Adventure Pro Mini 2.0 delivers off-grid freedom in a woodless, lightweight off-road trailer

There is something about high-durability, compact, off-road camping trailers. They are not the most comfortable. But they do the job just right that even some full-size camping trailers fall short. Adventure Pro Mini 2.0 is one such compact trailer that is designed to go where the tow vehicle can, and still offer food and comparatively comfortable lodging, without worrying about the weather and the elements.

Owing to its petite size, the camping trailer is easier to drag through tight spaces in the deep woods or where the road stops, looking black and has a worn-out bumpy face to maneuver. The brainchild of Indiana-based Kingdom Camping, the off-road-ready Aventure Pro Mini 2.0 comes with an articulating hitch coupling. It can conveniently adjust to the shakes and jerks and allow the trailer to follow its towing ride pretty smoothly.

Designer: Kingdom Camping

Adventure Pro Mini 2.0 has an interesting façade. The fiberglass shell keeps the compact rig lightweight but allows it to be stuffed with a host of amenities and facilities you need on the road. The topographical motif on the body is the first interaction you have with this 3,500-pound GVWR trailer that sits on a steel chassis with rock sliders. It rides on 33-inch all-terrain tires featuring independent suspension for a smoother experience on unpaved paths.

The trailer measures 180 inches long and 86 inches wide and is rated with a 2,300-pound fully loaded weight. Inside, you get a triple-fold mattress that provides a queen-size bed on the open floor. Presumably, you can use the vacant space (when the mattress is folded) to store and carry your adventure gear. A bunk, closed with safety netting on one side, is an additional sleeping space for a child or a pet you have along.

Kingdom Camping confirms that wood is not used anywhere in the trailer. In fact, the cabinetry inside is all made from powder-coated aluminum for longevity. Just above the cabinet comprising connectivity ports, power outlets, wireless charging port, and a Redarc display, is the dual-pane skylight. Most interesting still is the full rear galley. Accessible via lifting the hatch, the galley comprises a stainless steel sink with hot and cold water, a dual-zone Iceco BL75 fridge/freezer, and a lot of cabinets, again made from aluminum. The cooktop with a quick-connect propane pipe slides out of the side of the trailer. You also get an option for an outdoor shower.

The rooftop is provided with a roof rack for awnings and a 400-watt solar panel. Kingdom Camping furnishes the new trailer with a 300-Ah lithium battery, a 2,000-watt inverter, and a DC-to-DC charging. For all-season computing, the Adventure Pro Mini 2.0 features a 12-volt Dometic RTX air conditioner. And for the choosy ones, the builder is allowing you to customize your rig with preferred colors and features like air suspension, an additional 300Ah battery, and MOLLE boards.

The post Adventure Pro Mini 2.0 delivers off-grid freedom in a woodless, lightweight off-road trailer first appeared on Yanko Design.

Jacksonville Built a Music Garden That Grows With Its City

Most public art arrives fully formed. It gets unveiled, photographed, written about, and then gradually becomes part of the background noise of a city. You stop seeing it the way you stop noticing the paint color in your living room. A Cappella, a new permanent installation along Jacksonville’s riverfront, was designed to resist exactly that fate.

Created by Brooklyn-based studio The Urban Conga and situated within the Jacksonville Riverfront Music Garden along the St. Johns River, A Cappella does something most permanent installations don’t dare to do: it was built to remain unfinished. Not as an artistic statement about incompleteness, but as a genuine structural decision baked into every layer of the project. The installation draws from a collection of 84 songs by more than 60 local artists, spanning an entire century of Jacksonville music from the 1920s all the way to the 2020s. Those songs aren’t decoration. They’re the architecture.

Designer: The Urban Conga

The physical space is carved into the landscape in the shape of a musical note, which already tells you this project takes its metaphors seriously. But what makes it compelling beyond the clever concept is how it’s organized. The installation is divided into four sections that mirror the movements of a symphony: motivation, home, love, and freedom. Each carries its own emotional register, its own atmosphere and pacing. Walking through the space isn’t like looking at a gallery wall. It moves like a piece of music does, with energy and momentum in the early sections giving way to something more contemplative and expansive toward the end. You’re not just reading about the city. You’re moving through its emotional history.

The studio is led by Ryan Swanson and Maeghann Coleman, AIA, NOMA, and The Urban Conga’s whole philosophy centers on what they call “open-ended play” and the idea of building what they describe as playable cities. This isn’t decoration for decoration’s sake. Their work consistently asks what happens when a designed space actually invites people to engage, interact, and contribute rather than simply observe. A Cappella is perhaps the clearest expression of that philosophy yet.

The sourcing of the content is the part that deserves more attention than it usually gets. Jacksonville residents themselves identified the songs and lyrics that shaped this installation through an extensive public engagement process, before a single panel was placed. That distinction is easy to gloss over, but it shouldn’t be. A lot of public art about a community is really just art placed near a community. The difference between being consulted and being included is everything, and this project sits firmly on the included side.

The visual design reflects that same openness. Dichroic and reflective panels shift with changing light, meaning the installation looks genuinely different depending on when you arrive. That’s a detail worth noting, because it means repeat visits reward you with something new. The space doesn’t freeze time; it moves with it.

And then there’s the detail that separates A Cappella from most permanent public installations: it’s designed to accommodate new artists over time. As Jacksonville’s music scene evolves, so does the work. New songs can be added. The story doesn’t end with the ribbon cutting. That’s either a very bold design choice or an obvious one, depending on how you look at it. Either way, it’s rare, and it’s right.

We talk a lot about public space and who it belongs to. Too often the answer is technically “everyone” but practically “no one in particular.” A Cappella makes a real argument that a city’s sonic history is worth preserving with the same seriousness as its built one. Jacksonville has contributed more to American music than it usually gets credit for, and having that legacy embedded in the riverfront landscape, available to anyone walking past on any given afternoon, feels like a meaningful act of civic pride rather than a token gesture. Public art can be many things. At its best, it makes you feel like you belong somewhere. A Cappella seems to be aiming for exactly that.

The post Jacksonville Built a Music Garden That Grows With Its City first appeared on Yanko Design.

Adidas Finally Made the $150 Shoe Gym Rats and Runners Need

Most gym bags tell a story. For hybrid athletes, that story usually includes at least two pairs of shoes: one for running, one for lifting, and a creeping sense that neither is ever quite right for the moment you need it most. It’s the kind of inefficiency that gets quietly accepted because, until recently, no one had built a convincing alternative. Adidas has apparently decided to change that.

The Adizero Dropset Pro, launched on June 17, is the brand’s most aggressive answer yet to the hybrid training problem. It pulls technology from two of Adidas’s strongest lineages, the speed-obsessed Adizero racing series and the stability-focused Dropset training franchise, and merges them into a single shoe priced at $150. On paper, that sounds like the kind of thing every sneaker company promises. In practice, the details suggest Adidas might actually mean it this time.

Designer: adidas

Start with the midsole. Lightstrike Pro foam, the same cushioning technology found in Adidas’s elite racing shoes, sits at the core of the Adizero Dropset Pro. It’s lightweight and responsive, built for forward momentum, which is exactly what you need when you’ve just finished a set of deadlifts and you’re heading into a 1K run. Energy Rods run through the midsole for propulsion, pushing you off the ground with the kind of efficiency that shaves seconds off your transitions without requiring you to think about it.

The outsole is where the gym training credibility lives. Continental rubber, paired with Adidas’s Lighttraxion system, handles grip on both wet track surfaces and gym floors with equal reliability. A heel that holds steady during squats and wall balls while a midfoot and forefoot that responds during speed work is not a simple engineering ask, and the fact that Adidas addressed both in the same build is the real story here. A 2.6mm Adizero sockliner keeps the platform low and grounded, which matters more than it sounds when you’re loading a barbell.

What makes this launch feel genuinely considered, rather than just well-packaged, is the research behind it. Adidas surveyed hybrid athletes globally and found that 49% say their current training footwear limits their performance during workouts, and 47% say their shoes don’t adequately support both running and strength training. Those are not small numbers. They point to a real gap in the market, and the Adizero Dropset Pro was developed specifically to close it, with input from hybrid athletes Graham Halliday and Fabian Eisenlauer who tested the shoe through actual training conditions, not just lab settings.

The shoe debuted in Stockholm at the HYROX World Championships, which is exactly the right room to make that kind of statement. HYROX, for the uninitiated, is a global competitive fitness race that combines eight one-kilometer runs with eight functional fitness stations, a format that makes the shoe-switching problem very, very obvious. Wearing a shoe built only for running means compromising on the sled pushes and ski ergs. Wearing a lifting shoe means grinding through the runs. The Adizero Dropset Pro enters that conversation with a clear argument.

At 8.7 oz for a men’s 10.5, it’s genuinely light by training shoe standards, a deliberate signal that Adidas isn’t treating the speed component as secondary to the stability work. The engineered mesh upper transitions into a woven material that keeps the profile sleek without sacrificing structure. The fit reportedly lands somewhere between the narrower Dropset Elite and the roomier Dropset 4, which means most foot shapes should find a comfortable home here without needing to size up.

At $150, the value case is straightforward. A quality running shoe and a quality training shoe together can easily double that number, so the math is at least honest. Whether the Adizero Dropset Pro genuinely delivers on both fronts under real training conditions will be the longer story, but the design intent is clear and the execution looks considered. Adidas isn’t asking you to compromise anymore. It’s just building the shoe that earns the right to make that offer.

The post Adidas Finally Made the $150 Shoe Gym Rats and Runners Need first appeared on Yanko Design.

Why the RayNeo Air 4 Pro is the Perfect DJI Neo 2 Upgrade

Why the RayNeo Air 4 Pro is the Perfect DJI Neo 2 Upgrade First person view of the HDR10 floating display interface

The RayNeo Air 4 Pro AR glasses have emerged as a standout accessory for drone pilots, offering a blend of advanced features and practical design. In a recent overview by Tech Court, these glasses are highlighted as a fantastic upgrade for the DJI Neo 2, thanks to their ability to project a live drone feed […]

The post Why the RayNeo Air 4 Pro is the Perfect DJI Neo 2 Upgrade appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Apple’s Camera-Equipped AirPods Pro 4 Leaks Reveal a Wild New Strategy

Apple’s Camera-Equipped AirPods Pro 4 Leaks Reveal a Wild New Strategy AirPods Pro 4

Apple is reportedly working on a new version of its AirPods Pro, integrating built-in cameras to enhance Siri’s artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities. These cameras are not intended for traditional photography or video recording but are designed to provide contextual awareness, allowing hands-free, AI-driven assistance. This innovation is expected to debut alongside other major Apple products, […]

The post Apple’s Camera-Equipped AirPods Pro 4 Leaks Reveal a Wild New Strategy appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized