Uber to acquire Berlin-based chauffeur hailing app to ramp up its luxury travel efforts

Uber has acquired Blacklane, a Berlin-based startup that offers chauffeur services and bookings through its app, with plans to expand further into the luxury travel industry. Blacklane, founded in 2011, acts as a liaison between independent local chauffeur services and travelers looking for a more premium ride. According to Uber, the deal is subject to regulatory approvals but is expected to close by the end of 2026.

"This partnership marks a significant milestone in Blacklane’s next chapter and is a powerful step-change in introducing our service to new markets globally," Jens Wohltorf, founder and CEO of Blacklane said in a press release. Uber didn't disclose the acquisition details and it's not clear if Uber Elite and Blacklane will compete against each other.

Currently, Blacklane is available in at least 500 cities across more than 60 countries. Besides on-demand chauffeur hailing, the startup offers long-distance rides from city to city, airport pickup with flight tracking, and by-the-hour bookings. Uber's acquisition of Blacklane comes several weeks after it launched Uber Elite as an invite-only service for its "luxury ride experience." Besides Uber Elite and Blacklane, another luxury hailing service has recently entered the US market. Earlier this month, Wheely announced its US debut with New York City as its first location, with five others to be announced in the coming years. Blacklane also currently operates in New York City, along with several dozen other cities in the US.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/uber-to-acquire-berlin-based-chauffeur-hailing-app-to-ramp-up-its-luxury-travel-efforts-163855603.html?src=rss

These 4 Solar Pavilions Prove That Public Cooling Can Be Free

Heat is one of the most underestimated side effects of climate change, particularly in cities where built-up surfaces trap warmth long after the sun has gone down. Air conditioning has become a near-necessity in many parts of the world, yet millions of people can’t access it, either because they can’t afford it or because they simply have no home to cool. For them, that absence can be genuinely dangerous.

Cool Retreats is a direct response to that reality. Rather than a single structure, it’s a collection of four different solar-powered public pavilions, each built to provide free cooling, shade, and a place to rest to anyone who needs it. The project is specifically aimed at public parks and open areas, particularly in cities where those who need relief the most often have the fewest options.

Designer: Michael Jantzen

The Solar Ceiling Fan Pavilion is the most straightforward of the four, an open-frame structure with tilted solar panels across its roof and a row of ceiling fans hanging beneath. The logic is elegantly direct: sunlight hits the panels, the panels power the fans, and the space below stays cool. On cooler days, when the fans aren’t running, the surplus electricity feeds back into the local power grid.

The Solar Breeze Oasis Pavilion scales things up with a prefabricated, modular, octagonal steel structure that can be installed as a single unit or linked with others to form larger configurations. Inside, five solar-powered ceiling fans circulate air above seating areas and worktables, and solar-powered outlets let people charge their devices. The rooftop solar array also collects rainwater, which can be stored and used within the park.

Cool Spots are the most self-contained of the group. Each cylindrical module sits on a circular concrete base, with four large benches arranged around a central table and a solar-powered ceiling fan overhead. Built-in night lights and power ports extend their usefulness well into the evening, and the modules can run off batteries charged by their own solar arrays or pull power from the local grid as needed.

The Cooling Cone is the most visually striking of the four, a stacked, louvered structure that tapers into a cone at the top, where a solar panel powers a ceiling fan mounted just below it. The partially enclosed perimeter, made up of curved, slotted panels, provides both shade and ventilation. It’s the kind of structure that draws you in from the outside and keeps you comfortable once you’re there.

What ties all four together is their shared philosophy: cooling public space shouldn’t require a power bill, complex infrastructure, or permanent construction. Each structure is prefabricated, recyclable, and solar-powered, designed to go where it’s needed most and run without ongoing costs. It’s a reminder that public design can be both socially conscious and sustainable at the same time, without one ever having to come at the expense of the other.

The post These 4 Solar Pavilions Prove That Public Cooling Can Be Free first appeared on Yanko Design.

Microsoft’s research assistant can now use multiple AI models simultaneously

Microsoft's Copilot is getting even better at research thanks to a new feature that combines the power of both OpenAI's ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude. In a blog post announcing Copilot Cowork's availability, Microsoft debuted the Critique feature that will be used in Microsoft 356 Copilot's Researcher tool. Unlike the standard Copilot, Researcher is designed to tackle more complex tasks with multiple steps.

Now, Researcher is getting even better at that with the Critique feature that uses GPT responses, which are then refined by Claude. In a blog post, Microsoft said that, "this architecture creates a powerful feedback loop that delivers higher-quality results across factual accuracy, analytical breadth, and presentation," adding that Researcher's process is similar to what you see in "academic and professional research settings." Microsoft claims the upgrade scores somewhat higher (compared to the most recent Perplexity Deep Research models) on the Deep Research Accuracy, Completeness, and Objectivity benchmark. On its own, Anthropic has a Research feature that can use multiple Claude agents to provide a comprehensive response to more complex requests.

If you prefer doing research with a little more autonomy, Microsoft also added the Model Council feature that's available as an alternative option for Researcher. With Model Council, you'll get side-by-side responses from both Anthropic and OpenAI, with a report that shows where the models agree and disagree. Both features are currently available in Microsoft 365 Copilot's Frontier program, which acts as a early access space for the company's AI innovations.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/microsofts-research-assistant-can-now-use-multiple-ai-models-simultaneously-154558628.html?src=rss

This $145 Wood and Brass Timer Finally Gets Your Phone Off the Desk

Productivity apps have become one of the more ironic problems of modern work life. The tools meant to keep us focused are apps that live on the same devices responsible for most of our distractions. Switching to a timer app means unlocking a phone, and unlocking a phone means notifications, messages, and a dozen other things competing for your attention before you’ve even started the clock.

Thomas Curnow of Tomato Clocks had that contradiction in mind when he created the Roma Mk. 1, a purely analog study timer built around the Pomodoro Technique. The method is simple and widely used, working in focused intervals broken up by short rests, but it works best when the timing happens completely off-screen. The Roma Mk. 1 is designed to make that as easy and satisfying as possible.

Designer: Thomas Curnow (Tomato Clocks)

At the center of the design are two analog gauges, one for tracking a work interval and one for the break that follows. There are no menus to navigate and no app to open. You set the dials, get to work, and let the timer do the rest. The whole interaction takes a second, and that simplicity is precisely the point. It keeps the focus on the task at hand rather than the device managing it.

The build quality reinforces that philosophy. Each unit is laser-cut from premium Australian timber and assembled by hand in Melbourne, giving it a warmth and solidity that’s hard to find in mass-produced productivity gadgets. The brass switches used for input have a tactile snap to them, the kind of satisfying physical feedback that makes the act of starting a session feel deliberate rather than incidental.

It’s the sort of object that belongs on a desk permanently, not tucked into a drawer. A wooden timer with analog dials sits comfortably alongside notebooks, pens, and other tools that don’t demand your attention when you’re not using them. That’s a quality digital devices rarely manage, and it matters more than it might seem when you’re trying to build a consistent work habit.

The Pomodoro Technique has been around since the late 1980s, and the basic premise hasn’t changed much since then. What has changed is the environment in which most people try to use it. Screens are everywhere, and the pull of notifications is relentless. A dedicated physical timer doesn’t connect to the internet, doesn’t send alerts, and doesn’t tempt you with anything outside the task you’re working on.

The Roma Mk. 1 is currently available for pre-order at $145, which puts it well above a basic kitchen timer but firmly in the range of a thoughtful, long-term desk tool. It’s handmade, uses real materials, and is designed to last rather than be replaced. For anyone who has tried and failed to stay off their phone during a work session, a well-made analog alternative might be worth far more than what it costs.

The post This $145 Wood and Brass Timer Finally Gets Your Phone Off the Desk first appeared on Yanko Design.

The Mouse Carved From Walnut That Doesn’t Exist Yet

The concept is simple enough to say out loud: a computer mouse wrapped in walnut veneer. But when you actually see what designer Eslam Mohammed has put together with the Arche One, the simplicity of that sentence falls apart quickly. This is not a novelty item with a wood sticker slapped on top. It is a full rethinking of what a peripheral can be, and it is entirely a concept, which somehow makes it more compelling, not less.

Mohammed built the Arche One as an exploration, not a product pitch. He wanted to strip out the plastic aggression that defines most tech hardware and replace it with something that feels genuinely crafted. The result is a mouse with a long arching tail, a low organic body, and walnut veneer wrapped around every curve without shortcuts. It sits somewhere between a sculptural object and a piece of furniture, and I keep going back to look at it because it makes me realize how low the bar has been set for peripheral design for decades.

Designer: Eslam Mohammed

The gaming mouse world in particular has turned aggressive posturing into an aesthetic. Angular bodies, RGB lighting, the visual vocabulary of speed and dominance. Even the more restrained productivity mice from major brands feel like they were designed to be forgotten, not noticed. What Mohammed is proposing, even if only on a screen, is a different brief entirely: make it feel like an object worth keeping.

Form came first in his process. The silhouette reads almost like a comma, or an outstretched hand resting on fine wood. The scroll wheel is machined metal, knurled and precise, sitting flush against warm grain. The underside carries a 26,000 DPI optical sensor, Bluetooth 5.3, USB-C connectivity, and a lithium-polymer battery rated at six months. The specs are serious. The material is not a gimmick dressed up as design. It is the design, or at least inseparable from it.

The production approach is worth pausing on because it says something about how contemporary 3D design is evolving. Mohammed used three separate software programs simultaneously rather than forcing a single tool to carry everything. Houdini handled the cutting simulation. Cinema 4D managed the flow of the veneer layers. Blender took care of modeling and animation, and everything went through Octane for rendering. Each tool doing exactly what it was built for, nothing more, nothing less. The result is cleaner, and the renders have a photographic weight that makes you forget you are looking at a concept. The grain catches light the way real wood does. The curves feel like they have mass.

The Arche One is imagined as a limited run of 300 units, each individually finished in hand-applied satin oil, with the note that grain pattern will vary from piece to piece. That last detail is the one that gets me. In a peripheral market built on identical units rolling off assembly lines, the idea of a mouse where no two pieces look exactly the same is almost radical. It borrows the language of craft objects and heirlooms, the kind of things people keep, pass on, and genuinely care about. That is a different conversation than the one tech hardware usually wants to have.

I think about my own desk, and I think most people have at some point looked down at their mouse and felt nothing. It is a tool, purely functional, there to be used and eventually discarded. The Arche One is a question about whether that has to be true. Whether the relationship between a person and the objects they touch every day for hours at a time could carry some weight, some intention, some warmth. That is not a trivial thing to ask.

Maybe this mouse never gets made. That is fine. Concepts do not need to ship to matter. What Mohammed has done here is demonstrate, convincingly and beautifully, that someone asked the right question. The answer is still being worked out. But the asking is more than enough.

The post The Mouse Carved From Walnut That Doesn’t Exist Yet first appeared on Yanko Design.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide: The device meant to take on the iPhone Fold

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide: The device meant to take on the iPhone Fold Back view illustration shows two rear camera lenses, suggesting a simpler setup than recent flagship Folds.

Samsung is preparing to launch the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide, a foldable smartphone that pushes the boundaries of mobile design. With its unique 4:3 aspect ratio, this device offers a tablet-like experience in a compact, portable form. By introducing this innovative design, Samsung aims to solidify its position as a leader in the foldable […]

The post Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide: The device meant to take on the iPhone Fold appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

This year’s Xbox Games Showcase is set for June 7

Microsoft has confirmed exactly when this year’s Xbox Games Showcase will take place. It will air at the usual time, 1PM ET on the Sunday (June 7) of Summer Game Fest weekend. In recent years, the company has offered a deeper dive into one particular game straight after the showcase, and it’s sticking to that format this time with a closer look at Gears of War: E-Day.

The showcase and Gears of War: E-Day Direct will be available in more than 40 languages, including American Sign Language and British Sign Language. A stream with English audio descriptions will be available as well. You can watch it on several of Xbox’s various social channels, including YouTube, Twitch and Facebook.

This is typically Xbox’s biggest showcase of the year. It will be the first Xbox Games Showcase with Asha Sharma at the helm of Microsoft’s gaming division. Perhaps we’ll hear some more details on the next Xbox (aka Project Helix), which is confirmed to be a system that will run PC games — much like the upcoming Steam Machine.

Along with more details about a brand-new Gears of War game, it seems likely that we’ll learn the release date for Fable during the Xbox Games Showcase. That game is slated to arrive this fall.

We don’t yet have exact release dates for Minecraft Dungeons 2 or Halo: Campaign Evolved, a remake of the first Halo game’s campaign. Those are scheduled to debut this year as well, so they seem like prime candidates for showcase appearances. Microsoft also has Clockwork Revolution, State of Decay 3, OD (from Kojima Productions) and something new from Toys for Bob in the hopper.

In addition, Microsoft is promising the return of Xbox FanFest, an in-person fan event, to help mark the brand’s 25th anniversary. Sharma confirmed this will take place in Los Angeles, where all of the Summer Game Fest events are going down. “This year’s experience will include a look back at the last 25 years, alongside a forward view of what’s next,” according to an Xbox Wire blog post.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox/this-years-xbox-games-showcase-is-set-for-june-7-134942027.html?src=rss

The Side Table That Folds a Bookshelf Into Its Own Top

Most side tables ask very little of you. You set things on them, they hold those things, and that’s the end of the conversation. The Boca table by designer Deniz Aktay is not interested in that conversation at all.

At first glance, it reads as a straightforward piece: a circular metal top, slim tubular legs bent into a smooth C-shaped base, a warm terracotta finish. Tidy, minimal, easy to place. But look at it straight on and something shifts. The tabletop isn’t flat. Its center section dips downward into a rectangular cavity, creating a hidden pocket between two metal layers. That pocket is sized to hold a book flat inside the body of the table itself. Slide one in from the side and just the spine shows, sitting flush at the edge of the circle like a small geometric tab. No separate shelf. No added structure. The storage is built into the form of the top.

Designer: Deniz Aktay

The engineering behind this is worth slowing down for. Aktay took a single metal surface and pressed a rectangular section downward, folding it into a tray-like recess while keeping the surrounding disc level and usable. The result is a top that functions on two planes simultaneously: the recessed channel holds the book, and the flat surface above holds everything else. A glass of water, a phone, a small candle, all of it sits on the upper layer without interference. The table doesn’t ask you to choose between storage and surface. It quietly offers both at the same time.

From above, the geometry becomes almost graphic. A flat orange circle with a pressed rectangle at its center, two sharp diagonal ridges fanning outward toward the rim of the disc. It has the kind of topography you’d expect from a relief map or an architectural model, a surface that communicates depth and intention before you even understand the function. Even without a book inside, the form holds your attention. The cavity doesn’t disappear when it’s empty; it becomes a compositional detail, a shadow box pressed into the metal.

The color is doing real work here too. That terracotta-to-coral finish isn’t neutral, but it isn’t loud either. It reads as considered, the kind of color that commands a corner of a room without competing with everything around it. Set against the cool silver of the tubular legs, the contrast is clean and deliberate. The legs themselves are worth noting: bent from a single continuous tube into a profile that tapers from wide at the base to narrower at the top, they give the table a visual lightness that balances the solid weight of the metal disc above. The whole piece feels grounded but not heavy.

What makes the Boca table particularly interesting from a design standpoint is how the form and function are genuinely the same thing. The slot isn’t an addition or an afterthought. It’s the result of shaping the top itself differently. The cavity exists because the metal was bent that way, not because a compartment was attached afterward. That distinction matters more than it might seem. Furniture that achieves storage through added components tends to look like it’s carrying its own extra features. Furniture that achieves storage through form tends to look inevitable, like there was never any other option. Boca belongs to the second category.

There are practical limits worth acknowledging. The fixed-width opening suits standard paperbacks and average hardcovers comfortably, but larger format books won’t fit, and anyone with a habit of keeping thick volumes on their nightstand might find it constraining. That’s a real trade-off. But the specificity of the design is also part of its character. It was made for a particular kind of use, and it doesn’t pretend otherwise.

Stuttgart-based furniture designer Deniz Aktay has been exploring this kind of structural problem-solving across his body of work for years, but the Boca table feels like one of his most resolved ideas yet. The fold does everything. The rest just gets out of the way.

The post The Side Table That Folds a Bookshelf Into Its Own Top first appeared on Yanko Design.

DJI Avata 360 Camera Drone Hands-On Review : Specs, Battery Life & Video Quality

DJI Avata 360 Camera Drone Hands-On Review : Specs, Battery Life & Video Quality Several DJI Avata 360 batteries lined up on a table, reflecting the typical 16-minute per pack runtime.

The DJI Avata 360 is a compact drone designed to capture immersive 360-degree footage, offering features like the DLOG-M color profile for advanced post-production flexibility and solid performance in low-light environments. In this hands-on review, Dominic Hayles examines how the drone performs in real-world conditions, including its ability to withstand rain and wind during outdoor […]

The post DJI Avata 360 Camera Drone Hands-On Review : Specs, Battery Life & Video Quality appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

iPhone Fold Delayed? Why Apple’s First Foldable Might Miss September

iPhone Fold Delayed? Why Apple’s First Foldable Might Miss September Spec graphic comparing iPhone Fold screen sizes, showing a 7.7–7.8 inch inside panel and 5.5 inch outer screen.

Apple is gearing up to make a significant impact in the foldable smartphone market with the much-anticipated iPhone Fold. While the official announcement took place during Apple’s September 2023 event, the device’s release was strategically scheduled for December 2023. This deliberate timing underscores Apple’s commitment to delivering a polished, high-quality product while capitalizing on the […]

The post iPhone Fold Delayed? Why Apple’s First Foldable Might Miss September appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized