2026 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray Z51 Review: The Interior Finally Matches the Supercar

PROS:
- Interior redesign finally matches the supercar exterior
- Triple-display cockpit reduces eyes-off-road time effectively
- Roswell Green Metallic shifts color dramatically in sunlight
- Z51 delivers 495 hp with Brembo brakes under $97K
- Knurled metal switches resist the era of touchscreen fatigue
CONS:
- Seat heating and ventilation buried in touchscreen submenus
- Z51's summer-only tires make this a seasonal commitment
The 2026 Stingray 2LT with the Z51 Performance Package is not a car that asks you to evaluate its horsepower first. It asks you to sit inside and look around. That shift in priority, from powertrain to interior architecture, is the single most important thing Chevrolet has done to the C8 platform since moving the engine behind the driver six years ago.
Wrapped in a light-reactive finish called Roswell Green Metallic and rebuilt from the console outward, the 2026 Stingray is the first version of this car where the design language inside matches the sculptural ambition of the body. Everything before this was a supercar exterior with a parts-bin cockpit. That tension is finally resolved.
I’ve spent a week with the 2LT Z51 in Roswell Green, and the design overhaul changes the way you think about this car before you ever turn it on. What follows is a design-first breakdown of everything Chevrolet changed, everything that works, and where the compromises still live.
The ergonomic pivot: interior architecture rebuilt from the H-point up
The original C8 interior committed a fundamental spatial error. A tall center divider ran vertically between the two seats, housing climate controls, drive mode selectors, and a stack of physical buttons. The industry called it “the wall.” The design problem wasn’t the buttons themselves. It was the raised horizon line of that divider, which created a psychological barrier between driver and passenger. The cabin felt partitioned. The passenger sat in an adjacent room.

For 2026, Chevrolet dropped the entire center console structure. The lowered console horizon transforms the spatial relationship between the two occupants. Where the old layout isolated the passenger behind a vertical slab of controls, the new architecture invites them into the driver’s visual field. The experience shifts from “isolated” to “inclusive” without sacrificing any of the cockpit’s driver-centric focus.

Beneath the 12.7-inch center touchscreen, a slim bezel strip houses the primary HVAC controls: temperature, fan speed, and airflow direction. Below that, a row of knurled metal switches handles drive mode selection and volume. Each switch has a machined, cylindrical profile with a grip pattern you can find by touch alone. In an era of touchscreen fatigue, where even luxury brands have moved every interaction to a flat pane of glass, these physical controls are a premium tactile counterpoint to the triple-screen digital environment surrounding them.
The trade-off lives in the seats. Seat heating and ventilation controls have migrated entirely into the 12.7-inch touchscreen, buried inside a climate submenu. Removing the physical buttons cleaned the console’s visual horizon, but it added a tap-and-swipe sequence to what used to be a single button press. For a car that generates lateral forces strong enough to require a grab handle, asking the driver to navigate a digital menu for seat heat is a design compromise worth scrutinizing. The aesthetic gain is real. The ergonomic cost is measurable.
The old vertical divider left no room for a passenger grab handle. Its replacement, a minimalist, leather-wrapped grab handle, arcs across the lower console in a single fluid line. It’s a small element with outsized presence. Call it a functional sculpture: structurally necessary for a car that generates 1.0g lateral forces, refined enough that it reads as intentional design rather than an engineering afterthought. The leather wrap matches the door panel stitching. The mounting points disappear into the console geometry.

The lowered console transforms the spatial experience immediately. Where the old layout created the sensation of sitting inside a divided cockpit, the 2026 interior opens the sightline across the full width of the cabin. The claustrophobia factor drops measurably. The seating position remains laid back, almost Formula 1 in its recline, and that posture helps mitigate the limited headroom that taller drivers will still negotiate with.
The knurled switches feel substantial under the fingers: machined, weighted, precise. They resist the smudging that plagues the touchscreen surfaces around them. Some shared switchgear with lower Chevrolet models (the Trax uses identical pieces) undercuts the premium feel in spots, but the overall material quality reads as considered rather than cost-cut. The grab handle sits exactly where your hand reaches during hard cornering, low enough to brace against without blocking the console’s visual flow.
The triple-display UX: how three screens reduce cognitive load
Three screens sounds like excess. In practice, the 2026 Corvette’s display layout solves a problem that single-screen and dual-screen cockpits create: cognitive competition. When navigation, telemetry, media, and vehicle status all fight for space on one display, the driver’s eyes travel further and stay away from the road longer.
Chevrolet’s solution distributes information across three screens based on cognitive priority. The 14-inch Driver Information Center sits directly ahead, dedicated to speed, gear position, and essential driving data. It stays visually silent during normal driving, using high-contrast graphics that communicate without demanding attention. Navigation lives here only when active, taking over the full display with clean vector mapping.

The 12.7-inch center touchscreen handles media, climate, and vehicle settings. It’s the interactive screen, the one you touch. The larger, tactile volume knob sits at its base with an illuminated ring that glows in the ambient cabin color you’ve selected. In a cockpit full of digital surfaces, this single analog control becomes the functional focal point: a physical anchor in a digital environment.
The 6.6-inch display to the left of the steering wheel is the most interesting piece of the system. Think of it not as an auxiliary screen, but as a Driver Command Satellite: a dedicated tactical window for trip telemetry, HUD adjustments, PTM Pro controls, and the Performance Data Recorder’s coaching overlays. Positioned in the driver’s peripheral sightline, it reinforces the cockpit hierarchy rather than diluting it toward the passenger. By offloading this data to its own surface, the driver cluster stays uncluttered. The driver never looks away from the road to check performance metrics; a glance left handles everything.
The underlying software runs on a Google-native operating system with full voice integration. The practical effect is a natural-language interface that handles navigation, media, and communication through conversational input. “Navigate to the nearest charging station” works. So does “play the playlist from this morning.” The voice layer reduces cognitive load during spirited driving, when your hands need to stay on the wheel and your eyes need to stay through the windshield. Over-the-air updates mean the system improves after you’ve taken delivery, which is a first for any Corvette.
The infotainment system responds quickly to both touch and voice. The Google voice integration handles navigation and media commands without noticeable lag, and the natural-language processing accepts conversational input without requiring exact phrasing. The triple-display layout reduces eyes-off-road time in practice: the driver cluster handles speed and navigation, the center screen handles media and climate, and the left-side Command Satellite handles performance data. Each screen has a dedicated cognitive role, and after a few days behind the wheel, the layout becomes intuitive rather than overwhelming. The one usability complaint: some switchgear on the steering wheel is shared directly with lower Chevrolet models. The function is fine. The perceived material gap is not.
The Roswell Green narrative: pigment behavior on compound surfaces
Chevrolet doesn’t call Roswell Green Metallic a color. The more accurate description is a living finish, a light-reactive surface that changes identity depending on the light source hitting it. Tagged with color code G4Z and priced at $500, it’s only the second green ever offered on the C8 platform. The name references Roswell, New Mexico. Chevrolet has not confirmed the alien mythology connection, but the association is unmistakable.

In low ambient light, overcast conditions, or the shade of a parking structure, the panels read as shadowed emerald: deep, weighted, almost black-green with a dense metallic flake structure visible only at close range. The color feels heavy. It pulls the eye into the surface rather than bouncing off it.
Under direct UV, the transformation is dramatic. The same panels shift toward electric chartreuse on the car’s sharpest creases: the angular fender peaks, the leading edge of the rear haunches, the Z51 spoiler’s trailing lip. The metallic particles in the paint align differently at steep surface angles, concentrating reflected light into narrow bands of bright, almost acidic green. The effect is architectural. The body’s compound curves and crease lines become legible in a way that neutral finishes suppress.
The material contrast system around the body is equally considered. Carbon Flash accents (the standard dark carbon-fiber-look trim on mirrors, splitter edges, and roof panel surround) provide the necessary technical coldness to balance the organic warmth of the green. Standard Pearl Nickel forged-aluminum wheels (19-inch front, 20-inch rear, five-split-spoke) add a silver-cool metallic counterpoint on the base configuration; this test car wears the optional 5-Spoke Black-Painted Forged Aluminum Wheels ($995), which darken the stance and sharpen the contrast against the green. Without these neutral anchors, the green would risk reading as aftermarket. With them, the palette holds together: organic hue, technical trim, metallic ground.

The recommended interior pairing is Very Dark Atmosphere with Natural Tan accents, a deep chocolate brown Napa leather with warm tonal stitching. Emma Mikalauskas, Lead CMF Creative Designer for Chevrolet performance vehicles, describes it as “luxurious and grounded.” Against Roswell Green on the exterior, this combination reads more like a European GT than an American muscle car. Jet Black works too, but it lets the exterior do all the talking. The brown creates a conversation between inside and outside.
Roswell Green demands to be seen in person. In press photos, it reads as a saturated forest green that could go either way. On the street, the metallic flake structure transforms it into something far more complex. Under overcast skies, the panels pull toward a deep, almost industrial green that draws comparisons to heavy machinery. Some onlookers will see John Deere. Others will see wealth. Under direct sun, the color detonates: the metallic particles concentrate on the body’s crease lines and shift toward a bright, acidic chartreuse that photographs entirely differently from the shaded panels ten inches away. The color is polarizing by design. It rewards direct sunlight and punishes flat lighting. Over a full day of driving, the car changes identity three or four times depending on the angle of the light source.
Functional art: the Z51 as aesthetic and performance system
The Z51 Performance Package on the Stingray Coupe adds track hardware that reshapes how the car looks and how it drives. On the design side, the transformation starts at the rear.
The Stingray Coupe’s transparent rear hatch offers a curated view of the 6.2-liter LT2 V8, framing the engine behind glass like a piece of industrial art in a mechanical gallery. The intake manifold, the valve covers, the wiring harness: all visible through a panel that treats the powertrain as an exhibit rather than hiding it beneath painted bodywork. On the Z51, the engine cover carries a performance exhaust badge and sits lower in the frame, emphasizing the width of the rear track. The power source is visible, accessible, displayed. You don’t just hear 495 horsepower. You see where it comes from.

The Z51-specific front splitter and rear spoiler function as visual bookends that resolve the aggressive mid-engine wedge shape. The C8’s silhouette pushes mass rearward: the long hood carries only a frunk, while the truncated tail packs engine, transmission, and cooling. Without the Z51’s aero elements, the profile can feel rear-heavy. The splitter’s forward extension and the spoiler’s horizontal plane create a visual bracket, stabilizing the proportions by defining the car’s front and rear boundaries with equal authority. The aero works at speed. It also works standing still.
Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tires in staggered widths (245mm front, 305mm rear) fill the wheel arches completely. The Brembo brake calipers sit visible behind the spokes. Heavy-duty cooling ducts in the lower fascia add functional apertures that darken the nose. Every Z51 addition serves a performance purpose. Every addition also modifies the car’s visual stance. That dual function, where engineering and aesthetics solve the same problem from different directions, is what makes the Z51 more than an options checkbox.

The performance numbers live in the specs appendix above, but one figure deserves context here: 2.9 seconds to 60 mph (Chevrolet’s claim; Car and Driver independently measured 2.8). That’s mechanical violence. It’s the number that justifies wrapping this car in a color as aggressive as Roswell Green, because a finish this confrontational needs a powertrain that backs it up. The Z51’s performance exhaust, Brembo brakes, electronic limited-slip differential, and heavy-duty cooling system aren’t just track hardware. They’re the kinetic proof behind the visual promise.

New for 2026, PTM Pro (Performance Traction Management Pro) pairs with the Z51 to complete the performance-as-art thesis. This mode strips nearly all electronic intervention while the car’s sensor array continues feeding real-time 3D drift graphics to the cockpit displays: tire smoke rendered on screen, tread marks traced in real time, the car’s dynamic state visualized as a live digital sculpture. It’s track software that treats driving data as content, not just telemetry. Everything the body’s creases and aero elements suggest about speed, the Z51 and PTM Pro deliver at the pedal and on the screen.
Driving the design: modes, data recording, and the new PTM Pro
The Driver Mode Selector offers five presets plus two custom profiles, and each one changes how the car’s design elements communicate with the driver. Tour softens everything for daily use: the suspension absorbs, the exhaust quiets, the steering lightens. It’s the mode where the interior’s new comfort-focused design language makes the most sense. Sport tightens the chassis and opens the exhaust note. Track removes the filters entirely, maximizing chassis and powertrain response. Weather dials back throttle and traction for slippery conditions. MyMode lets you build a personal blend. Z Mode, accessed via a dedicated steering wheel button, stores a quick-access performance profile independently.

The available Magnetic Selective Ride Control 4.0 uses a suspension fluid embedded with metallic particles. An electromagnetic field realigns those particles in milliseconds to change the fluid’s viscosity, adjusting damping rates faster than any conventional mechanical system. It’s the engineering behind the car’s dual character: grand touring compliance in Tour, track-ready stiffness in Track, from the same hardware.
The Performance Data Recorder (PDR) has been completely reimagined for 2026. Previous versions required a laptop for video analysis. The new PDR is built directly into the vehicle’s screens. It records high-definition video of your driving sessions with telemetry overlays (speed, g-forces, lap times), provides automated coaching tips, and includes a side-by-side video comparison feature for lap analysis. You never leave the car’s infotainment system. Standard on 2LT and 3LT.
Performance Traction Management (PTM) now includes PTM Pro, a new mode that fully disables traction and stability control for advanced track driving. A dedicated hardware switch beneath the Driver Command Satellite display (left of the steering wheel) provides one-touch access. The system generates real-time 3D graphics showing the car in dynamic drift states with tire smoke and tread marks rendered on screen. It’s a track tool wrapped in a visual interface that treats the data as content, not just numbers.
The drive modes transform the car’s character beyond what the spec sheet communicates. In Tour, the Magnetic Ride suspension absorbs road imperfections with a compliance that feels closer to a grand tourer than a mid-engine sports car. Speed bumps taken at normal speeds register as soft thumps, not impacts. The exhaust drops to a murmur. The steering lightens to the point where parking becomes effortless.
Switch to Sport, and the chassis tightens perceptibly within the first quarter mile. The exhaust opens into a mid-range bark that fills the cabin without overwhelming conversation. Track mode removes every remaining filter: the dampers stiffen until expansion joints announce themselves through the seat bolsters, and the throttle response sharpens to a hair trigger.
The difference between Tour and Track in Magnetic Ride is not subtle. It is one of the most dramatic suspension transformations available in any production car at this price. The PDR interface, built directly into the vehicle screens, is functional and responsive for track use: lap overlays, telemetry readouts, and coaching tips all run without leaving the infotainment system. PTM Pro, accessed via the dedicated hardware switch beneath the Command Satellite, disables electronic intervention entirely while leaving ABS active. It is a track-only tool that requires confidence, clear sightlines, and a willingness to accept the consequences of full driver authority.
Five colorways as interior identities
The five new 2026 interior colorways aren’t palette options. They’re identity statements built around different driver archetypes.
Asymmetrical Adrenaline Red places the signature Corvette red only in the driver’s zone: seat bolsters, door panel insert, steering wheel accent. The passenger side stays neutral. The result is a deliberate visual asymmetry that draws attention to the driver’s seat as the cockpit’s center of gravity. The available Driver Competition / Passenger GT2 seat configuration pairs a deep-bolstered Competition Sport seat on the driver’s side with a comfort-oriented GT2 on the passenger side. Asymmetric color. Asymmetric seating. The interior reflects who controls the car.

Cool Gray with Habanero accents is the most design-forward option. Monochrome cool grays provide a clean, tech-inflected base. Bright orange Habanero appears only in precise locations: stitching lines, seatbelt webbing, small trim inserts. The effect is closer to consumer product design than traditional automotive interiors. Chevrolet’s CMF team cites “subtle futurism” as the reference point.
Jet Black suede with customizable accent stitching (Adrenaline Red, Competition Yellow, or Santorini Blue) strips the cabin to its most elemental state. Brandon Lynum, Corvette CMF Design Lead, calls it “the ultimate expression of competition driving.” The sueded microfiber on high-touch surfaces creates grip. The monochrome palette eliminates visual noise. It’s the interior equivalent of a blacked-out watch dial.
Very Dark Atmosphere with Natural Tan is the grand touring interior: deep chocolate brown Napa leather with warm stitching that reads European rather than American. This is the colorway that makes the most sense with Roswell Green on the outside.
Santorini Blue is the extrovert’s choice: a vivid electric blue across major surfaces. Loud, confident, and intentionally polarizing.
The seat architecture underneath these colorways runs four deep. GT1 (Mulan leather, standard on 1LT/2LT) is built for daily comfort. GT2 (carbon-fiber seatback halo, Napa leather, standard on 3LT) reduces mass while increasing structural rigidity. Competition Sport (Napa with performance textile) adds deep bolsters for lateral grip. The asymmetric Driver Competition / Passenger GT2 pairing, exclusive to Asymmetrical Adrenaline Red, puts a locked-in sport seat where you need it and a comfort seat where you don’t.
Living with 182 inches of mid-engine sports car
The Stingray measures 182.3 inches long, shorter than a Toyota Camry. But the wide sills, the low roofline, and the mid-engine packaging create a specific set of daily considerations that the spec sheet can’t communicate.
The squared-off steering wheel remains divisive. Chevrolet has committed to the flat-bottom, flat-top shape since the C8’s introduction, and it serves a functional purpose in a cockpit this tight: easier ingress and egress, and a clearer view of the 14-inch driver cluster. But the flat sections still interrupt the natural hand-over-hand rotation at low speeds.

Rear visibility without the camera systems is poor. The engine cover, the high rear deck, and the low seating position combine to create significant blind spots. The 2LT’s Rear Camera Mirror and HD Curb View Camera aren’t luxury additions. They’re close to necessities. Rear Cross Traffic Alert and Side Blind Zone Alert (both standard on 2LT) fill the gaps.
The frunk and rear cargo area combine for 12.6 cubic feet of storage. Enough for soft bags, groceries, or a weekend carry-on. The coupe features a removable Targa roof panel that stows in the rear cargo area, though it cuts into luggage space. Getting in and out requires a practiced motion: swing, drop, pivot. The wide sills don’t forgive hesitation.
Fuel economy sits at EPA-estimated 16 city, 25 highway, 19 combined MPG on premium unleaded from an 18.5-gallon tank. That’s roughly 460 miles of highway range. Not exceptional for a daily driver, but rational for a naturally aspirated V8 producing nearly 500 horsepower.
The convertible option adds a power-retractable hardtop that raises or lowers in 16 seconds at speeds up to 30 mph. If the Targa panel stowage bothers you, the convertible solves that problem at the cost of roughly 100 additional pounds.

Getting in and out requires a practiced sequence: step over the wide sill, drop into the seat, pivot your legs under the steering wheel. It becomes automatic within a day, but the wide sills never forgive hesitation or tight parking spaces. The squared-off steering wheel helps with ingress, providing clearance that a round wheel would not. At low speeds, the flat sections still interrupt the natural hand-over-hand rotation during tight turns.
The visibility systems earn their keep in real traffic. The Rear Camera Mirror eliminates the blind spot created by the engine cover and high rear deck. The HD Curb View Camera proves essential in every parking structure. Without these systems, the car would be difficult to live with in dense urban driving.
Cargo is more usable than the spec sheet suggests. The frunk holds a small carry-on or two bags of groceries. The rear trunk fits soft bags, hardware store supplies, and bulky gear that would not fit in most two-seat sports cars. With the Targa roof panel stowed, rear trunk space shrinks, but the total package is more practical than any mid-engine competitor.

Highway cruising in Tour mode with the Bose Performance Series system is remarkably civilized. Road noise is present but not intrusive. The 14-speaker system delivers clean audio at moderate volumes, though the V8 soundtrack tends to make the stereo irrelevant. Real-world fuel economy in mixed driving settles around 17 to 18 MPG, close to the EPA combined rating of 19.
The pricing equation: what $96,795 actually buys
The 2LT base starts at $79,095 including destination. But base MSRP is not the number anyone drives off the lot with. This car, the Hero Spec 2LT with every design-critical option checked, stickers at $96,795 per the verified window sticker. The gap between base and as-tested is $17,700 in factory and dealer-installed options that define the visual and dynamic identity of this build. The complete options list and published prices:
- Z51 Performance Package (RPO Z51): $6,345
- Front Lift with Memory (RPO E60): $2,595
- Z51 Suspension w/ Magnetic Selective Ride Control 4.0: $1,895
- GT2 Bucket Seats: $1,695
- Coupe Engine Appearance Pkg: $1,695 (carbon fiber trim closeouts, engine lighting, specification plaque)
- 5-Spoke Black-Painted Forged Aluminum Wheels (dealer installed): $995
- 2-Tone Seats: $595
- Roswell Green Metallic (G4Z): $500
- Engine Cover in Sterling Silver: $495
- Tan Seat Belt: $395
- Exhaust Tips, Black: $495
That accounts for every line item on the window sticker: $77,100 base vehicle + $17,700 options + $1,995 destination = $96,795. Every option on the Hero Spec changes how the car looks, drives, or both. The Z51 reshapes the aero and unlocks 495 hp. Magnetic Ride transforms the chassis character between Tour and Track. The front lift with memory saves the splitter on every driveway and parking ramp. The Coupe Engine Appearance Package dresses up the visible powertrain through the rear glass with carbon fiber trim closeouts, LED engine lighting, and a specification plaque. Roswell Green makes the bodywork legible. Strip any one and the design argument weakens.
The 2LT is where the value argument gets sharp. Over the base 1LT, you gain the Head-Up Display, the 14-speaker Bose Performance Series system (up from 10 speakers), heated and ventilated seats with power lumbar and wing adjustment, the Performance Data Recorder, the HD Curb View Camera, Rear Cross Traffic Alert, Side Blind Zone Alert, and a heated steering wheel. Every one of those features changes how the car feels to drive and live with daily. The 1LT is a capable sports car. The 2LT is a capable sports car that treats you like you paid for one.

The 3LT adds further material upgrades: 14 interior color options, custom leather-wrapped instrument panel and door panels, sueded microfiber upper interior trim, and the GT2 seats with Napa leather. Those are material and craftsmanship upgrades. Important if you care about what your hands touch every time you reach for the wheel. Less critical if your priority is extracting lap times.
At $96,795 as tested, the Hero Spec competes in serious sports car territory, and the competitive frame shifts. The now-discontinued Porsche 718 Cayman GTS 4.0 ($103,300 MSRP, 394 hp) sits above this price point but delivers about 100 fewer horsepower and a less dramatic design statement. The 2LT Z51 in Roswell Green occupies a rare position: genuinely exotic design and mid-engine performance from a manufacturer that still builds its own naturally aspirated V8.
The 2LT is the right trim for most buyers who intend to drive the car rather than display it. The 1LT saves money but surrenders the Head-Up Display, the 14-speaker Bose system, and the visibility systems that make the car livable daily. The 3LT adds material refinement (Napa leather, sueded microfiber, GT2 seats) that matters if tactile quality is a priority, but it does not change the driving experience.
At $96,795 as tested, the Hero Spec sits in Porsche 718 Cayman GTS 4.0 territory. The Porsche started at $103,300 (394 hp) before its February 2026 discontinuation but delivers about 100 fewer horsepower and a less dramatic design statement. The Lotus Emira ($112,900, 400 hp) occupies the same mid-engine conversation but with less interior refinement and a smaller dealer network. Nothing in this price range matches the Corvette’s combination of power, daily usability, and visual presence.
The aggressive American wedge vs. the conservative minimalist
Place a 2026 Corvette Stingray next to a Porsche 718 Cayman and you’re looking at two fundamentally different design philosophies occupying the same market.
The Cayman is a conservative minimalist. Its surfaces are smooth, its transitions are gradual, its proportions are resolved through subtraction. Nothing on the body calls attention to itself. The design communicates competence through restraint. It’s elegant. It’s also, after a decade, concluded: Porsche discontinued the 718 in February 2026.
The Corvette is an aggressive American wedge. Every surface has a purpose, and that purpose is visible. The crease lines announce structural intent. The vents aren’t decorative. The mid-engine packaging creates a silhouette that looks fast at rest because the proportions aren’t balanced in the traditional sense. They’re weighted, biased, kinetic. Roswell Green amplifies every one of those characteristics by making the surfaces legible in ways that flatter colors cannot.
For five years, the Corvette’s exterior made a promise that the interior couldn’t keep. The sculpted, angular body said supercar. The button-walled cockpit said parts-bin. For 2026, the interior finally speaks the same language as the sheet metal: intentional, layered, considered. The knurled switches echo the machined precision of the engine’s internals. The triple-display architecture matches the visual complexity of the body’s crease network. The leather-wrapped grab handle mirrors the flowing lines of the exterior’s haunch.
The Porsche 718 Cayman still does more with less. That’s its design thesis. The 2026 Corvette Stingray 2LT Z51 in Roswell Green Metallic does more with more, and for the first time, the “more” is coherent. The engineering caught the design world’s attention in 2020. The design finally deserves the same scrutiny.
The 2026 Corvette Stingray 2LT Z51 in Roswell Green Metallic is the first version of this car where the design ambition matches the engineering reality from every angle. The exterior has always made the argument. The interior, for five years, undermined it. That tension is resolved.
What surprised me most was not the speed (which is violent and immediate) but the interior’s spatial transformation. The lowered console, the three-screen architecture, the knurled switches: these are design decisions that change how the cabin feels, not just how it looks. The car reads as intentional in a way the 2020 through 2025 models never achieved.
What I would change: the seat heating and ventilation controls belong on physical switches, not buried in a touchscreen submenu. The squared-off steering wheel remains an acquired taste at low speeds. And the summer-only Pilot Sport 4S tires on the Z51 package make this a seasonal commitment in any climate with real winters.
This car is for the buyer who treats design language as a performance metric. If the way a cabin is constructed matters as much as the way a chassis corners, the 2026 Stingray finally delivers both.
Who is this for
Best for: Buyers who care about design language as much as horsepower. If you cross-shop European GTs and want mid-engine performance without the mid-engine price of a Porsche or McLaren, the 2LT Z51 delivers both the visual identity and the driving capability.
Also good for: Design-conscious drivers upgrading from a muscle car or sport sedan who want something sculptural, not just fast. The interior overhaul makes the C8 livable in ways the 2020 through 2025 models weren’t.
Skip it if: You want minimalist interior design (the now-discontinued Cayman was your car), you need all-weather daily capability (the Z51’s summer-only Pilot Sport 4S tires are a seasonal commitment), or you’re waiting for the hybrid E-Ray.
How I tested
Tested over a week period in mixed conditions: urban commuting, highway cruising, and spirited driving on secondary roads. Approximately 400 miles covered. Weather conditions ranged from clear skies to overcast. Evaluations included ride quality across all drive modes (Tour, Sport, Track), daily usability (ingress and egress, cargo loading, visibility systems), interior ergonomics, infotainment responsiveness, Bose audio quality, and real-world fuel economy tracking. No formal track testing was conducted for this review. All performance figures cited are manufacturer claims unless otherwise noted.
Frequently asked questions
How much horsepower does the 2026 Corvette Z51 have?
The Z51 Performance Package includes a performance exhaust that raises output to 495 horsepower and 470 lb-ft of torque, up from the standard 490 hp and 465 lb-ft.
What changed in the 2026 Corvette interior?
Chevrolet removed the center button divider, lowered the console horizon, and added a three-screen layout (12.7-inch center, 14-inch driver cluster, 6.6-inch Driver Command Satellite). Five new interior colorways, a leather-wrapped grab handle, knurled metal control switches, ambient lighting, and a relocated wireless charger complete the redesign. Google Built-in and over-the-air updates are now standard.
What is Roswell Green Metallic?
A light-reactive exterior finish (color code G4Z) named after Roswell, New Mexico. It shifts from shadowed emerald in low light to electric chartreuse on the car’s sharpest creases under direct sunlight. It’s the second green ever offered on the C8, costs $500, and is available across all Corvette models.
How fast is the 2026 Corvette Stingray with Z51?
0 to 60 mph in 2.9 seconds (Car and Driver independently measured 2.8). Quarter mile in 11.2 seconds. Top track speed of 184 mph, per the original GM spokesperson confirmation and Car and Driver test data. Chevrolet’s current marketing page advertises 194 mph without distinguishing between trims; the Z51’s shorter final drive ratio trades top speed for quicker acceleration.
What is the fuel economy of the 2026 Corvette Stingray?
EPA-estimated 16 city, 25 highway, 19 combined MPG on premium unleaded. The fuel tank holds 18.5 gallons, giving roughly 460 miles of highway range.
How much does the 2026 Corvette Stingray cost?
The 2LT starts at $79,095 including destination. The verified window sticker for our tester totals $96,795: $77,100 base + $17,700 in options + $1,995 destination. Key options include the Z51 Performance Package ($6,345), Front Lift with Memory ($2,595), Magnetic Ride 4.0 ($1,895), GT2 Bucket Seats ($1,695), Coupe Engine Appearance Pkg ($1,695), and Roswell Green Metallic ($500).
What seats are available on the 2026 Corvette Stingray?
Four configurations: GT1 (Mulan leather, standard on 1LT/2LT), GT2 (carbon-fiber seatback halo, Napa leather, standard on 3LT), Competition Sport (Napa leather with performance textile), and a unique asymmetric Driver Competition/Passenger GT2 pairing available with the Asymmetrical Adrenaline Red interior.
Is the 2026 Corvette Stingray available as a convertible?
Yes. The convertible features a power-retractable hardtop that raises or lowers in 16 seconds at speeds up to 30 mph. The coupe features a removable Targa roof panel.
What is PTM Pro on the 2026 Corvette?
A new Performance Traction Management mode that fully disables traction and stability control for advanced track driving. A dedicated hardware switch provides one-touch access beneath the Driver Command Satellite display (left of the steering wheel).
The post 2026 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray Z51 Review: The Interior Finally Matches the Supercar first appeared on Yanko Design.
Your Dusty Film Camera Can Shoot 26MP Digital: No Modifications Needed
Film cameras have had a strange little comeback, and not in the way anyone expected. It’s not that people find waiting days for developed photos convenient. It’s that pulling a mechanical viewfinder to your eye still feels more deliberate, more personal, than tapping a glass screen. Vintage bodies from the 1970s and ’80s have become far more desirable again than they were a decade ago.
The obvious problem is the film itself. Processing costs have climbed, lab turnaround times can stretch into weeks, and there’s always that faint dread of discovering a whole roll came out underexposed. I’m Back Roll tries to address that without asking you to give up the camera you actually love. The idea is to keep the body intact and quietly swap out what goes inside.
Designer: Samuel Mello Medeiros
Click Here to Buy Now: $449 $699 ($250 off). Hurry, only 1/435 left! Raised over $525,000.
What goes inside is a digital roll the size of a standard film cartridge, housing an APS-C sensor positioned in the film gate. Close the camera back, and almost nothing looks different from outside. No rear screen, no clunky attachment bolted to the body. The only visible concession to the digital world is a small Bluetooth remote that clips near the winding lever.
That remote is how you synchronize the digital sensor with the mechanical shutter, pressing it just before you fire. It sounds fiddly at first, but it also reinforces the whole point. There’s no live view to second-guess yourself with, no image to review immediately after. You shoot, move on, and download everything wirelessly later. That’s closer to how film photography actually felt than most digital cameras manage.
At the heart of the roll is Sony’s 26.1 MP APS-C IMX571 sensor, the same sensor family also used in astronomy cameras, where low-noise performance matters. It sits inside a CNC-machined aluminum body designed for heat dissipation, with up to 256GB of internal solid-state storage and both Wi-Fi and Bluetooth for transferring images once you’re done shooting.
The battery follows the same logic as a film roll, sitting in the film chamber where a cartridge would normally live. It’s interchangeable, so you can swap in a fresh one mid-session the same way you’d load a new roll. That’s a small but genuinely clever bit of design thinking, because it doesn’t ask the camera to pretend it’s something it was never built to be.
An old Nikon F3 or a Contax G2 becomes a genuinely different camera with the I’m Back Roll inside, without actually looking any different on the outside. From that point, it shoots RAW and JPEG files across an ISO range of 100 to 6400, with presets inspired by classic film stocks and brands, including Fujifilm and Ilford, for anyone who wants some of that analog character in the output.
There’s something appealing about the idea of pulling a camera out of a drawer and actually using it again. The roll works with most 35mm bodies from major brands, including Nikon, Canon, Pentax, and Leica, though cameras where the back opens from bottom to top may need a custom rear panel. Many classic 35mm bodies can accommodate it, though some may need the pressure plate removed or a custom rear panel.
Of course, the two-step shooting process, activating the sensor before triggering the shutter within a second or two, is going to feel less natural to some. Someone who relies on live view or reviews every frame would need to adjust expectations considerably. The rhythm here is slower and more committed, which is either the whole point or the main reason to look elsewhere.
What I’m Back Roll is really arguing is that cameras collecting dust on shelves aren’t finished. The lenses are still sharp, the mechanics are still smooth, and the experience of using them is still genuinely different from anything modern. Slipping a digital core inside doesn’t change any of that. It just means those cameras might actually get used again, which feels like the better outcome.
Click Here to Buy Now: $449 $699 ($250 off). Hurry, only 1/435 left! Raised over $525,000.
The post Your Dusty Film Camera Can Shoot 26MP Digital: No Modifications Needed first appeared on Yanko Design.
Nike Just Turned 4 Iconic Football Boots into Air Max 90s
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If you’ve never cared about football in your life, the Nike Mad 90 Pack might just change that. Not because it’ll make you want to kick a ball around, but because it proves that the most powerful design language in sports has always lived off the pitch as much as on it.
Here’s the setup: Nike took four of its most iconic football boots from the past 25 years and used them as the blueprint for four new Air Max 90 colorways. The Hypervenom, the Mercurial Vapor 2002, the Total 90 Laser, and the Tiempo. Each one gets its own distinct expression on the Air Max 90 silhouette, pulling directly from the materials, colors, and energy of the original boot. The result is a pack that manages to feel both nostalgic and completely new at the same time.
Designer: Nike
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The Air Max 90 as a canvas makes a lot of sense here. It’s one of the most versatile sneakers Nike has ever produced, a shoe that’s lived in so many different worlds that borrowing DNA from football feels natural rather than forced. And each pair in this pack earns its reference.
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The Hypervenom comes in Bright Citrus and Total Orange, using mesh and Gripskin tech lifted directly from the boot’s original construction. It’s loud, aggressive, and unapologetic, exactly the energy the Hypervenom always carried on the pitch. The Mercurial Vapor 2002 translation goes dark and sleek in an all-black colorway, and it even borrows the boot’s signature flip-over tongue. That’s a small detail, but it’s the kind of thing that separates a thoughtful design from a lazy one.
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The Total 90 Laser shows up in its iconic black and yellow with the “90” logo planted at the toe box, and if you grew up in the early 2000s, that color combination alone will do something to you. Finally, the Tiempo takes on a crackled leather finish in black and voltage green that feels more like a heritage piece than a modern release, understated compared to the others but arguably the most wearable of the four.
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What Nike is doing here is interesting beyond just the product. They’re translating a very specific kind of sports memory into something wearable for an entirely different context. People who grew up watching Ronaldo score in Mercurial Vapors, or who remember the Total 90 Laser as the boot every kid wanted at Christmas, now get to carry a piece of that era on their feet without needing to step on a football pitch to justify it. That’s a clever move for a brand that knows its audience runs much wider than athletes.
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The timing is also doing a lot of heavy lifting. With the FIFA World Cup coming this summer, football is having a cultural moment that goes well beyond its usual fanbase. Fashion people are paying attention. Streetwear people are paying attention. The sport has been creeping into pop culture conversations for a few years now, and Nike is making sure to plant a flag at exactly the right moment. The Mad 90 Pack isn’t a World Cup product in the obvious sense, it doesn’t feature national team colors or tournament branding, but it benefits from that energy all the same.
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I do think there’s a genuinely good design story in each pair. The decision not to just slap a boot colorway on a standard Air Max 90 and call it a day, but to actually incorporate material references and structural details from the original footwear, is what keeps this from feeling like a cheap cash-in. It’s well-researched, specific, and considered. You can tell someone actually cared about getting the references right.
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Each sneaker retails for $150. The pack drops globally on May 11 and across North America on May 21, along with a complementary apparel collection that draws from football community culture in ways that extend the story past just the shoes. Whether you’re a football obsessive who still thinks the Total 90 Laser is the greatest boot ever made, or someone who just appreciates a well-executed design concept, the Mad 90 Pack gives you something worth paying attention to. Nike has been doing this kind of cross-cultural translation for decades, and every now and then they get it exactly right. This is one of those times.
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The post Nike Just Turned 4 Iconic Football Boots into Air Max 90s first appeared on Yanko Design.
A Modular Form Where Geometry Quietly Becomes Furniture

Fractal 9 began not as a formal design project but as a response to a simple, everyday need. The goal was to make use of an empty corner in the living room by creating something that felt meaningful in the space, not just a functional object. The intention was to design a piece that could quietly anchor the room while offering both aesthetic presence and practical value. Over time, what started as a personal experiment grew into a deeper exploration that ultimately led to the creation of Fractal 9, a modular sculptural furniture piece rooted in geometry, materiality, and conceptual depth.
At the core of Fractal 9 lies a strong relationship with mathematical principles, particularly the square, the golden ratio, and the number nine. These elements are not decorative references but foundational to the structure of the design. A significant turning point came when the first model was analyzed through the lens of the Digital Root, a mathematical concept that reduces numbers to a single digit. This analysis revealed meaningful numerical patterns within the form. What began as an intuitive structure gradually revealed an underlying mathematical coherence, suggesting that the design was guided by a deeper internal logic rather than chance.
Designer: Miguel Espejo

The design takes inspiration from fractal patterns found in nature, where forms repeat across scales while maintaining harmony and balance. This thinking informs the modular nature of the piece. Fractal 9 can function as a single integrated unit or be separated into two independent units, allowing it to adapt to different spaces and uses. Whether serving as a bookshelf, a display surface, or a sculptural centerpiece, the piece encourages interaction, experimentation, and creative reconfiguration.
The assembly system plays a key role in the user experience. The entire structure can be assembled using an Allen wrench, allowing the piece to be put together or taken apart without adhesives. This mechanical approach preserves the material integrity while offering flexibility and durability. Designing the connection system was one of the most challenging aspects of the project. The structure needed to be strong and stable while also appearing visually subtle so that the form remained uninterrupted.

The choice of materials is central to the identity of the piece. FSC certified wood forms the structural base, reflecting a commitment to sustainable sourcing. Transparent acrylic components, produced using precise laser cutting, introduce lightness and clarity while allowing the structural connections to remain visible. Stainless steel fasteners provide strength and long term durability. A natural beeswax finish is applied by hand, enhancing the grain of the wood and adding a tactile warmth that complements the precision of the fabrication methods.
The development of Fractal 9 was supported by applied research. The aim was to validate the geometric and mathematical integrity of the design using the Digital Root method. Through careful measurement of angles, proportions, and modular relationships, recurring numerical patterns were identified. Stability tests conducted across different configurations confirmed the structural reliability of the system. These findings demonstrated that the design has potential beyond furniture, with possible applications in architecture, spatial systems, and educational contexts related to geometry and applied mathematics.

One of the most demanding aspects of the project was conceptual. Establishing a meaningful connection between the square, the golden ratio, and the number nine required extensive exploration and refinement. This process revealed a framework that extends beyond the object itself and opened the door to ongoing research into modular systems and mathematical structures in design.
Fractal 9 is ultimately an exploration of structure, meaning, and human interaction. By combining mathematical principles, sustainable materials, and modular adaptability, it reflects a belief in balance and interconnectedness. It is a reminder that design, much like nature, exists as part of a larger system where every element has purpose and contributes to the whole.

The post A Modular Form Where Geometry Quietly Becomes Furniture first appeared on Yanko Design.
This minimal AI camera blends into the wild while quietly tracking wildlife
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There’s a quiet shift happening in how we observe wildlife. It’s no longer about being physically present with bulky gear and long lenses, but about placing intelligence into the environment itself. This lets technology do the watching while humans step back. And that’s exactly where this minimal AI camera concept positions itself.
Created as a compact, unobtrusive wildlife tracking device, the design strips away everything that feels traditionally “camera-like.” Instead of buttons, screens, or visible complexity, what you get is a clean, almost monolithic form that feels closer to a sensor than a gadget. The idea here is simple: if you’re trying to observe nature, the device itself shouldn’t interfere with it.
Designer: Nicolas Fred and Thomas Fred
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The camera leans heavily into minimalism, not just as an aesthetic choice, but as a functional one. Its small footprint makes it easier to deploy in remote locations, while the lack of visual noise helps it blend into natural surroundings. This is particularly important in wildlife monitoring, where even the slightest disruption can alter animal behavior. By reducing its presence, the device becomes less of an observer and more of a silent participant.
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What makes it interesting, however, is the integration of AI as a core feature rather than an add-on. Unlike traditional camera traps that simply record footage for later review, AI-enabled systems are increasingly designed to process data in real time—identifying species, filtering out irrelevant motion, and reducing the need for manual sorting. Similar approaches in modern wildlife tech already show how embedded intelligence can dramatically cut down human effort while improving accuracy.
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This concept seems to follow that same philosophy, imagining a camera that doesn’t just capture images, but understands them. That shift from passive recording to active interpretation is where the real value lies. It turns a simple device into a tool for conservation, research, and even anti-poaching efforts. The form factor also suggests modularity and adaptability. Whether mounted on trees, placed near water sources, or integrated into different terrains, the design feels versatile enough to function across environments. Its minimal geometry likely aids in durability too, reducing points of failure while making it easier to weather harsh outdoor conditions.
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At the same time, there’s an understated elegance to how the device is presented. It doesn’t try to look rugged in the traditional sense. No exaggerated textures or aggressive styling. Instead, it embraces a softer, more refined visual language that aligns with its purpose: observe without intrusion.
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This minimal AI camera for the wild feels less like a tool you use and more like something you place and trust. It quietly works in the background, capturing stories you might never have been able to witness yourself!
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The post This minimal AI camera blends into the wild while quietly tracking wildlife first appeared on Yanko Design.
Apple reportedly testing out four different styles for its smart glasses that will rival Meta Ray-Bans
Apple may be late to the smart glasses market, but it could be covering all its bases with up to four potential styles for its upcoming product. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple could launch some or all of the four styles it's currently testing for its smart glasses.
Gurman reported Apple is testing out a large rectangular frame that's comparable to Ray-Ban Wayfarers, a slimmer rectangular design like the glasses that Apple CEO Tim Cook wears, a larger oval or circular frame and a smaller oval or circle option. Apple is also working on a range of colors, including black, ocean blue and light brown, according to Bloomberg.
Internally code-named N50 for now, Apple's upcoming smart glasses will compete directly with the second-gen Ray-Ban Meta model. While similar, Apple might be differentiating its design with "vertically oriented oval lenses with surrounding lights," according to the report. Like Meta's smart glasses, Apple's upcoming product will capture photos and videos, but is meant to better sync with an iPhone, allowing users to take advantage of Apple's ecosystem for editing, sharing, phone calls, notifications, music and even its voice assistant, according to Gurman. The release of Apple's smart glasses could even coincide with the upcoming improved Siri that should arrive with iOS 27.
Gurman reported that Apple could reveal its smart glasses as soon as the end of 2026 or early 2027, followed by an official release sometime in 2027. As for the competition, Meta released its latest model that's better suited for prescription lenses and offers a more customizable fit.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/wearables/apple-reportedly-testing-out-four-different-styles-for-its-smart-glasses-that-will-rival-meta-ray-bans-200550013.html?src=rssBugatti Type Sigma Concept Ditches the Chiron’s Maximalist Design for Pure Sculptural Form

Bugatti built the Type 57SC Atlantic in the 1930s using a technique called riveted construction, where aluminum panels were joined with raised seams that became the car’s defining visual feature. That central spine running from nose to tail was both structural necessity and sculptural flourish, a detail so elegant it’s been referenced in automotive design for nearly a century.
Edouard Suzeau’s Type Sigma concept channels that same philosophy but inverts the execution. Where the Atlantic celebrated its construction method, the Type Sigma hides every seam, every panel gap, every hint of how it might actually be built. The body looks like a single piece of fabric pulled taut over a frame, finished in matte gray that emphasizes form over finish. The surface is so clean, so deliberately unadorned, that it forces you to focus on proportion and gesture rather than details and embellishments.
Designer: Edouard Suzeau

The design carries Bugatti’s genetic code but translates it through a contemporary filter. The horseshoe grille sits vertically integrated into the nose, maintaining brand identity without dominating the composition. The C-shaped rear pillar flows from cabin to tail as a surface rather than a graphic, tracing lineage back to the Atlantic while pushing the language forward. The long hood and fastback roofline recall the grand tourers Ettore Bugatti built for covering continents, cars that prioritized elegance and comfort alongside speed. Suzeau’s concept explores what Bugatti’s design language looks like when stripped of the Chiron’s dual-tone drama and the Tourbillon’s hyper-complex surfacing. The Type Sigma proves that sometimes the most challenging design exercise is knowing what to leave out, and the result is a car that feels both historically grounded and refreshingly modern.

The matte metallic finish is pretty new to Bugatti, which has relied on glossy finishes like blue and black in the past. Where gloss black or bare carbon fiber would create hard reflections that break up the surface into geometric shards, this matte gray lets light pool and stretch like mercury on glass. Reflections become soft gradients that emphasize the underlying form, making the car read as a single sculptural mass rather than an assembly of panels. The choice to avoid dual-tone treatment is equally deliberate. Recent Bugattis have relied on contrasting materials to create visual drama, splitting the body into upper and lower sections or using exposed carbon to telegraph performance intent. The Type Sigma abandons that strategy entirely, trusting that the purity of the form will carry enough visual weight on its own.

The proportions position this firmly in grand tourer territory rather than mid-engine hypercar land. The hood stretches forward in the classic front-engine GT tradition, creating that long, muscular stance that defined Bugatti’s pre-war icons. The cabin sits far back on the wheelbase, with a greenhouse that tapers gently rearward into the fastback deck. The roofline has an almost shooting-brake quality to it, extending further back than a traditional coupe but stopping short of full estate proportions. This creates a unique silhouette that feels both familiar and fresh within Bugatti’s portfolio.

The wheels appear to be modern interpretations of classic Bugatti spoke patterns, possibly referencing the Type 35’s iconic wheels but rendered with contemporary multi-spoke turbine detailing. The fender arches are muscular but smooth, defined by surface curvature rather than hard character lines. Side vents behind the front wheels are so subtly integrated they’re almost invisible in this matte finish, revealed only by shadow and surface transition rather than chrome trim or aggressive surfacing. The horizontal DRL bars sit flush with the front fascia, clean and minimal, avoiding the overwrought lighting signatures that plague most modern concept cars.

A full-width lighting signature spans the tail, likely incorporating Bugatti script or the EB logo as part of the illuminated graphic. Below, the diffuser is aggressive but integrated, its fins and channels carved into the lower body rather than appearing as tacked-on aerodynamic furniture. The way the C-shaped pillar terminates at the rear deck is particularly elegant, flowing seamlessly into the tail rather than stopping abruptly or requiring a visual full stop. Horizontal slats in the rear glass echo the Chiron’s central spine but abstracted into functional venting, maintaining visual continuity with the current lineup while pushing the aesthetic somewhere quieter.

Production viability was clearly never the point here. Suzeau’s renders show a car with shut lines that would be impossible to engineer, glass areas that would never pass certification, and aerodynamic surfaces that exist purely to please the eye rather than cheat the wind. The Type Sigma lives in the same realm as the Atlantic did when it debuted in 1936, a piece of rolling sculpture built to prove that a car could be art. Only four Atlantics were ever made, and they remain among the most valuable automobiles ever auctioned. The Type Sigma will never be built at all, but it accomplishes something harder than production feasibility. It makes you reconsider what a modern Bugatti could look like if the brand decided to prioritize elegance over aggression, sculpture over decoration, whisper over shout.

The post Bugatti Type Sigma Concept Ditches the Chiron’s Maximalist Design for Pure Sculptural Form first appeared on Yanko Design.
The US government wants Reddit to snitch on one of its users through a grand jury
Immigration and Customs Enforcement has a certain Redditor in its crosshairs and it's now strong-arming the social media platform to reveal who they are with a grand jury subpoena, according to a report from The Intercept. The nonprofit news outlet was able to obtain the subpoena that ordered Reddit to provide info on one of its users who's been accused of criticizing ICE by April 14.
According to the report, ICE has been trying to identify this Redditor for a month without success. More specifically, Reddit is being asked to give up the user's name, address, phone number and other personal data. The Intercept reported that the subpoena was issued by federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C. after a failed attempt from ICE to do the same through a federal court in Northern California, which has jurisdiction in San Francisco where Reddit is headquartered.
Reddit attorneys said their client's posts and anonymity are protected under the First Amendment and described ICE's use of a grand jury as "a disturbing escalation," according to the report. Reddit didn't state if it would challenge the government's order or not, according to The Intercept, but it did provide a statement saying, "privacy is central to how Reddit operates and we take our commitment to protecting that seriously." Reddit also said in the statement that it does "not voluntarily share information with any government, especially not on users exercising their rights to criticize the government or plan a protest.”
While this grand jury subpoena could set an alarming precedent, it's not the first time a government agency has requested social media platforms reveal accounts that have spoke negatively about ICE. According to a New York Times report, the Department of Homeland Security has filed hundreds of subpoenas to Google, Discord, Meta and even Reddit again, for identifying details about its users.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/the-us-government-wants-reddit-to-snitch-on-one-of-its-users-through-a-grand-jury-190532844.html?src=rssYou Can Now Own the Actual Motherboard from the First iPhone, Sealed Inside The 17 Pro

Caviar’s Apple 50th anniversary collection has been moving faster than the company’s own PR team can keep up with. We covered the Steve Jobs turtleneck edition earlier this month, nine units of a titanium iPhone 17 Pro carrying an authenticated Issey Miyake fabric fragment inside the Apple logo, and by the time most readers had processed whether it was brilliant or absurd, Caviar had already sold out. I’ll admit I did not see that coming. The lesson appears to be that the intersection of Apple mythology and physical relics is a more powerful commercial force than any reasonable person would predict.
So Caviar has returned with an even more loaded artifact for the second release in this anniversary series. The iPhone 2007 embeds a verified fragment of the original iPhone 2G motherboard into the rear panel of an iPhone 17 Pro, sealed beneath an Apple-logo-shaped capsule, ringed by engravings tracing the circuitry of the phone that launched in January 2007. Production is limited to 11 units. Pricing starts at $10,770 for the 256GB Pro and climbs to $12,700 for the 2TB Pro Max, with each phone shipping alongside a 999 fine gold commemorative coin and a signature Caviar key.
Designer: Caviar

The chassis is titanium with a black PVD coating, and the color story it tells is deliberate. Black and silver, offset logo placement, minimalist engraving: Caviar is visually quoting the 2007 original without cosplaying as a replica, which is the smarter move. The motherboard fragment anchors the rear panel at dead center, with circuit-trace engravings fanning outward from it like a schematic that never quite finished rendering. Jobs’ signature runs along the frame. The whole composition functions as a timeline compressed into a single object, 2007 hardware embedded inside 2025 hardware, separated by a few millimeters of machined titanium.
A PCB fragment from a specific hardware generation is an unusually specific kind of artifact. Original iPhone 2G boards have identifiable components, documented manufacturing runs, a physical particularity that places them firmly in a category alongside signed guitars and moon rocks rather than alongside phone cases. Caviar ships each unit with an authentication certificate, and unlike fabric or paper memorabilia, a motherboard fragment from a consumer electronics device has enough physical specificity to make that certificate mean something. At eleven grand, that distinction matters to the kind of buyer who actually reads the certificate rather than frames it.

The original iPhone is one of a very small number of consumer products whose design was so resolved on arrival that the industry spent the following decade catching up to it. Eleven units of the iPhone 2007 will exist in the world, each carrying a physical fragment of that hardware inside Apple’s current best. For the collector who thinks about objects that way, the website link is at the bottom of this page.

The post You Can Now Own the Actual Motherboard from the First iPhone, Sealed Inside The 17 Pro first appeared on Yanko Design.









