated display routing. It works across Windows and macOS without additional drivers, so plugging in is genuinely all you need to get a full dual-screen arrangement running.

Charging is another area where the G3 keeps things clean. The 100W PD port can keep a laptop topped up while everything else stays connected, which means you don’t need a separate charger taking up another outlet. Pass-through charging also stays active even when the dock is switched off, so your devices keep charging overnight without you having to think about it.

On the data side, the G3 carries multiple 10Gbps connections, including USB-C, which is meaningfully faster than the 5Gbps typical of most docks in its category. Moving a batch of raw photos or offloading footage from an external drive feels noticeably quicker, cutting the time you’d otherwise spend watching a progress bar crawl. Two USB-A ports handle the everyday stuff, from keyboards and mice to thumb drives.

Photographers and video shooters will appreciate having both an SD and a TF slot built in, which removes the hassle of hunting for a separate card reader every time they need to pull files off a camera. Pair that with a Gigabit Ethernet port for a steadier wired connection, and the G3 handles a range of workflows that most hubs can’t without reaching for yet another dongle.

The volume knob deserves a separate mention, not just as a feature, but as a design choice that says something about the G3’s priorities. Instead of digging through a settings panel every time you want to nudge the audio on a call, you just reach over and turn it. It’s a small thing, but it’s the kind of immediate, tactile control that feels obvious once you have it.

Docking stations rarely get treated like products worth designing with real care. They sit at the junction of display, power, data, and audio, making them genuinely central to how a desk functions, yet they’re almost always designed as if nobody will ever look at them. The Memdock G3 is a reminder that the things holding a workspace together can be just as thoughtfully considered as anything else on the desk.

Click Here to Buy Now: $89 $189 ($100 off). Hurry, only 135/200 left! Raised over $50,000.

The post The Memdock G3 Is the 13-Port Dock You Don’t Have to Hide Anymore first appeared on Yanko Design.

This LEGO VHS Player Actually Has Cassettes You Can Insert and Remove

Par : Sarang Sheth
16 mai 2026 à 00:30

Before streaming queues and binge-watching algorithms rewired how we consume film and television, there was a ritual. You drove to the video store, walked the aisles, made your pick, and came home to slide that chunky black cassette into a slot that swallowed it with a satisfying mechanical thunk. The VCR wasn’t just a piece of consumer electronics. It was the centerpiece of a whole cultural ceremony, the thing that turned an ordinary Tuesday night into a genuine event. Polar-Angel_UA, a LEGO builder and 10K Club Member from Ukraine, has captured exactly that feeling in brick form with the Video Home System.

The build recreates a classic VHS setup with the kind of specificity that only someone who actually lived through the era could pull off. The main unit nails the flat, utilitarian slab aesthetic of a proper 80s or 90s VCR deck, complete with a cassette slot, a row of playback controls, and a PAUSE indicator rendered in green. A top-loading lid flips open to reveal the tape mechanism inside, and the real delight here is in that interaction. The tapes go in. The tapes come out. For a build that’s ostensibly a static display piece, that single interactive element transforms the whole experience.

Designer: Polar-Angel_UA

Four items accompany the main unit: a movie cassette, a cartoon cassette, a remote control, and a VHS case. The distinction between the movie tape and the cartoon tape is a quietly brilliant design decision because if you grew up in that era, you absolutely had a dedicated shelf section for each. Saturday morning cartoons lived in their own plastic sleeve, carefully rewound and stacked away from the movie collection. Polar-Angel_UA understands the taxonomy of the VHS-era household intimately, and it shows.

The MOC’s inherently block-ish nature (thanks to the LEGO bricks) works well for this product. VCRs were not delicate objects. They were heavy, deliberately black, and looked like they meant business sitting under your television set, blinking 12:00 in perpetuity because nobody ever set the clock. This LEGO version carries that same hulking, I-mean-business energy, with the cassettes propped against it like they’re already queued up for a double feature. The remote control sitting casually beside the deck is a small touch that completes the tableau perfectly. You can almost feel the carpet under your feet and smell the takeaway boxes.

The Video Home System is currently gathering votes on the LEGO Ideas platform, where fan-created builds compete for the chance to become official retail sets. Cross the 10,000 vote threshold and LEGO’s internal team reviews the submission for potential production. With 688 supporters on the board right now and 422 days left on the clock, there is plenty of runway here. Head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote!

The post This LEGO VHS Player Actually Has Cassettes You Can Insert and Remove first appeared on Yanko Design.

This $35,000 Tiny Home Proves You Don’t Need More Than 161 Square Feet to Live Well

15 mai 2026 à 23:30

At 20 feet long and 8 feet wide, the Tulsi by Simplify Further Tiny Homes doesn’t try to be anything it isn’t. It has everything you need, and nothing you don’t. That restraint is exactly what makes it work. While the tiny home market is crowded with builds that either sacrifice livability for aesthetics or pile on features that inflate the price tag, the Tulsi threads the needle — landing at a starting price of $35,000 for a fully functional, NOAH-certified home on wheels.

The Florida-based builder behind it, Simplify Further, has built a reputation around the idea that quality and simplicity aren’t mutually exclusive. Their motto — “Simple Living, High Thinking” — runs through every design decision in the Tulsi. The build carries a BBB Accredited A+ rating, and its certification as an RV through NOAH means it meets a recognized standard for workmanship and safety.

Designer: Simplify Further Tiny Homes

At 161 square feet, the Tulsi packs in a kitchenette, a full bathroom with a shower stall, a flush toilet, a mini sink, a built-in seating area, a main-level queen-sized bedroom, and a loft. The loft measures 7 by 4 feet with a 36-inch height at the low side, accessible by ladder with black metal railings — tight, but functional. The height under the loft sits at 6 feet 4 inches, which means the main living area never feels like you’re ducking through a crawl space.

What sets the Tulsi apart from its contemporaries is its genuine flexibility. The main level bedroom isn’t a compromise — it’s a feature. For guests who don’t mind the loft, you could designate the loft as the main sleeping area and convert the downstairs bedroom to a living room. That kind of adaptability is rare at this price point. In the kitchen, buyers can opt for open shelving or swap seating for additional cabinet storage — a small but meaningful decision that shapes how the space actually lives day to day.

Simplify Further positions the Tulsi primarily as a guest house or mother-in-law suite — a secondary structure that gives visitors full independence without removing them from the property entirely. But the build has proven versatile enough to serve as a short-term rental, a starter home, or a full-time residence for someone drawn to the economy of small living. The Tulsi by Simplify Further seamlessly blends convenience and comfort, making it a charming addition to any property.

For a 161 square foot box on wheels, the Tulsi has quietly earned its place as one of the more thoughtfully designed entry points into tiny living — and the numbers back it up.

The post This $35,000 Tiny Home Proves You Don’t Need More Than 161 Square Feet to Live Well first appeared on Yanko Design.

Waymo’s Self-Driving Car Saw the Flood and Drove In Anyway. Here’s The Problem Plaguing Every Robotaxi.

Par : Sarang Sheth
15 mai 2026 à 20:45

Every sensor on a Waymo robotaxi sees the world in layers. The LiDAR maps it in three dimensions, radar bounces through it, and cameras read it in color and contrast, building a composite picture of the road that no human retina could match at the same fidelity. So when a Waymo encountered a flooded section of a 40 mph road in San Antonio on April 20, the car absolutely saw the water. It slowed down for it. Then it drove in anyway, floated off the road surface, and came to rest in Salado Creek. The voluntary recall Waymo filed with NHTSA on April 30, covering 3,791 vehicles, was triggered not by a sensor that missed a hazard, but by a software stack that saw the hazard clearly and still chose the wrong response.

You might be sitting in one of those 3,791 recalled vehicles right now, somewhere in Phoenix, Los Angeles, Austin, or Atlanta, and Waymo has confirmed the permanent software fix is still in development. Tesla’s Cybercab, entering production at Giga Texas, runs a supervised robotaxi service in Austin, Dallas, and Houston on a pure-vision architecture with no LiDAR whatsoever. Uber’s platform in Dallas is dispatching Avride-operated Hyundai Ioniq 5s that are currently under NHTSA investigation for 16 crashes involving lane changes and failure to stop for traffic ahead. Amazon’s Zoox uses cameras, LiDAR, radar, and long-wave infrared on every vehicle, the most sensor-redundant consumer-facing stack in the industry, and is still in limited city testing. Each platform has a different answer to what a self-driving car should do when it encounters something it cannot traverse, and after the San Antonio creek, all of those answers deserve a much closer look.

The NHTSA recall notice characterizes the flaw precisely: the software “may allow the vehicle to slow and then drive into standing water on higher speed roadways.” That is a classification error buried in the decision stack, not a sensor failure, and the distinction matters more than the recall number suggests. Waymo’s 5th-gen Jaguar I-Pace and 6th-gen Zeekr RT both carry LiDAR, radar, and cameras in overlapping fields of view, and the San Antonio car processed the flooded road accurately as a hazard worth responding to. The decision architecture, however, had no hard-stop condition for water on a 40 mph road, only a caution flag that reduced speed and left proceeding as an available output. A separate Waymo had already been stranded near McCullough Avenue in San Antonio roughly two weeks before the April 20 incident, confirming this was a repeatable failure mode across a fleet that was still carrying passengers in nine other cities.

Tesla’s Cybercab carries no LiDAR, putting its supervised fleet in Austin, Dallas, and Houston in a fundamentally different position when floodwater appears than Waymo’s overlapping sensor stack would. The platform relies on eight cameras and 4D millimeter-wave radar, meaning no independent depth-sensing channel exists to assess water severity when camera visibility degrades in heavy rain. A real-world FSD 14.3.1 test in April 2026 ended in manual takeover when the front bumper camera submerged, a precise illustration of where the vision-only approach runs out of information. Avride, dispatching Hyundai Ioniq 5s through Uber’s Dallas app since December, is under concurrent NHTSA investigation for 16 crashes involving lane changes and failures to stop for road hazards, all 16 occurring with a trained safety monitor seated in the vehicle. Amazon’s Zoox sits at the opposite end of the sensor redundancy spectrum, combining cameras, LiDAR, radar, and long-wave infrared in a 360-degree array with a human TeleGuidance fallback for scenarios the stack cannot resolve, though its commercial footprint remains a fraction of Waymo’s.

The Waymo recall, the Avride probe, and a dashcam video of a Waymo rolling through a red light on Irving Boulevard in Dallas all surfaced in the same seven-day window, collectively mapping the same design gap across three platforms: a perception-to-action pipeline that detects a hazard but generates the wrong response to it. Waymo’s OTA patch is deploying now, but the permanent fix remains in development, meaning every current ride runs on interim constraints rather than a finished solution. The San Antonio incident involved an empty car, and that is the only reason this story ends with a recovery operation rather than a casualty report. Each platform carrying passengers today is still writing its edge-case rulebook, publishing each new chapter only after something breaks on a live road. Knowing which system you are riding in, what its sensor stack can assess in a sudden storm, and whether its flood-detection logic has been patched from an interim fix to an actual solution is, I’d argue, the most practical safety question a passenger can ask in 2026.

The post Waymo’s Self-Driving Car Saw the Flood and Drove In Anyway. Here’s The Problem Plaguing Every Robotaxi. first appeared on Yanko Design.

This Ceramic Vase Is Actually a Phone Speaker That Needs No Power

Par : JC Torres
12 mai 2026 à 16:20

The home has become increasingly cluttered with gadgets that need charging, pairing, and their own dedicated spaces. Even something as simple as playing music from a smartphone often involves a Bluetooth speaker sitting on a shelf, waiting for its battery to drain. There’s been a quiet counter-movement in product design, where objects do their jobs without power and sit in a room the way a vase or a mug would.

Kenji Abe’s ECHO is exactly that kind of object. It’s an analog speaker that amplifies smartphone audio simply by being set on top of the phone, requiring no power, no pairing, and no setup beyond placing it down. The concept takes its cues from wind instruments and seashells, two forms that have been shaping and projecting sound for centuries without the help of electricity.

Designer: Kenji Abe

The inside of ECHO works like a chamber, built to catch the phone’s audio and carry it outward in soft, diffused waves rather than projecting it directly. The geometry draws from the same logic as a cupped hand, but with more control over how sound travels. The result isn’t a dramatic volume boost so much as a room-filling quality that feels warmer than a powered speaker on a desk.

The choice of material makes as much of a statement as the form. Abe uses glazed ceramic, the same material found in vases, mugs, and tableware, giving ECHO a texture and presence that belongs in a home rather than on a tech shelf. It doesn’t look like an accessory. It looks like something that was always there, something that simply happened to be placed near a phone.

That quality matters when the phone is on the kitchen counter and you want music while cooking, or on a desk where you’d rather not have a speaker taking up permanent residence. ECHO doesn’t need to live next to a charging cable or be put away between uses. It sits on the table and becomes part of the room, as unobtrusive as any other ceramic piece nearby.

A guest walking in wouldn’t necessarily clock it as a tech product. That’s partly the point. The glazed surface catches light the way pottery does, and the form is quiet enough to sit beside books or plants without demanding attention. When a phone is slid underneath it, it starts doing its job. When the phone is gone, it just stays there, still looking like it belongs. The same underlying principle runs through the Battery-free Amplifying iSpeakers, where a Duralumin metal enclosure amplifies a smartphone’s audio without any power.

Abe designed ECHO to exist comfortably in a room even when it isn’t doing anything, a goal most speakers never consider. Most audio accessories announce themselves. This one quietly waits, and when a phone is close enough to fill the cavity with sound, the room gets a little warmer and a little fuller without anyone having to reach for a power button.

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This pocket-sized cyberdesk built inside Altoids Tin is a portable workstation for geeks

Par : Gaurav Sood
12 mai 2026 à 15:20

What do you do with your Altoids tins after devouring the mints? Maybe for keeping your coins, hand it over to your mom for storing the sewing accessories, for keeping handy a first aid, or perhaps keep the watercolor paint for your little niece. DIYer “Exercising Ingenuity,” however, has a very unique use for the aluminium container.

The inventive YouTuber wanted to build a fully functional Cyberdesk inside of the Altoids tin. Sounds bizarre? Surely it is, given the size of the thing. In his video, he asked himself, “That looks like a tiny computer?” It was clear from the outset that the assembly would require the utmost level of detail and sourcing all the hardware inside the tiny housing. While it might not be the most powerful machine you can own, it surely is ultra-portable and quite nice nonetheless.

Designer: Exercising Ingenuity

Normally, Cyberdesks are built inside ammo cans, rugged Pelican cases, or anything that has a boxy form factor. The machines piqued in popularity during the 1980s after the science fiction novel Neuromancer. Altoid tins have all these attributes, just the smaller size makes them a very odd proposition in the Cyberdesk world. That said, he set out anyway on putting together the hardware. For the CPU, he used the Raspberry Pi Zero W he had lying around, and a 2-inch LCD from another unfinished project. The power comes from a 750mAh lithium-ion polymer battery.

The real challenge was to find the tiny mechanical keyboard and fit it inside the small space. According to him, this was the most enjoyable part of the project, even though the video suggests it was a difficult one. It required learning how to construct the diode matrix for configuring the input, along with the assembling and soldering methodology of each of the keys. The final step here involved painting the keys with a white ink pen. Once this bit was taken care of, the DIY headed into the moderate level difficulty (at least for us). The next step was to create a 3D-printed frame to keep all the components inside the tin in place.

Wiring had to be kept to a minimum, and soldering of other components had to be done efficiently, as space was a premium. As a last step to make more room for components like the UPS HAT board and the display, the original hinge was extended with another Altoids tin hinge for a makeshift, slightly bigger replacement. Once all the hardware components were secured properly inside the tin, it was just a matter of running the system using the software. To make the thing look and feel like a vintage desktop computer, the DIYer painted the front panel beige.

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Hario’s V60 Gets Its First Real Upgrade in 20 Years for $23

Par : Ida Torres
12 mai 2026 à 13:20

The original Hario V60 is the kind of object that earns its own mythology. Released in 2004, it became the face of the third-wave coffee movement: a simple cone of heat-resistant glass (or ceramic, or plastic, depending on how serious you are) that turned the morning cup into a ritual of patience and precision. Baristas loved it. Coffee nerds obsessed over it. And somewhere along the way, it became as recognizable as a kitchen object can get without appearing on a museum shelf.

That legacy makes the V60 Dripper NEO an interesting proposition. Hario could have left well enough alone. Instead, they spent two years quietly engineering a redesign that touches the one part of the V60 nobody talks about but everyone deals with: the ribs.

Designer: Hario

The original V60’s spiral ribs are the reason it works the way it does. They create space between the paper filter and the cone wall, allowing air to escape as water flows through. The result is a controlled extraction, but one that demands attention. Get your grind wrong, pour too fast, let your focus wander, and the brew either stalls or races past the point of no return. The V60 has always been a beautiful, slightly unforgiving thing.

The NEO changes that equation with a genuinely clever structural update. Instead of a single spiral rib pattern, it introduces 72 ultra-fine vertical ribs along the upper walls of the cone, which then converge into 9 deeper ribs near the base. This dual-zone design guides water evenly down the entire wall before accelerating it through the outlet. The effect is a faster, more uniform extraction that minimizes bitterness from water lingering too long in contact with the grounds. The cup you get out the other end is cleaner, sweeter, and more vibrant, with a balanced acidity that doesn’t tip into sourness.

Two years of testing went into getting this right. Hario’s engineers ran exhaustive trials on rib counts, angles, and flow dynamics before landing on this configuration. The fact that they filed a utility model patent on the structure suggests they believe it is genuinely novel, not just cosmetically different.

The material choice is also worth noting. The NEO is made from Tritan resin, a lightweight, high-clarity plastic that handles heat retention better than standard plastic alternatives. It keeps the brewing temperature more stable from the first pour to the last, which matters more than people think. Temperature consistency is one of those variables that separates a good cup from a great one, and the NEO addresses it without requiring you to do anything differently.

For anyone already embedded in the V60 ecosystem, the compatibility factor is a quiet win. The NEO works with all existing V60 switch bases, so you don’t have to rebuild your setup from scratch. It comes in two sizes, both made in Japan, and retails for around $23.50, which is an accessible price point for a piece of equipment that functions this thoughtfully.

Not everyone is convinced, though. Since hitting the market, the NEO has sparked a genuinely divided response from the coffee community. Users describe the brew as cleaner and more tea-like, which sounds appealing until you realize that some people loved the original V60 precisely for its acidic punch and intensity. One Reddit user put it plainly: the NEO presents coffee “differently,” not necessarily better. For experienced brewers who spent years dialing in their pour technique to coax specific flavors from the classic cone, the NEO’s smoother, more forgiving nature feels less like an upgrade and more like a personality change. That’s a fair criticism. Hario didn’t make a bad V60. They made a different one, and that distinction is exactly what has the coffee internet divided.

Pour-over coffee has always had a slight gatekeeping problem. The ritual appeals to people who love it precisely because it requires care, but that same learning curve turns off anyone who just wants a good cup without turning their kitchen into a science experiment. The V60 NEO doesn’t eliminate that ritual. It just makes the margin for error a little more forgiving, which means more people get to enjoy the result without years of practice behind them.

The original V60 deserved its legacy. The NEO earns its own, just a slightly different one.

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The 5 Best Tech Gadgets of May 2026

12 mai 2026 à 11:40

May 2026 is a good time to be paying attention. Gadgets aren’t just getting faster or thinner; the best ones this month are getting more intentional. There’s a shared thread running through every standout: each was built around a real constraint, a real behavior, or a real cultural moment, rather than a spec sheet searching for an audience. Five products rose above the rest, and each earns its spot for a distinctly different reason.

From a foldable phone that demolishes the category’s $800 price floor to a Nintendo Switch add-on that turns a gaming console into a live production rig, the range here is unusually wide. What connects them is the quality of thinking underneath. These aren’t renders looking for investment. They’re real objects designed to change how you work, listen, create, and move through a day. That’s the only brief that actually matters.

1. NASA Artemis Watch 2.0

NASA’s Artemis II lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on April 1, 2026, carrying four astronauts on humanity’s first crewed lunar journey in over 50 years. CircuitMess timed the NASA Artemis Watch 2.0 directly into that cultural gravity. At $129, it’s a fully assembled, ready-to-use programmable smartwatch built around a dual-core ESP32 microcontroller, with a full-color LCD screen, accelerometer, gyroscope, compass, and temperature sensor packed into a wristband designed for anyone aged nine and up who wants more than a fitness tracker strapped to their wrist.

What makes it worth your attention is the depth it offers without demanding anything upfront. Out of the box, it pairs with iOS and Android over Bluetooth for activity tracking and notifications. When curiosity takes over, the firmware is fully open-source and reprogrammable in Python, CircuitBlocks, or the Arduino IDE. Build custom watch faces, write your own apps, and modify sensor behavior as far down as you want to go. The Artemis Watch 2.0 is one of the rarer gadgets at this price: it genuinely grows with the person wearing it.

What we like

  • Fully open-source firmware supports Python, CircuitBlocks, and Arduino, giving both beginners and experienced coders meaningful room to explore and build
  • Ships fully assembled and ready to use straight out of the box, lowering the barrier to entry without removing any of the technical depth underneath

What we dislike

  • At $129, it asks for more commitment than most impulse purchases in the kids’ tech category allow for
  • Screen performance in direct sunlight hasn’t been addressed in any available documentation

2. OrigamiSwift Mouse

Every frequent traveler has made the same quiet compromise: leave the proper mouse at home or carry something too small to work with comfortably for more than an hour. OrigamiSwift was built precisely around that problem. It’s a Bluetooth mouse that folds flat when not in use, weighs just 40 grams, and opens into full working position in under half a second. The origami-inspired form isn’t a styling exercise. It’s a structural answer to the oldest tension in portable peripherals: comfort has always cost you size.

The ergonomic shaping holds up across extended work sessions, which matters more than most product pages acknowledge. Whether you’re finalizing a presentation at an airport gate or editing documents in a co-working space, OrigamiSwift stays comfortable in your hand and disappears into a bag when you’re done. The ultra-thin profile and minimal build weight mean it never adds anything meaningful to your load. For anyone who genuinely works from wherever they happen to be, this is the mouse that finally makes sense to own.

Click Here to Buy Now: $85.00

What we like

  • 40-gram weight and flat-fold profile make it practically invisible in any bag, disappearing entirely until you actually need it
  • Sub-0.5-second activation means there’s no friction at all between being packed and being productive

What we dislike

  • Available listings don’t confirm DPI range or scroll wheel responsiveness for anyone doing precision work
  • Bluetooth-only connectivity may create compatibility friction with older desktop setups that lack wireless support

3. Ai+ Nova Flip

The foldable phone category has spent five years convincing itself that the flip experience carries a natural premium of $800 or more. Ai+ is testing that assumption head-on with the Nova Flip, launched in India at Rs 29,999, roughly $320, making it the most accessible foldable phone on the market. The inner display is a 6.9-inch AMOLED panel resolving at 2790 x 1188 pixels, complemented by a 3.1-inch AMOLED cover screen. MediaTek’s Dimensity 7300 handles processing, paired with 8GB of LPDDR4X RAM and 256GB of internal storage.

The spec list doesn’t read like a budget compromise. A 50-megapixel primary camera, a 32-megapixel front shooter, and a 4325mAh battery with 33W wired charging all hold credibly against devices at double the price. 5G, NFC, and an IP64 dust and splash rating close out a package that would feel serious in any category. The Nova Flip doesn’t just undercut the competition on price. It quietly forces a harder conversation about what the flip form factor has genuinely been worth at $1,000 all along.

What we like

  • $320 pricing opens the foldable phone experience to an entirely new audience that the category has ignored since its beginning
  • The 4325mAh battery is a genuinely surprising capacity for the flip form factor at any price point, let alone this one

What we dislike

  • The 2-megapixel depth lens reads as the weakest component in an otherwise strong and well-considered camera array
  • Long-term hinge durability at this price tier is unproven and worth tracking carefully over time

4. Akai MPC Switch

Alquemy’s Akai MPC Switch concept asks a question that feels obvious the moment someone finally puts it to you: if laptop-grade software can run on portable hardware, why can’t a capable gaming console handle serious music production? The MPC Switch is a pair of controller units designed to snap directly onto the sides of a Nintendo Switch, replacing the Joy-Cons with MIDI inputs, outputs, and a full DAW running on the console’s own screen. The control layout reflects real production workflows rather than a stylized render built for social media.

The appeal runs deeper than the novelty of the form. The concept treats the Switch as a legitimate interface surface: something you game on when you need to and produce or perform on when the moment calls for it. Swap the Joy-Cons for the MIDI setup, and you’re there. Whether Nintendo or Akai ever moves this into production is a separate question entirely, but Alquemy has made a persuasive case that the idea deserves a real answer. The best concepts don’t just look good. They make you wonder why nobody shipped it first.

What we like

  • MIDI integration and a credible DAW interface position the Switch as a serious production platform rather than a novelty peripheral
  • The Joy-Con snap mechanism makes the transition between gaming and music production genuinely seamless in concept

What we dislike

  • No confirmed production timeline means this remains aspirational, with no clear path in your hands
  • The Switch’s processing ceiling may be a real constraint for complex, multi-layer production sessions

5. StillFrame Headphones

Most headphone designs land at one of two poles: the over-ear build that announces itself before you even put it on, and the in-ear solution that disappears but gives nothing back in soundstage. StillFrame lands somewhere more considered than either. At 103 grams, it sits closer to weightless than wearable. The 40mm drivers are tuned for a wide, open soundstage that pulls spatial detail and melodic texture out of tracks that most headphones flatten into undifferentiated background noise.

Active noise cancellation closes you off when focus demands it. Transparency mode reconnects you to the room when the world around you matters more. Battery holds at 24 hours, covering a full workday, an overnight flight, and the morning after with no cable required. Switching between modes takes a single tap. StillFrame was designed around the premise that how you listen should adapt to where you are, not the other way around. That’s a harder brief to execute cleanly than it sounds, and the weight alone suggests it’s been taken seriously.

Click Here to Buy Now: $245.00

What we like

  • 103 grams is a genuinely rare achievement for an over-ear headphone carrying both ANC and full-size 40mm drivers
  • 24-hour battery life covers the kind of all-day, real-world use that most headphones in this category only claim to handle

What we dislike

  • No published information on codec support, like LDAC or aptX, for listeners who prioritize wireless audio fidelity
  • Colorway and finish options appear limited in current listings, which may be a sticking point for buyers who care about visual identity

The Only Standard That Matters Is the One You Can Feel

May 2026’s strongest gadgets share something harder to write into a spec sheet than battery life or pixel count. Each was designed around a specific friction point and resolved it with a precision that feels purposeful rather than accidental. The Artemis Watch converts a cultural moment into a learning platform. The Nova Flip resets the floor of an entire category. The OrigamiSwift solves a portability problem that dozens of mice before it never genuinely addressed.

StillFrame and the Akai MPC Switch represent opposite ends of the development spectrum, one shipping and one conceptual, but both make the same underlying argument: that considered design changes the terms of what a product is allowed to be. Whether you’re optimizing a travel bag or rethinking a music studio from a gaming console, the standard these five set is worth taking seriously. The best gadgets this month aren’t the loudest ones in the room. They’re the most resolved.

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d64 Just Packed an Entire Dice Collection Into a Tiny 1980s Computer

Par : JC Torres
12 mai 2026 à 09:16

Tabletop roleplaying games have an accessory problem. The dice alone can take over a corner of any gaming table, each one representing a different die type that the rules will inevitably call for at the least convenient moment. Tracking down the right d10 mid-session, or explaining to a new player why there are two different ten-sided dice in the bag, is just one of those small but reliable annoyances that experienced players have long since stopped questioning.

The Console’88 from d64Computing is a compact digital dice roller that handles the entire set from d4 through d100 in a single device, the size of a pocket calculator. What makes it genuinely interesting, though, isn’t just the function; it’s that the designer chose to dress it up as a miniature 1980s computer, complete with a CGA color display, vector graphics, boot-screen text, and the kind of visual language that looks like it was pulled straight out of a 1984 computer catalog.

Designer: d64Computing

Selecting a die type is done through a rotary dial and a button underneath the faux keyboard, which fits the era aesthetically and keeps the interaction simple. Spin it to the die you want, and get your result. The randomness runs at microsecond precision, so the results are genuinely unpredictable rather than cycling through a predictable sequence. For anyone who’s ever side-eyed an app-based roller and wondered about its actual randomness, that’s a meaningful detail.

The sounds are what push it over from clever gadget into something with real personality. The Console’88 plays 1980s video game audio when you roll, and it apparently has dedicated sound effects for critical successes and critical failures, which is the kind of contextually appropriate design decision that’s easy to appreciate at an actual gaming table. A crit that’s announced by a triumphant eight-bit jingle lands differently than a number quietly appearing on a phone screen.

There’s an argument to be made for physical dice that has nothing to do with practicality. Rolling actual dice is tactile, dramatic, and central to the experience for a lot of players. But for anyone who travels frequently to gaming sessions, runs games for beginners without their own dice, or simply wants something that takes up less space on an already crowded table, a single device covering every die type is a reasonable swap to make.

The design commitment here is what separates the Console’88 from a generic electronic dice app. This thing looks like it belongs on a desk next to a Commodore 64, and reviews consistently call out the visual quality of the vector graphics and the charm of the retro computer case. It’s a product that clearly started from an aesthetic vision rather than pure function, and the function turned out to be genuinely good on top of it.

The post d64 Just Packed an Entire Dice Collection Into a Tiny 1980s Computer first appeared on Yanko Design.

This 4-in-1 Hands-free Flashlight Clips To Clothes, Snaps to Your Phone, and Stands on Its Own

Par : Sarang Sheth
12 mai 2026 à 01:45

A Red Dot Design Award and a $210,000 Kickstarter campaign are two very different kinds of validation. One comes from a jury of design professionals evaluating form, function, and coherence. The other comes from tens of thousands of people who looked at a product and handed over money before it shipped. SparkO, the compact wearable EDC flashlight from California’s ScoutLite, earned both. That combination suggests something specific about the object: it reads clearly to designers and solves something real for everyday people. At $45.99 and 40 grams, the barrier to entry is low enough that hesitation becomes difficult to justify.

Two photos of SparkO are enough to grasp the concept: a disc-shaped body, a silicone loop that clips and doubles as a kickstand arm, and a circular LED array wrapped in a fine prismatic lens ring. The anodized metal bezel is color-matched to whichever of the four options you pick, Forest Moss, Basalt Black, Glacier Blue, or Canyon Clay. It clips to a bag strap or jacket, snaps magnetically to a MagSafe iPhone, props upright on the optional ring stand, or rides on clothing as a hands-free wearable. That range of deployment is the whole argument for SparkO, and ScoutLite backs it with 300 lumens, three color temperatures, four brightness levels, a red light mode, CRI 95+ rendering, a 14.5-hour runtime, and USB-C charging. At a campsite, a workbench, or a dim restaurant table, the light adapts to the situation rather than demanding you adapt to it.

Designer: Ten

Click Here to Buy Now: $41.40 $45.99 (10% off, use coupon code “YK10”). Hurry, deal ends in 48-hours!

The disc form is a real departure from the cylindrical tube that has defined flashlight design for over a century. A cylinder forces you to hold it; a disc invites you to wear it, clip it, or set it down facing wherever light needs to go. The silicone loop is soft enough to flex over thick fabric and structured enough to hold position once seated, its geometry doubling as the kickstand arm when the magnetic ring base enters the picture. The circular LED face is surrounded by a concentric prismatic lens ring that distributes light broadly and evenly, borrowing visual language from photography ring lights rather than from tactical torches. That framing signals the breadth of SparkO’s intended audience: the tradesperson and the camper, but equally the commuter, the hobbyist, and the photographer working in low light.

Clipped to a chest pocket or jacket collar, SparkO illuminates whatever your hands are working on without requiring you to hold anything, which is the core use case that conventional EDC lights have historically fumbled. Snapped to the back of an iPhone Pro via the magnetic base, it becomes a fill light for close-up photography, turning a phone into something resembling a professional lighting rig for the cost of a decent lunch. The ring stand converts the same unit into a bedside reading lamp or a compact task light with a footprint smaller than a drink coaster. Each scenario calls for a different mounting method, and the transitions between them take seconds rather than a setup ritual. Four modes sounds like a marketing stretch right up until you’ve run through all of them in a single day, and then it starts to feel like the accurate count.

Three hundred lumens is the right range for a light this size: capable outdoors, tolerable at close range, and not so aggressive that it becomes a problem in tight spaces. The three color temperature options matter more than the lumen figure in daily use, covering the gap between a warm amber reading mode and a cooler beam suited to detailed work. CRI 95+ color rendering is what sets SparkO apart from most of the EDC lighting field, reproducing colors accurately enough that the light reads close to natural daylight, which makes a genuine difference for craftspeople and photographers. The red mode preserves night-adapted vision on a trail or at a campsite, a small but real addition for outdoor use. Runtime at 14.5 hours and USB-C charging put SparkO on a weekly recharge cycle with a cable it shares with everything else in a modern carry kit.

ScoutLite has built a product that lands on the right side of the three virtues the EDC community consistently responds to: compact, accessibly priced, and solving a problem the existing field handles poorly. The Red Dot Award carries credibility for an audience that pays attention to such things, while the $210,000 Kickstarter result is a harder signal to argue with, because crowdfunding backers are betting on a design that communicates its own value clearly enough that waiting feels unnecessary. At $45.99, the decision practically makes itself, especially given that the clip, the magnet, the stand, and the wearable mode collectively cover more scenarios than most EDC kits manage with multiple dedicated tools. Whether ScoutLite follows this up with accessories or a higher-output variant, SparkO sets a credible benchmark for what a wearable EDC light should cost, weigh, and do. The category has needed something this considered for a while.

Click Here to Buy Now: $41.40 $45.99 (10% off, use coupon code “YK10”). Hurry, deal ends in 48-hours!

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Sony’s PS6 Could Triple the PS5’s Power. It Could Also Cost $800 and Land in 2029

Par : Sarang Sheth
12 mai 2026 à 00:30

Seven years is a strange unit of time. Long enough to finish a PhD, short enough to remember an event vividly, and apparently, exactly long enough for Sony to build, test, manufacture, and ship a new generation of PlayStation hardware. PS3 to PS4, PS4 to PS5: seven years, twice, with the precision of a Swiss movement. The console industry built its entire release calendar ecosystem around that cadence. Publishers scheduled their biggest titles around it. Retailers planned inventory cycles for it. Analysts forecast revenue curves based on it. So the news that Sony has not yet decided when the PS6 will launch, with Bloomberg and MST International both pointing toward 2028 at the earliest (if not 2029), carries weight well beyond a single product launch.

The culprit is DDR7 memory, or more precisely, the catastrophic shortage of it, as AI data centers absorb the global supply of high-bandwidth RAM faster than Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron can produce it. One year of delay sounds manageable until you zoom out. GTA6, announced in December 2023 for a 2025 launch, has been publicly delayed three separate times and is currently targeting November 2026, with bettors still skeptical. Beyond the Spider-Verse slipped from March 2024 to June 2027, a three-year crater in the release calendar of one of the most acclaimed animated franchises in history. Apple is formally retiring the single annual iPhone event in favor of a split premium-then-standard cadence. The PS6 delay is a symptom of something structural, and the structure is bending.

Image Credits: Latif Ghouali

The memory crisis at the root of Sony’s problem is unlike previous supply chain disruptions in one important way: it is being driven by a competitor class that simply outclasses consumer electronics on every financial dimension. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron have made a calculated pivot toward high-bandwidth memory for AI accelerators, with demand expected to grow 70 percent year-over-year in 2026 alone. Meanwhile, Alphabet and Amazon have announced capital expenditure plans of roughly $185 billion and $200 billion respectively this year, among the largest in corporate history, further intensifying competition for advanced memory. Sony is not losing a bidding war. It is sitting in a market that has structurally reorganized around different priorities, and the PS6 is waiting at the back of a very long, very expensive queue.

Sony President and CEO Hiroki Totoki addressed the uncertainty directly at the FY2025 earnings briefing, saying through a translator: “We have not yet decided on at what timing we will launch the new console, or at what prices. So we would like to really observe and follow the situation.” That is an extraordinary statement from the head of one of the most strategically disciplined hardware companies on the planet. Sony does not typically observe and follow. It plans, announces, and executes. The fact that Totoki’s language sounds more like a macroeconomist reading a volatile market than a product chief managing a launch calendar tells you everything about how abnormal this moment is.

The hardware itself, when it arrives, looks genuinely transformative. Leakers and supply chain sources indicate Sony awarded the PS6 chip contract to AMD back in 2022, with the console expected to feature a custom Zen 6 CPU and RDNA 5 GPU architecture, targeting roughly triple the PS5’s rasterization performance with 4K gaming at 120 frames per second and advanced ray tracing. A companion handheld codenamed Project Canis is reportedly riding alongside the main console as part of a unified two-device platform strategy, which would represent the most significant structural shift in PlayStation’s hardware philosophy since the PS3’s disastrous Cell processor gamble. The specs, in other words, are not the problem. The atoms are.

The delay also arrives at a peculiar competitive moment. If supply chains stabilize by 2027, Sony could target a late 2028 launch with multiple SKUs and the handheld companion. If shortages persist, the PS6 could slip to 2029 or beyond, risking market momentum loss to rivals. Microsoft has been conspicuously quiet about its own next-generation plans, and a scenario where Xbox gets to market first, even with a smaller install base, would hand the competition a narrative advantage that Sony has not faced since the PS3 era. As of early April 2026, prediction markets showed only about 25 percent probability that Sony would announce the PS6 before 2027. The crowd is not optimistic.

What the PS6 situation actually exposes is the fragility of product cycles that have been treated as laws of nature rather than engineered outcomes. GTA6 has been delayed not once or twice but three times since its December 2023 reveal, bouncing from a 2025 window to May 2026, then to its current November 19, 2026 target, with Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick deploying identical “we feel really good about it” language each time a new date was announced. Beyond the Spider-Verse, a sequel to a film that grossed $690 million and earned a near-universal critical consensus as a generational achievement in animation, has been pushed from March 2024 to June 2027, a three-year gap that would have been unthinkable for a franchise at that level of commercial and artistic momentum. And Apple, the company that arguably invented the modern product launch as cultural event, is now formally splitting its iPhone releases across a fall premium window and a spring standard window, with Mark Gurman reporting the expectation that this pattern continues for years to come. Clockwork, everywhere, is slipping.

Sony will ship the PS6. The hardware is real, the AMD partnership is locked, and the performance targets are serious enough to make the wait feel justified when the box finally lands on a shelf. But the seven-year cycle, that beautiful, reliable, industry-organizing drumbeat, is not coming back on its original terms. The PS6 will arrive when the memory market allows it, which is to say when AI infrastructure spending pauses long enough for consumer electronics to get a turn. That is a sentence that would have read like science fiction in 2020, when the PS5 launched on schedule into a pandemic and sold out globally within minutes. The world has reorganized itself around different priorities. The PlayStation, for the first time in a long time, has to wait in line like everyone else.

The post Sony’s PS6 Could Triple the PS5’s Power. It Could Also Cost $800 and Land in 2029 first appeared on Yanko Design.

This Stationary Tiny Home Has More Room Than Most City Apartments

11 mai 2026 à 23:30

Most tiny houses ask you to make a trade-off. You get the romance of compact living, but sacrifice the one thing that makes a home feel like a home — space. Craft House, a modular builder operating across Poland, Austria, and Ireland, decided to flip that script entirely with the Samuel, a non-towable module house that prioritizes spacious full-time living over the freedom to hitch and go.

The Samuel sits at 10 meters (32 ft) long and an unusually generous 3.2 meters (10.6 ft) wide, measurements that push well beyond the European tiny home average. That extra width is deliberate. It’s what allows the interior to breathe in a way that most towable models simply can’t, opening up a layout that reads less like a cleverly compressed box and more like a well-considered apartment. The structure wears a single-pitched roof, topping out at 4.1 meters at the ridge, and is finished in engineered wood and metal, a clean pairing that reads industrial without feeling cold.

Designer: Craft House

Inside, the ground floor spans 26 square meters, with a 13-square-meter mezzanine sitting above and a 4.3-square-meter bathroom rounding out the floor plan. The layout makes room for two distinct sleeping areas, and the volume created by the sloped ceiling gives the mezzanine level a loft-like quality that larger homes often fail to capture. Optional off-grid upgrades are also on the table, making the Samuel a realistic candidate for plots far beyond urban infrastructure.

What Craft House understood when designing the Samuel is that the tiny home market has two very different buyers. There’s the nomad, always ready to hitch the trailer and head somewhere new. Then there’s the person who simply wants a well-designed, right-sized home that doesn’t carry the financial weight of a conventional build. Samuel is clearly built for the latter. By dropping the wheels and leaning into a fixed footprint, Craft House was able to allocate width and volume in ways that towable structures prohibit by law and logistics.

Priced at around US$72,000, the Samuel lands in a range that makes it a genuinely viable alternative to traditional housing in several European markets. It isn’t trying to be everything. You won’t be parking it in a new location every season. What it offers instead is something arguably more valuable: a permanent, considered space that proves small doesn’t have to mean cramped, and that the best tiny homes aren’t always the ones with the biggest adventures, but the ones that make staying put feel worth it.

The post This Stationary Tiny Home Has More Room Than Most City Apartments first appeared on Yanko Design.

This Sculptural Glass Object Makes Flowers Feel Like a Van Gogh Painting

Par : Tanvi Joshi
11 mai 2026 à 22:30

There is something instantly familiar about patterned glass. We have seen it in old windows, cabinet doors, bathroom partitions, and quiet corners of homes where privacy and light needed to exist together. It is a material that usually stays in the background, doing its job quietly. With Violet Frosted, designer Marius Boekhorst brings that overlooked material forward and turns it into something sculptural, expressive, and quietly poetic.

At its heart, Violet Frosted is a geometric glass object that plays with flowers, light, color, and texture. What makes it interesting is the way it changes how we see what is placed behind it. The frosted, patterned glass softens the flowers, turning bright petals and stems into blurred fields of color. A flower becomes a shadow, a brushstroke, a violet glow, or a faded green line depending on where you stand.

Designer: Marius Boekhorst

That is where the charm of the piece begins. Instead of presenting flowers directly, Violet Frosted filters them. It creates a gentle distance between the viewer and the arrangement. That distance makes you look closer. It asks you to slow down and notice how color shifts through glass, how a shape becomes unclear, and how something ordinary can feel painterly when it is partly hidden.

In many ways, Violet Frosted feels like a still life painting brought into the real world. Traditional still lifes capture flowers in one fixed composition, frozen in paint and time. This piece lets the still life move. The flowers change as they bloom and fade. The light changes throughout the day. The view changes as you move around it. From one angle, the arrangement may feel bold and graphic. From another, it becomes soft, quiet, and almost dreamlike.

The design feels especially beautiful because it does not try too hard. It avoids excess decoration. The form is clean and almost architectural, while the patterned glass gives it warmth and character. It feels contemporary without losing the memory of where the material comes from. That balance between old and new gives the piece its quiet confidence.

Violet Frosted also carries a museum-like feeling, though it never feels precious or untouchable. It brings the mood of a gallery into everyday space. A table, shelf, or windowsill suddenly feels more considered. A simple floral arrangement becomes an experience. You are looking at flowers through atmosphere, texture, and light.

Violet Frosted reminds us that design does not need to shout to stay with us. Sometimes, the most memorable objects are the ones that shift how we see familiar things. By turning patterned glass into a living frame, Marius Boekhorst creates a piece that sits between a vase, a sculpture, and a painting. It is functional, emotional, and deeply visual. It holds flowers, and it holds a moment.

The post This Sculptural Glass Object Makes Flowers Feel Like a Van Gogh Painting first appeared on Yanko Design.

BEYOND Expo 2026: Asia’s Biggest Tech Event Just Told the World That AI Software Was Only the Warm-Up

Par : Sarang Sheth
10 mai 2026 à 23:30

Every major tech conference eventually finds its thesis statement. CES landed on “everything is connected.” SXSW staked out culture-meets-technology. BEYOND Expo‘s thesis for 2026 is more specific, and honestly more timely: AI has spent years proving itself in software, and the interesting question now is what happens when it leaves the screen. The official theme, “AI: Digital to Physical,” takes over from last year’s theme of Transforming Uncertainty into a Trigger for Innovation. Timed perfectly around the global speculation that AI’s a bubble, it’s a genuine reflection of where the most consequential AI work is actually happening right now, in robotics labs, automotive platforms, wearables, and manufacturing floors across the Greater Bay Area.

BEYOND has been building toward this moment since Dr. Lu Gang launched it during a global lockdown in 2021, a decision he’s called delusional in hindsight during an interview with Yanko Design, but with the kind of grin that says he’d do it again. The original problem he was solving was simpler than people realize: Asia’s most interesting founders kept showing up at CES and Web Summit as attendees rather than headliners. A hardware startup out of Shenzhen with genuinely world-class AI chops would get a 3×3 booth on a back wall while the stage went to the usual suspects. BEYOND was built to fix that imbalance, and five years in, it’s working.

Click Here to know more about the BEYOND Expo 2026

The 2026 edition is aiming for 30,000 attendees, a significant jump from 2024’s 20,000, and the programming reflects a maturing event that knows its own strengths. The summit lineup spans Humanoid Robotics and Embodied AI, Enterprise Agentic Workflows, Autonomous Driving, AI-Integrated Wearables, and a PayFi and Decentralized AI track that will either feel prescient or premature depending on your priors. What ties all of it together is the through-line of AI becoming something you interact with physically, not just through a chat interface. That’s a meaningful editorial choice, and one that puts BEYOND in a different conversation than conferences still treating large language models as the whole story.

The most interesting addition this year is the GBA Innovation Tour, which gives international attendees direct access to Greater Bay Area manufacturing infrastructure. This matters more than it might sound. Lu Gang has argued for years that what makes Asia’s tech ecosystem genuinely different isn’t just the innovation pipeline, it’s the compression of the distance between idea and physical product. Watching an AI concept move from prototype to production in a Shenzhen facility in weeks rather than months is something you can describe in a keynote, but apparently you need to see it to really understand the scale and speed involved. The tour is BEYOND’s way of making that argument visceral rather than theoretical.

Last year’s theme, “Unveiling Possibilities,” was about reframing uncertainty as creative fuel, which was the right message for a chaotic moment. “AI: Digital to Physical” is more declarative, more confident. It names a specific transition that the industry is mid-stride through, and plants BEYOND squarely in the middle of it. Registration and exhibition details are live at beyondexpo.com.

Click Here to know more about the BEYOND Expo 2026

The post BEYOND Expo 2026: Asia’s Biggest Tech Event Just Told the World That AI Software Was Only the Warm-Up first appeared on Yanko Design.

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