LEGO Icons Hubble Space Telescope: A Build for Space Lovers

Those of a certain generation grew up in an era where space travel and discoveries were fascinating topics. A lot of young boys and girls dreamed of becoming astronauts and going into space to make amazing discoveries. While there were probably some who eventually did (or at least worked on it in some capacity), most of us stayed on Earth and just consumed various news and pop culture content that made us live vicariously through them. The fascination with space may have waned for some, but there are still those who love anything space-related, especially after the recent success of the Artemis mission.

If you’re one of those who still dream of Moon landings or deep-space explorations, this newest build from LEGO will be the next thing to add to your collection. The LEGO Icons Hubble Space Telescope is an upcoming build meant for grown-ups (18+). It has 1,252 pieces, so it might be a bit intimidating for younger space lovers, but adults will definitely have fun putting together this version of the legendary telescope and displaying it proudly on their shelves alongside other space-related memorabilia.

Designer: LEGO

Before diving into the details of the set, it’s worth taking a moment to appreciate what makes this subject matter so special. The real Hubble Space Telescope, launched in 1990, completely changed the way humanity sees the universe. It helped scientists determine that the universe is approximately 13.8 billion years old, discovered two of Pluto’s moons, and captured some of the most breathtaking images of deep space ever seen. These photos have since become some of the most iconic in human history. It’s one of the greatest scientific instruments ever built, and now you can have your very own version of it sitting right on your desk.

Once you finish putting together this build, you’ll have a finished model that stands 12.5 inches tall, making it a bold and impressive display piece that captures the real telescope’s iconic silhouette with remarkable detail. You’ll be able to reposition the solar arrays and antennas for a dynamic display to complement whatever other cool pieces you might have on your shelf or display table. It also comes with an opening aperture door that mimics the real Hubble Telescope’s mechanism, adding a satisfying interactive element to the finished build. The level of care put into the design is evident from every angle, and this is clearly a set that was built with true fans in mind.

The instrument bay is also pretty detailed, giving you a peek into the inner workings, at least the LEGO version of it. You will also get a NASA astronaut minifigure, included primarily for scale representation, which adds a nice layer of storytelling and authenticity to the display. It also comes with a display stand and an informative plaque, so your finished showpiece is more than just decorative. It’s a genuine conversation starter.

The LEGO Icons Hubble Space Telescope (Set #11382) is set to release on August 1, 2026, and will retail for $139.99 USD (£119.99 GBP / €129.99 EUR / $229.99 AUD). For a 1,252-piece, display-quality set, it sits at a very reasonable price point, especially considering how striking the finished model looks. Whether you’re treating yourself or looking for the perfect gift for the space lover in your life, this is one build that checks all the right boxes.

Space may feel like a distant dream for most of us, but LEGO has always had a wonderful way of bringing those dreams a little closer to home. The Hubble Space Telescope set is more than just a building project. It’s a tribute to one of humanity’s greatest scientific achievements, packaged in a way that’s accessible, engaging, and genuinely beautiful to display. Whether you’re a seasoned LEGO collector, a science enthusiast, or just someone who has always gazed up at the night sky with a sense of wonder, this is one build that truly has it all. Mark your calendars for August 1, 2026, and make sure it’s at the top of your wishlist.

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Satechi Just Built the MacBook Neo Accessories Apple Forgot to Make

Apple has always used color as a defining feature of its consumer laptops, and the MacBook Neo leans into that more than most. It’s the brand’s most affordable MacBook yet, arriving in four expressive colorways that clearly aren’t an afterthought. The accessories market hasn’t kept pace with that thinking, though. Most hubs and mice sold alongside colorful laptops are still generic gray or silver, made for nothing in particular.

Satechi’s MacBook Neo Collection takes direct aim at that gap. The three-piece lineup, available in Citrus, Blush, Indigo, and Silver, is built around the simple idea that accessories for a distinctly colored laptop should actually match it in kind. That means two USB-C hubs that address the Neo’s limited port selection, and a wireless mouse that rounds out the desk setup with the same visual intention the laptop brought.

Designer: Satechi

Of the two hubs, the USB-C Snap Hub ($44.99) is the one built most specifically around the Neo. It connects to both of the laptop’s USB-C ports simultaneously and sits flush against the chassis without any cables running off to the side. Six ports all operate at once without any configuration needed, covering 4K/60Hz HDMI output, USB-A and USB-C data, SD and microSD card slots, and 45W pass-through charging.

What makes the Snap Hub more considered than a typical color-matched hub is its two-tone construction. The top surface is anodized aluminum matched to the Neo’s body color, while the base is soft-touch ABS aligned to the keyboard finish, giving it a genuinely integrated look. Most accessories stop at a matching surface. This one accounts for how it looks when it’s actually attached to the laptop, not just placed nearby.

The OntheGo 5-in-1 Multiport Adapter ($44.99) takes a more portable approach to the same connectivity problem. It connects through a single USB-C port via a nylon-braided cable, and its magnetic soft-touch base can snap onto a MagSafe iPhone or mount flush to the Neo’s lid with an included adhesive ring. The ports cover 4K/60Hz HDMI output, 60W USB-C pass-through charging, dual 5 Gbps data ports, and an SD card reader.

The Slim EX Wireless Mouse ($29.99) completes the collection and the color story it sets up. Previously only available in standard finishes, it now comes in the same Neo colorways for the first time, on an aluminum body that matches the hubs it sits beside. It supports two simultaneous Bluetooth channels and a 2.4 GHz wireless connection, quiet click switches, a precision-machined scroll wheel, and a USB-C rechargeable battery.

The MacBook Neo was designed for people who care about color as much as capability, and the accessories around it should reflect that sensibility. At $29.99 for the mouse and $44.99 for either hub, the collection isn’t asking much. It gives back a desk setup that actually feels considered from one end to the other, which is a harder outcome to achieve in the laptop accessory space than it sounds.

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Sicily’s New Concrete Church Is Quietly Rewriting Sacred Design

When you think of a church in Sicily, your mind probably goes somewhere ancient. Mosaic floors, Byzantine domes, the kind of gold that took centuries to accumulate. So when I came across the new Santa Barbara Parish Complex in Licata, a small coastal city in the island’s southern province of Agrigento, it stopped me completely.

The complex was designed by architects Francesco Lipari, Lillo Giglia, and Giuseppe Conti, the team behind OFL Architecture, and it is one of the most compelling pieces of sacred architecture I’ve seen in years. It won a two-stage invited competition promoted by the Archdiocese of Agrigento and the Santa Barbara Parish, with funding from the Italian Episcopal Conference through the ‘8xmille’ program, and what came out of it is genuinely unlike anything you’d expect from a church commission.

Designers: Francesco Lipari, Lillo Giglia, and Giuseppe Conti

The concept is described as a “campus of faith,” and that framing tells you everything. Rather than positioning the church as a monument to be looked at from the outside, the architects designed it as a permeable, walkable space where the building and its surroundings flow into each other. The churchyard functions as an open civic square, directly connecting the complex to the city around it. On the western edge of Licata, a city that doesn’t get nearly enough architectural attention, this project becomes a new kind of civic landmark, the kind that earns its place in a neighborhood rather than simply occupying it.

Visually, the building is striking in a way that feels earned. Curved white surfaces define the liturgical hall, punctuated by small square openings and anchored by a golden portal that works as both entrance and visual statement. The flowing roof is where the design gets genuinely poetic, its sinuous edge framing the sky in a way that feels both deliberate and effortless. Inside, a suspended timber ceiling mirrors the curvature of the roof above it, creating a quiet continuity between form and material that’s hard to achieve and even harder to fake. Concrete here is not the heavy, utilitarian material we’re used to seeing in brutalist structures. It’s fluid, almost organic, moving in ways that concrete isn’t really supposed to move.

The cylindrical bell tower stands separately as a vertical landmark, a classical reference rendered through an entirely contemporary lens. It’s the kind of design decision that could easily feel gratuitous but doesn’t, because the rest of the complex earns it. The whole project has a consistency of thinking that’s rare, where no single element feels like it wandered in from a different brief.

Beyond its striking form, this project says something meaningful about the role of sacred architecture today. Churches are not the cultural anchors they once were in many parts of the world, and commissions like this come with real pressure to be relevant without being gimmicky. Lipari, Giglia, and Conti seem to have understood that the best way to honor that tension is to make a building that genuinely belongs to its community, not just spiritually but physically and socially. A church that also functions as a civic square, a campus that connects education, worship, and daily life, is an architectural idea that feels more urgent now than it probably did when the project began in 2016.

It took years to get here. The project period ran from 2016 to 2022 and the complex has since been making its way to completion, a timeline that speaks to the scale and structural complexity involved. The free-form reinforced concrete geometry required state-of-the-art structural engineering, and the result is a building whose ambition is matched by its technical rigor.

Sacred architecture has always had to carry more weight than almost any other building type. It has to mean something beyond its walls. The Santa Barbara Parish Complex makes a compelling case that meaning doesn’t have to come from tradition alone. Sometimes it arrives through fluid concrete, warm timber, and an open square that anyone can walk through.

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Apple Watch Just Got Smarter: Siri AI Arrives in watchOS 27 Public Beta

Apple Watch Just Got Smarter: Siri AI Arrives in watchOS 27 Public Beta watchOS 27 Public Beta

Apple has unveiled the public beta of watchOS 27, bringing a host of new features, design enhancements, and compatibility changes to the Apple Watch ecosystem. This update introduces exciting improvements while also phasing out support for older devices and retiring certain functionalities. Below is an in-depth exploration of what this update offers and how it […]

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Tiny Vinyl’s $50 record player makes collecting mini vinyl more accessible

Tiny Vinyl is the industry leader when it comes to, well, you guessed it right, tiny vinyl records. These records can be played on most 33⅓rpm turntables and are pure joy simply for their cute quotient. The company introduced its 4-inch records (one-third the size of a standard vinyl record) last year, which can be played on a standard manual turntable. These records store two songs – one on each side – and the audio community has taken these pocket records pretty seriously. Most of these vinyls are officially licensed by big artists who choose their best two songs to go on the vinyl. The miniature records are highly collectible but can only play on a seemingly bigger platter, so where is the fun in that?

After selling their millionth Tiny Vinyl in just a year, the fans and Target wanted the brand to come up with a versatile and small record player. For this reason, the company has now introduced a dedicated TINY Vinyl Player to play music from those tiny records. No bigger than a shoebox, the turntable is built from the ground up, given its small size. Everything, right from the tone arm and platter to the control panel, was designed from scratch. The only two components from standard component manufacturers are the cartridge and needle.

Designer: Tiny Vinyl

What we see here is a turntable that’s ultra-portable, specifically designed to play 4-inch vinyls, and definitely a conversation starter. According to co-founders Jesse Mann and Neil Kohler, the shrunk-down turntable opens up the possibility of owning a record player for the music-loving community who otherwise cannot afford to buy the traditional decks. According to  Jesse Mann, “These new products give music fans and collectors everything they need to build out their own little Tiny Vinyl universe, a setup as fun and personal as the music they love.”

The only downside, though, is that they can only play the tiny vinyl records, and if we’re all in for the complete album collections, they are a bit of a handful. Another major consideration is the slight compromise in audio quality coming from the small speakers. That said, the duo from Nashville has access to the pro music industry peers, and they’ve used this to build the Tiny Vinyl Turntable for maximum user satisfaction. Once they got past the initial drawings, the next big challenge was to design the built-in speakers and Bluetooth sync. But the biggest of them all was to calibrate the revolutions per minute to 33⅓rpm to play the music at perfect speed.

The portable turntable can stream music to Bluetooth speakers or headphones if the built-in speakers don’t tingle your senses. You could go for the wired option as well for better audio dynamics. Tiny Vinyl has gone a step further by integrating a storage slot beside the platter to hold up to five records of choice. For those planning to expand the collection of Mini Vinyls, there’s also the option of getting the vinyl storage cabinet called Crate, which sits right underneath the turntable. There’s a third accessory in the mix as well, dubbed Frame, which can be used to display four Tiny Vinyl albums on the wall. The Tiny Vinyl Turntable available at Target costs $50, while the Crate and Frame are priced at $20 and $15, respectively. The UK launch is slated for Autumn, so better watch out!

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