OpenAI’s head of robotics resigns following deal with the Department of Defense

OpenAI is going to need to find a new head of robotics. Caitlin Kalinowski, OpenAI's now-former head of robotics, posted on X that she was resigning from her role, while criticizing the company's haste in partnering with the Department of Defense without investigating proper guardrails.

Kalinowski, who previously worked at Meta before leaving to join OpenAI in late 2024, wrote on X that "surveillance of Americans without judicial oversight and lethal autonomy without human authorization are lines that deserved more deliberation than they got." Responding to another post, the former OpenAI exec explained that "the announcement was rushed without the guardrails defined," adding that it was a "governance concern first and foremost."

OpenAI confirmed Kalinowski's resignation and said in a statement to Engadget that the company understands people have "strong views" about these issues and will continue to engage in discussions with relevant parties. The company also explained in the statement that it doesn't support the issues that Kalinowski brought up.

"We believe our agreement with the Pentagon creates a workable path for responsible national security uses of AI while making clear our red lines: no domestic surveillance and no autonomous weapons," the OpenAI statement read.

Kalinowski's resignation may be the most high-profile fallout from OpenAI's decision to sign a deal with the Department of Defense. The decision came just after Anthropic refused to comply with lifting certain AI guardrails around mass surveillance and developing fully autonomous weapons. However, even OpenAI's CEO, Sam Altman, said that he would amend the deal with the Department of Defense to prohibit spying on Americans.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/openais-head-of-robotics-resigns-following-deal-with-the-department-of-defense-195918777.html?src=rss

Indonesia announces a social media ban for anyone under 16

Following in the footsteps of Australia, Indonesia will be the latest country to limit social media usage for children under 16. Meutya Hafid, Indonesia's communication and digital affairs minister, announced that a new government regulation will require "high-risk" platforms to delete any accounts from Indonesia that are under 16, starting on March 28.

Hafid said in the announcement that the implementation would be done in stages, starting with major platforms like YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, X, Roblox and Bigo Live, a live-streaming platform based in Singapore. The minister added that all platforms will have to fulfill compliance obligations from the Indonesian government, but didn't specify what they were. In response to the ban, a Meta spokesperson told The New York Times that the company hasn't received an official regulation from the country yet and was awaiting details.

While Australia was the first country to implement such a sweeping ban on social media, many other countries are currently in the process of doing the same. Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced last month that the country is also ready to ban social media for users under 16, while Malaysia's cabinet approved a similar ban that will reportedly go into effect sometime this year.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/indonesia-announces-a-social-media-ban-for-anyone-under-16-174634956.html?src=rss

5 Wildest Design Trends at MWC 2026: Nodding Phones and Tiny Robots

Every year, MWC arrives with the promise of seeing the future of mobile technology, or at least a very expensive approximation of it. The 2026 edition in Barcelona was the event’s 20th anniversary in the city, and while nearly 105,000 people showed up, there was a noticeable shift in what filled the booths. Fewer headline-grabbing product launches, more working concepts and proofs of concept across every category imaginable.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing. When manufacturers stop competing on a single spec and start showing what they’re thinking about next, the underlying patterns get easier to read. Five trends cut across product categories at MWC 2026, crossing from smartphones to laptops to robotic companions. None of them belongs to one company, and none of them is going away anytime soon.

Robots got a size reduction

For the past couple of years, humanoid robots have been stealing the show at tech events. They walk, they wave, they occasionally fall over, and everyone takes a video. The problem is that a bipedal robot that can fetch a package from across the room is not something most people actually need sitting in their office. MWC 2026 suggested the industry might be starting to figure that out.

The robots worth talking about this year were small, desk-bound, and refreshingly honest about what they could do. Lenovo’s AI Workmate Concept is a desk-mounted unit that handles document scanning, note organization, and presentation help through voice, gesture, and spatial interaction, processing everything on-device. It can even project content onto your desk or a nearby wall, which sounds gimmicky until you think about how useful a hands-free reference surface actually is during a meeting.

Samsung Display’s OLED AI Mini PetBot takes the idea in a more playful direction. It is a pocket-sized robot with a 1.34-inch circular OLED screen for a face, reacting to voice and touch with animated expressions. It comes from Samsung’s display division rather than its product team, so this is less a product announcement and more a demonstration of where the panel technology can go.

AI is learning to show its feelings

Most people’s experience of AI right now involves typing into a box and getting text back, or asking a question into empty air and hearing a voice that sounds like it was recorded in a server room. It works, but it does not feel particularly warm. A cluster of products at MWC 2026 was specifically trying to fix that, not by making AI smarter, but by making it more expressive.

Lenovo’s AI Work Companion Concept looks like a desk clock, which is either a clever disguise or a statement about how unobtrusive AI should be. Its AI planning system, called Thought Bubble, syncs tasks and schedules from across your devices to build a daily plan, monitors screen time, nudges you to take breaks, and delivers an end-of-week summary of what you actually got done. The behavioral framing is deliberately light. The goal is to build a rhythm rather than manage a list, and the device is designed to feel like a presence in your workspace rather than another notification surface.

TCL’s Tbot takes a similar approach for a younger audience. It pairs with the company’s MOVETIME kids smartwatch, so when a child gets home and drops the watch onto Tbot’s magnetic dock, the robot comes to life as a study companion and bedtime storyteller. The physical handoff is a considered design decision, a tangible trigger rather than an app to open.

Honor’s Robot Phone extends the idea into the phone itself. A motorized titanium alloy gimbal arm holds a 200-megapixel camera that nods when it agrees, shakes when it doesn’t, and tracks you across the room. Honor plans to sell it in the second half of 2026, which means it will be the first of this particular batch of emotionally expressive AI devices to actually land in someone’s hands.

Modular design, this time as a practical argument

Modular phones have been promised before: Project Ara, LG G5, and Fairphone at various stages of their evolution. The pitch is always appealing: buy a base device, then upgrade the camera, swap the battery, add what you need. The reality has usually involved awkward connectors, software that doesn’t quite work, and products that disappear within two years. MWC 2026 had a notable cluster of modular devices, and what made them interesting is that each was solving a different version of the problem.

Lenovo’s ThinkBook Modular AI PC Concept approaches it from the laptop side. The 14-inch base connects to a secondary screen via pogo pins, and that screen can sit alongside the base as a travel monitor, mount on the lid for face-to-face sharing, or replace the keyboard to create a dual-display setup. Interchangeable I/O ports, covering USB Type-A, USB Type-C, and HDMI, mean the connection layout changes with the workflow. It’s a concept aimed at professionals who spend their day switching between contexts, and the argument is about longevity and flexibility rather than upgradeability for its own sake.

TECNO’s Modular Magnetic Interconnection Technology works from the phone outward. The base device is 4.9mm thick, which is thinner than anything Apple or Samsung currently sells, and that extreme thinness turns out to be the point. Modules, including telephoto lenses, battery packs, microphones, wallets, and speakers, attach magnetically to the rear without making the phone ungainly.

Ulefone’s RugOne Xsnap 7 Pro is less elegant but arguably more practical: a rugged phone whose rear camera detaches and operates independently as a wearable action camera. Three very different products, three different price tiers, and the same underlying idea. A device you can reconfigure is a device you keep longer.

The keyboard is making a serious case for itself

BlackBerry’s demise was supposed to be the end of physical keyboards on phones. Touch screens were better, the argument went, because they could be anything. And they were right, mostly. But they were also cold, imprecise for fast typing, and they ate half your screen every time you needed to type more than a sentence. A small but persistent group of users never fully made peace with that trade-off, and in 2026, they suddenly had options.

The Unihertz Titan 2 Elite was at MWC with a 4.3-inch AMOLED display at 120Hz above a physical QWERTY keyboard with touch-sensitive keys that also function as a trackpad. The aluminum body and slimmed-down proportions mark a clear departure from the chunky, ruggedized aesthetic of earlier Titan phones. This one is trying to look like something you would actually carry every day.

The Clicks Communicator comes from the opposite direction: Clicks already makes keyboard cases for iPhones, and the Communicator is a logical next step, a standalone Android phone built around the companion philosophy for people who want physical keys without abandoning modern smartphone basics.

The iFROG RS1 is the strangest and most interesting of the three. It is a square phone with a 3.4-inch display that sits on top of a rotating lower section. Twist it one way, and you get a full QWERTY keyboard with tactile keycaps. Twist it the other way, and you get a gamepad with a D-pad and face buttons, which unavoidably recalls the Game Boy and the Motorola Flipout in equal measure. What all three of these share is a belief that tactile input has genuine ergonomic value that glass surfaces haven’t replaced, just obscured. Whether that belief translates into mainstream sales is a different question.

Design became the headline spec

Phones have always been designed objects. But for most of the last decade, the design conversation at launch events came after the camera specs, after the processor benchmark, after the battery capacity. At MWC 2026, a handful of manufacturers flipped that order. The design was the lead, and everything else followed.

Honor’s Magic V6 is the most straightforward example. At 8.75mm closed, it is one of the thinnest foldables on the market, and Honor announced that measurement with the same emphasis as a performance figure might receive. The engineering behind it is genuinely impressive: IP68 and IP69 water resistance on a foldable, combined with a 6,660mAh silicon-carbon battery, means thinness was not achieved by sacrificing durability or endurance. It’s a difficult combination, and the design is doing real work to make it possible rather than just looking good on a spec sheet.

The CMF collaborations told a different story about design as positioning. Infinix’s NOTE 60 Ultra, developed with Pininfarina, applied the Italian studio’s automotive logic to the phone’s rear panel. The result is a single continuous sheet of Gorilla Glass Victus covering the triple camera array, a thin floating taillight strip, and a hidden active matrix notification display, all completely flush. No bump. The colorways, Torino Black, Monza Red, Amalfi Blue, and Roma Silver, are not accidental.

TECNO’s partnership with Tonino Lamborghini produced the TAURUS gaming PC, a water-cooled mini system with a 10,000mm² copper cold plate, and the POVA Metal phone, whose 241-pixel rear LED dot matrix turns the notification surface into a deliberate design feature. At the concept end, TECNO’s POVA Neon filled its rear panel with ionized inert gas to produce plasma patterns that chase your fingertip across the glass, which is either the most impractical phone feature ever conceived or a fascinating question about what a phone’s surface is actually for.

The Lenovo Yoga Book Pro 3D lets 3D creators sculpt directly on a dual-screen laptop without additional hardware. The Motorola Maxwell AI pendant turned conference transcription into something you wear around your neck. None of these are shipping products. At MWC 2026, that seemed less like a limitation and more like the whole point: showing what you think design can do, before you have to prove it.

The post 5 Wildest Design Trends at MWC 2026: Nodding Phones and Tiny Robots first appeared on Yanko Design.

Roblox introduces real-time AI-powered chat rephraser for inappropriate language

Roblox has launched a feature powered by AI that can rephrase inappropriate language in real time. The online game has been using AI filters to block out any language that goes against its policy for a while now, but it has been replacing censored chats with a series of hash signs (####). Roblox admits that encountering too many hashmarks can be disruptive and make conversations hard to follow. This new feature will instead replace words and phrases with what the AI deems as more appropriate substitutes.

Rajiv Bhatia, Roblox’s Chief Safety Office, said the game is starting with profanity. For instance, if a user sends “Hurry TF up” in chat, the system will replace it with “Hurry up!” Everyone in the chat will see a note when a message has been rephrased, and the sender will see what language was edited out. A user who keeps cursing in chat will still be penalized for breaking Roblox policy even if the AI rephrases their messages. “As these systems scale, they create a flywheel for civility, where real-time feedback helps users learn and adopt our Community Standards,” Bhatia said in a blog post.

Rephrasing has been rolled out to chats between age-checked users in similar age groups and in all the languages the game’s translation tool supports. Roblox introduced a mandatory age verification system back in January after reports came out that it has a “pedophile problem,” with adult players allegedly using the game to groom children. Kids under 13 can no longer use in-game chat outside of certain experiences, while everyone else can chat with players around their age. Age check, however, hasn’t stopped authorities from suing Roblox: LA County, in a lawsuit filed in February, said Roblox knows its platform “makes children easy prey for pedophiles.” Louisiana’s AG has also just filed a lawsuit, saying Roblox “created a public park and filled it with sex predators that are preying on… children.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/roblox-introduces-real-time-ai-powered-chat-rephraser-for-inappropriate-language-160000063.html?src=rss

Nothing Headphone (a) promises flagship-level features and five-day battery life at budget price

Nothing has steadily built a reputation for blending distinctive design with practical features. Now the Headphone (a) continues that philosophy by bringing many of the flagship features of the company’s earlier over-ear models to a more affordable price point. Positioned as a streamlined alternative to the Nothing Headphone (1), the new budget headphones aim to deliver strong battery life, customizable sound, and tactile controls while costing significantly less at $199.

The Headphone (a) maintains Nothing’s recognizable industrial design language while introducing more expressive color choices for new-age buyers. Available in black, white, pink, and yellow, the headphones feature a boxy ear-cup structure and semi-transparent elements that align with the brand’s aesthetic identity. Despite being over-ear headphones, they weigh about 310 grams and include memory foam ear cushions designed for comfort during extended listening sessions.

Designer: Nothing

The model carries an IP52 rating, offering protection against dust and light splashes, which makes it suitable for everyday commuting or casual outdoor use. Audio performance is driven by 40mm dynamic drivers with titanium-coated diaphragms, engineered to deliver clean and controlled sound with reduced distortion. The headphones support Hi-Resolution Audio Wireless and the LDAC codec, allowing compatible devices to stream higher-quality audio over Bluetooth. Through the Nothing X companion app, users can further refine the listening experience with an eight-band equalizer and additional sound adjustments. This level of customization is uncommon at this price tier, giving listeners more control over their preferred sound profile.

Noise management is handled through adaptive active noise cancellation capable of reducing external sound by up to 40 decibels. Users can choose between multiple noise-cancellation levels depending on their surroundings, while a transparency mode lets ambient sounds pass through when awareness is needed. For voice calls, the headphones employ multiple microphones and AI-assisted noise reduction to isolate speech from background noise, improving clarity during conversations.

One standout feature of the Headphone (a) is its physical control system. Instead of relying on touch gestures, Nothing integrates tactile inputs directly into the ear cups through a Roller, Paddle, and Button interface. These controls allow users to adjust volume, skip tracks, answer calls, or change noise-cancellation modes without needing to look at their phone. The customizable button also supports a feature called Channel Hop, which enables quick switching between apps or functions. In addition, it can act as a remote camera shutter when paired with compatible smartphones, expanding the headphones’ functionality beyond audio playback.

Battery life is where the Headphone (a) stands out most clearly. Nothing claims up to 135 hours of playback without active noise cancellation and around 75 hours with ANC enabled. Even with the high-bandwidth LDAC codec, the headphones can deliver roughly 50 hours of listening. A quick five-minute charge provides several hours of playback, while a full charge takes about two hours via USB-C. This endurance significantly exceeds that of many competitors in the same category.

Compared with the earlier Nothing Headphone (1), the Headphone (a) offers a similar design and control scheme but removes some premium tuning elements and advanced features to reach a lower price. However, it retains most of the everyday functionality users expect, including ANC, customizable sound, and multipoint connectivity. When viewed against higher-end models like the Apple AirPods Max, the differences become clearer. Apple’s headphones deliver more advanced spatial audio and premium materials but cost considerably more, typically around $549. The Headphone (a), while less luxurious, focuses on practicality by offering dramatically longer battery life and simpler physical controls at a fraction of the price.

The post Nothing Headphone (a) promises flagship-level features and five-day battery life at budget price first appeared on Yanko Design.

Engadget review recap: Galaxy S26 Ultra, Galaxy Buds 4, Dell XPS 14 and more

It’s a busy time for the reviews team and Engadget, and with Apple announcing new devices this week, we aren’t letting up any time soon. New products from Samsung, Dell, Google and ASUS headline the roundup this time, and we’ve got a few unique items to discuss as well. Read on to catch up on anything you might’ve missed, including the latest installment of Pokémon.

This year’s Samsung flagship phone may not impress you with a load of new features, but there’s one in particular that senior reporter Sam Rutherford was wowed by. “This goes double for the S26 Ultra, whose biggest upgrade — the Privacy Display — is something meant to stop other people from snooping at what you're doing.,” he said. “When it's on, you probably won't even be able to tell, which is kind of the point.”

Samsung went all-in with with AirPods mimicry last year, and that continues on the Galaxy Buds 4 and 4 Pro. However, despite big improvements to sound quality and the continued addition of new features, Samsung could certainly do more. “The company is really only lagging behind Apple in two areas: hearing health and heart-rate tracking,” I wrote. “Samsung currently offers the option to amplify voices on its earbuds, but it hasn’t built a hearing test or the hearing protection tools Apple has. The biggest update on the AirPods Pro 3 was the addition of heart-rate tracking last year, which would be a great foundation for a fitness-focused version of the Galaxy Buds.”

We review a lot of devices that are almost excellent, except for one big flaw. That’s the case with the new XPS 14, where senior reporter Devindra Hardawar had a hard time with very basic functionality. “If I were to judge the XPS 14 based purely on its specs and design alone, it would be my favorite Windows laptop available today,” he wrote. “Dell is so close to making a PC that’s a true MacBook Pro competitor, it's a shame a simple keyboard issue holds the XPS 14 back from true greatness.”

Google’s A-series devices have consistently been a great option if you’re looking to spend less on phone but still want a capable handset. Despite minimal upgrades on the Pixel 10a, that sentiment still holds true. “On the one hand, part of me wants to dock points because Google has added so few updates,” senior reporter Igor Bonifacic said. “On the other, the 10a is still a great phone for $500, and at a time when consumer electronics are becoming more expensive by the day, the fact it hasn't gone up in price is a small miracle.”

Creators often need a combination of power and display quality in a laptop that would be overkill for most of us. For those who do need it, contributing reporter Steven Dent found the ASUS ProArt GoPro Edition PX13 nearly checked all the boxes. “ASUS is one of the few PC manufacturers trying to compete with Apple in the creator market, and with the ProArt GoPro Edition laptop, it has largely succeeded,” he said. “This model offers excellent performance and battery life, a huge amount of memory, a very nice OLED HDR display, a nice range of ports and an excellent keyboard and trackpad.”

We also recently reviewed a couple of off-beat gadgets, both of which earned high marks from our team. The Ambient Dreamie is a “bedside companion” that functions as an alarm clock with both bedtime and morning routines. Weekend editor Cheyenne MacDonald was so impressed by how it improved her sleep that she bought one for herself. And the Seattle Ultrasonics C-200 was dubbed “the future of kitchen knives” by Sam.

Sam also played a few hours of Pokémon Pokopia and he was charmed by the new take on gameplay for the series. Lastly, Devindra put the Falcon Northwest FragBox through its paces, discovering a powerful gaming rig in machine that looks a bit like a box of fried chicken

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/engadget-review-recap-galaxy-s26-ultra-galaxy-buds-4-dell-xps-14-and-more-140435975.html?src=rss

12 Ways the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Just Quietly Beat the iPhone 17 Pro Max

12 Ways the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Just Quietly Beat the iPhone 17 Pro Max Samsung Galaxy S26

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra represents a blend of refinement and technological advancement in the premium smartphone market. While its design retains a sense of familiarity, the device introduces notable upgrades in areas such as battery performance, display technology, and thermal management. Additionally, it incorporates innovative features like satellite communication and privacy-focused displays, setting it […]

The post 12 Ways the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Just Quietly Beat the iPhone 17 Pro Max appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

$1,400 Gaming PC vs $1,400 Handheld : Gaming Performance Compared FPS, Benchmarks & Value

$1,400 Gaming PC vs $1,400 Handheld : Gaming Performance Compared FPS, Benchmarks & Value Cyberpunk 2077 graphics settings screen shown beside an FPS counter for a PC and a handheld test run.

When faced with a $1,400 gaming budget, the decision between a custom-built PC and a handheld device like the Lenovo Legion Go highlights the trade-offs between performance and portability. Tech Fowler explores this comparison by breaking down how each option uses the same budget to cater to different gaming needs. For instance, the custom-built PC […]

The post $1,400 Gaming PC vs $1,400 Handheld : Gaming Performance Compared FPS, Benchmarks & Value appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

The 5 Best Accessories That Look Like They Shipped in an Apple Box (They Didn’t)

Apple has always had this gravitational pull when it comes to design — clean lines, considered materials, and that unmistakable restraint that somehow still feels exciting. It’s the reason a whole ecosystem of third-party accessories exists that speaks the same visual language, sometimes so fluently you’d swear they came out of Cupertino.

The five products on this list sit right in that sweet spot. They’re designed for your Apple devices, they match that premium sensibility, and yet they each bring something Apple itself hasn’t thought of (or wouldn’t dare try). From a keyboard that brings BlackBerry nostalgia to your iPhone to a carabiner that turns your AirTag into a proper adventure companion, these are the accessories that deserve a spot in your setup.

1. Akko MetaKey

There’s something almost rebellious about strapping a physical keyboard to an iPhone in 2026. Akko, a company celebrated in the mechanical keyboard community for its switches and keycap artistry, decided to do exactly that with the MetaKey. It connects to the iPhone 16 Pro Max and 17 Pro Max via USB-C and features a passthrough port, so you can still charge or transfer data without detaching the whole thing. It’s clever, it’s niche, and it’s built with the kind of intentionality that makes you pause and appreciate the craft.

The keyboard layout is compact and BlackBerry-inspired, with backlit keys that work comfortably in low light. What really sets it apart, though, is the thoughtfulness in the details — dedicated shortcuts for Siri, voice dictation, and number input, plus a scroll mode that transforms the top rows into navigation buttons for breezing through long feeds. Akko even includes a tiny nine-gram counterweight that clips behind the keyboard to keep your phone balanced in your hand. It’s the kind of consideration that separates a gimmick from a genuine tool for your Apple device.

What We Like

  • The USB-C passthrough is a smart move — you never have to choose between typing and charging your iPhone, which makes the MetaKey feel like a seamless extension of the phone rather than an inconvenient add-on.
  • The scroll mode is a surprisingly intuitive touch. Turning keyboard rows into navigation buttons for scrolling through social feeds or documents on your iPhone shows that Akko was thinking beyond just text input.

What We Dislike

  • The added length and weight, even with the counterweight, will take some getting used to. It shifts the balance of the phone noticeably, and one-handed use becomes a bit of a juggling act.
  • Compatibility is limited to just two iPhone models. If you’re on an older device or a non-Pro model, you’re out of luck — and that narrows the audience considerably for something this well-designed.

2. AirTag Carabiner

If you’ve ever attached an AirTag to something and felt like the holder was letting down the tracker, this one’s for you. The AirTag Carabiner is made from Duralumin composite alloy — the same material found in aircraft and marine vessels — so it’s as tough as it is minimal. It snaps onto bags, bikes, umbrellas, or whatever else you tend to misplace, and it lets Apple’s Find My network do the rest. There’s a quiet confidence in how understated this thing looks, like it was always supposed to be part of the AirTag’s story.

Each carabiner is individually handcrafted, which gives it a tactile quality that mass-produced holders simply can’t match. It’s also available in untreated brass and stainless steel finishes, so you can match it to your personal style or let it develop a patina over time. For anyone deeply embedded in the Apple ecosystem who uses AirTags on everything from luggage to keys, this is one of those small upgrades that quietly elevates the entire experience.

Click Here to Buy Now: $129.00

What We Like

  • The Duralumin construction means it’s lightweight yet remarkably strong — suitable for use in water and at high altitudes, which makes it a genuine companion for outdoor adventures, not just a desk accessory for your AirTag.
  • The handcrafted quality and multiple finish options (brass, stainless steel) add a personal, artisanal dimension that feels right at home next to Apple’s own hardware.

What We Dislike

  • The AirTag itself isn’t included, which is expected but still worth noting — you’re investing in the holder alone, and the overall cost of the tracker plus carabiner adds up.
  • For something this minimal, the design language is almost too subtle. If you like your accessories to make a visual statement, this one deliberately doesn’t — it disappears, which is the point, but not everyone wants that.

3. Nomad Icy Blue Glow Stratos Band

The Apple Watch Ultra was built for people who push limits, and Nomad’s Stratos Band has always matched that energy. But the Icy Blue Glow edition adds something unexpected — a fluoroelastomer cast that lights up in Tron-like hues after dark. It’s a limited-run release, and it bridges the gap between serious performance gear and something you’d actually want to show off at a dinner table. Nomad describes it as proof that performance and fun can coexist, and honestly, it’s hard to argue.

Underneath the glow, the engineering is just as considered. Grade 4 titanium hardware handles the structural work, while compression-molded FKM fluoroelastomer links sit against the skin for comfort and flexibility. The dual-material design creates natural ventilation spaces between the links, helping with moisture and breathability during workouts or just everyday wear. For Apple Watch Ultra owners who’ve cycled through the usual band options and want something that feels both premium and a little playful, this Stratos edition is a standout.

What We Like

  • The hybrid construction of titanium and FKM fluoroelastomer strikes a rare balance — you get the refined, metallic look that matches the Apple Watch Ultra’s hardware with the comfort of a sport band, all in one piece.
  • The glow-in-the-dark feature isn’t just a novelty. It adds genuine visibility during nighttime runs or low-light conditions, making it functional for the adventure crowd the Ultra was designed for.

What We Dislike

  • It’s a limited-run release, which means if you don’t move quickly, it’s gone. For a band this well-made, it would be nice to see it as a permanent option in Nomad’s lineup for Apple Watch Ultra.
  • The glow effect relies on light absorption, so its intensity fades over time in darkness. After a few hours, you’re back to a regular (still great-looking) band — manage expectations accordingly.

4. Battery-Free Amplifying iSpeakers

There’s an elegance to things that work without electricity. The Battery-Free Amplifying iSpeakers from Yanko Design Select take your smartphone’s built-in speaker and amplify the sound purely through acoustic design — no charging, no Bluetooth pairing, no cables. You simply place your iPhone into the cradle and let the Duralumin metal body do the work, channeling and projecting sound waves across the room. It’s the kind of product that makes you appreciate physics as a design material.

Beyond the clever engineering, the speaker itself is designed using the golden ratio, so its proportions feel inherently pleasing on a desk or shelf. The vibration-resistant Duralumin construction — the same aerospace-grade material — means the body stays stable even when the sound is full. There are also optional add-on modules called +Bloom and +Jet that let you direct the sound in different patterns, which is a nice touch for people who care about how audio fills a space. For your iPhone, it’s a zero-fuss, zero-power way to fill a room with music.

Click Here to Buy Now: $179.00

What We Like

  • The completely passive, battery-free design is refreshing in a world of chargers and cables. You just drop your iPhone in and go — no setup, no pairing, no power source needed.
  • The golden ratio proportions and aerospace-grade Duralumin make it as much a desk sculpture as an audio accessory. It genuinely enhances the look of whatever space it sits in alongside your Apple devices.

What We Dislike

  • Acoustic amplification has its limits. Don’t expect it to compete with a powered Bluetooth speaker — it’s best suited for casual listening and background music with your iPhone, not filling a large room for a gathering.
  • The +Bloom and +Jet sound-directing modules are sold separately, which means getting the full experience requires additional investment beyond the base speaker.

5. Triple Boost 14 Pro

Dual monitors are fine. The Triple Boost 14 Pro thinks bigger. This accessory attaches to your MacBook and unfolds into three additional 14-inch IPS displays — two flanking the sides and one rising from the top — turning your laptop into a four-screen workstation that looks like it belongs in a mission control room. It connects via a single cable, and once you set it up, your MacBook’s workspace expands in a way that fundamentally changes how you multitask.

Each panel delivers 1920×1080 resolution at 60Hz with 300 nits of brightness and a matte finish that tames reflections. These aren’t color-accurate screens for photo editing or design work — they’re built for volume, for keeping your spreadsheets, code editors, Slack channels, browser tabs, and terminal windows all visible simultaneously on your MacBook. It’s a tool for people who work across multiple apps at once and hate the alt-tab dance. For MacBook users who’ve always wished their laptop could do more without being tethered to a desk setup, the Triple Boost 14 Pro is a compelling, portable answer.

What We Like

  • The sheer screen real estate is transformative for MacBook productivity. Going from one display to four means you can keep everything visible — no more cycling between windows or losing your place in a workflow.
  • The matte finish on all three panels is a smart, practical choice. It keeps reflections and glare under control, which matters when you’re staring at this much screen area on your MacBook for extended work sessions.

What We Dislike

  • At 1080p and 60Hz, the panels don’t match the Retina quality of your MacBook’s built-in display. The resolution difference is noticeable when you glance between screens, especially with text rendering.
  • Portability is relative here. While it technically travels with your MacBook, the bulk and setup process of three additional screens make this more of a semi-permanent desk solution than a true grab-and-go accessory.

Designed Different, But Designed Right

What ties all five of these accessories together isn’t just compatibility with Apple devices — it’s a shared design philosophy. They’re restrained where they need to be, bold where it counts, and built with materials and details that punch well above what you’d expect from third-party products. Each one feels like it belongs in the Apple ecosystem without trying too hard to imitate it, and that’s a difficult line to walk. These are products made by people who clearly care about craft.

If you’re particular about what sits next to your iPhone, MacBook, or Apple Watch, this list is for you. Not every accessory deserves a place in a carefully considered setup, but these five earn it. They solve real problems, they look good doing it, and they bring ideas that Apple hasn’t explored yet. Sometimes the best additions to your ecosystem are the ones that didn’t come from Cupertino at all.

The post The 5 Best Accessories That Look Like They Shipped in an Apple Box (They Didn’t) first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung Targets 200g for Galaxy Z Fold 8: How the New Aluminum Build Sheds the Bulk

Samsung Targets 200g for Galaxy Z Fold 8: How the New Aluminum Build Sheds the Bulk Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 is expected to represent a significant step forward in the evolution of foldable smartphones. By addressing longstanding user concerns and introducing targeted upgrades, Samsung has solidified its position as a leader in this innovative market. Whether you are new to foldable devices or upgrading from an earlier model, the […]

The post Samsung Targets 200g for Galaxy Z Fold 8: How the New Aluminum Build Sheds the Bulk appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized