How to Get the iOS 27 Developer Beta Today

How to Get the iOS 27 Developer Beta Today The redesigned Siri user interface on an iPhone running iOS 27

The much-anticipated iOS 27 developer beta is set to debut later today during the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). This release marks a pivotal moment in Apple’s software development, introducing a range of new features designed to enhance functionality and user experience. Among the highlights are a redesigned Siri interface and advancements in Liquid Glass display […]

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What Apple Accidentally Revealed Right Before WWDC

What Apple Accidentally Revealed Right Before WWDC Split-screen multitasking feature displayed on the iPhone Ultra.

Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2023 is poised to deliver significant advancements in software and artificial intelligence (AI), reinforcing the company’s commitment to innovation. While last-minute leaks suggest that hardware announcements may be limited or delayed, the event remains a pivotal moment for developers and users alike. Here’s a detailed look at the most anticipated […]

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The Final iOS 27 Leaks Just Dropped: Everything You Need to Know

The Final iOS 27 Leaks Just Dropped: Everything You Need to Know Illustration of notification center related to the article topic.

Apple’s iOS 27 is poised to deliver a significant leap forward in mobile operating systems, blending user-centric enhancements with innovative AI capabilities. With features designed to improve multitasking, streamline automation, and enhance everyday usability, this update promises to reshape how you interact with your iPhone. Below is a comprehensive breakdown of the most notable features […]

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Why It is Finally Time to Say Goodbye to Your iPhone 11

Why It is Finally Time to Say Goodbye to Your iPhone 11 Apple software update notification on an iPhone

The iPhone 11, unveiled in September 2019, is nearing the conclusion of its software support lifecycle. With Apple expected to release iOS 27 in September 2026, this device will likely lose compatibility with the latest operating system. This transition marks a pivotal moment for a smartphone that has been a cornerstone of Apple’s lineup for […]

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This Titanium EDC Wrench Hides a Caliper, Ratchet, Pen, and Scalpel in a Palm-sized Body

Victorinox and Leatherman did something remarkable beyond building useful tools. They each created a visual identity so strong that it became the default answer to the question of what a portable multitool should look like. The Swiss Army Knife turned the folding pocket knife into a miniature toolkit, with blades and tools layered along a single spine in a form almost anyone on the planet would recognize on sight. Leatherman took the opposite route, putting a plier at the center and folding the handles outward to reveal a dozen more functions. These were genuinely different design philosophies, and both became iconic. Between them, they defined the category for most of a century.

The format nobody seriously explored is the one that fits naturally into the same spaces as a phone, a wallet, or a slim notebook. A flat rectangular slab, sized somewhere between a pocket knife and a small notepad, turns out to be an almost perfect geometry for daily carry, because that is exactly the geometry your pockets, bags, and cases were already designed around. The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 from Los Angeles-based IF is a Grade 5 titanium multitool system that occupies that territory, built around a genuine 0 to 18mm adjustable wrench and packed with fifteen practical tools. It is currently on Kickstarter, where it has raised over $57,000 against a $3,000 goal with two weeks still remaining.

Designer: Team IF

Click Here to Buy Now: $169 $259 ($90 off) Hurry! Only 89 of 100 units left.

IF built the OmniPro 3.0 around the wrench function first, treating everything else as secondary. The adjustable jaw spans 0 to 18mm, which covers the majority of fasteners you encounter in daily repairs, from furniture assembly to bike maintenance to plumbing fixes. The adjustment mechanism is smooth, with a knurled thumbwheel that grips positively even when your hands are sweaty or oily. The wrench jaws themselves deliver genuine torque, the kind you need when a bolt refuses to budge or when a fitting needs real pressure to seal properly. This feels like an actual wrench that happens to live in a multitool body, rather than a novelty wrench grafted onto a keychain gadget.

Grade 5 titanium, the same Ti-6Al-4V alloy used in aircraft landing gear, forms the entire body. Each OmniPro 3.0 starts as a solid titanium billet and gets CNC-machined down to final form, then hand-finished with micro chamfers on every edge to eliminate sharp corners. The result weighs 174 grams, lighter than most smartphones but substantial enough in hand to communicate durability. Titanium brings corrosion resistance that steel cannot match at this weight, which means sweat, rain, and salt water leave no trace. The sandblasted finish feels matte and slightly textured, the way raw titanium emerges from machining. A black PVD coating option offers a stealthier aesthetic for those who prefer darker gear.

The three-position bit driver system addresses one of the most persistent frustrations with compact screwdrivers, insufficient clearance. Most pocket tools force you into a single driver orientation, which works fine on a workbench but fails spectacularly inside a cramped electronics enclosure or underneath a desk. The OmniPro 3.0 gives you top, side, and bottom bit ports, so you can switch angles to match whatever clearance the space allows. The ratchet mechanism reverses direction with a single flick of an external switch, eliminating the need to remove the ratchet head entirely just to change from tightening to loosening. That small detail saves several seconds per fastener, which compounds into real time savings across a full repair session.

The extension rod was one of the most requested features from earlier OmniPro backers, and the third generation integrates it through a snap-on magnetic latch system. Pull the rod from its slot, snap it onto the bit driver, and you gain several centimeters of reach for recessed screws or deep cavities. The modular bit storage cabin holds three 6mm bits, two 4mm bits, and a 6mm-to-4mm adapter, all retained magnetically so they stay secure during movement but release cleanly when you need them. The storage module itself latches to the main body with the same satisfying snap mechanism as the extension rod, the kind of tactile feedback that makes you open and close it twice just because it feels good.

A built-in caliper scale runs along the wrench body, precision-lasered directly into the titanium. Measure bolt diameters, check material thickness, verify part dimensions, all without pulling out a secondary tool or guessing by eye. The magnetic eternal pen uses a graphite tip that writes on nearly any surface without ink, and it pulls from either side of the body through dual access grooves. A side-mounted #11 scalpel blade sits in a protective finger groove for safe cutting. The bottle opener relocates to the rear of the tool, away from the wrench jaws, which improves both grip clarity and caliper accuracy. A phone stand groove props your device up at a hands-free viewing angle. Eight tritium slots glow for 25 years without batteries or charging, making the tool visible in total darkness. A tungsten carbide glass breaker handles emergency escape scenarios with a single sharp strike.

At 104.5mm by 46mm, the OmniPro 3.0 slips into a front pocket alongside a phone or wallet without printing awkwardly. It works equally well in a bag side pocket, a gear pouch, or clipped to a belt loop with the optional leather sheath. The sheath itself is belt-compatible with a hanging hook for fast-access carry. Two finishes, sandblasted titanium and black PVD, offer different aesthetic directions with identical material performance underneath.

The OmniPro Wrench 3.0 is available now on Kickstarter with discounted pricing starting at $169 for a single wrench, which includes a bit converter, two 1/6-inch bits, one 1/4-inch bit, and an everlasting pen, representing a 35% discount off the planned retail price of $259. A two-pack bundle is available at $309. The campaign runs through June 22, 2026, with shipping scheduled to begin in September 2026.

Click Here to Buy Now: $169 $259 ($90 off) Hurry! Only 89 of 100 units left.

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This 27.5-Foot Tiny Home Has Two Lofts and Zero Compromises

Tiny house living has long come with an unspoken agreement — you trade space for freedom, and you make peace with the limitations. The Coolangatta 8.4 by Gold Coast-based Removed Tiny Homes wants to renegotiate that deal entirely. Named after its dimensions, the 8.4-meter (27.5 ft) build sits on a triple-axle trailer and arrives not as a stripped-back escape pod, but as a considered, liveable home — one that takes full-time living seriously without abandoning the lightness that makes tiny architecture worth chasing.

The exterior sets the tone immediately. Wrapped in monument Colorbond steel cladding and softened with natural textures, the Coolangatta 8.4 walks the line between coastal restraint and contemporary edge. It’s not trying to disappear into the landscape — it has presence. The kind that reads well in the late afternoon sun and doesn’t scream for attention while doing it. From the outside, the massing feels deliberate: clean rooflines, a tight material palette, and just enough visual weight to signal that what’s inside has been thought through.

Designer: Removed Tiny Homes

Step inside, and the first thing you notice is the light. Generous glazing throughout the interior keeps the space feeling open in a way that floor area alone never could. The kitchen anchors the main living zone, featuring a breakfast bar seating area for two — a small but telling detail that says this home was designed for actual mornings, not just floor plans. Storage is woven into the architecture rather than bolted on as an afterthought, which is where many tiny homes lose their footing.

What genuinely distinguishes the Coolangatta 8.4 is the second loft. Floating above the main living space, it functions as a workspace, a guest loft, or a second bedroom depending on the day. That kind of programmatic flexibility is rare in a build this size. It’s not a gimmick — it’s a spatial move that multiplies how the home can be used without adding a single square metre to the footprint. The layout was reworked specifically around how the clients planned to live, which is exactly the kind of client-led thinking that separates a custom build from a catalogue selection.

Removed Tiny Homes operates out of the Gold Coast and delivers across Australia, building for downsizers, young families, and investors. The Coolangatta 8.4 sits within their custom range — a collection of builds that begin with a conversation and end with something that couldn’t have existed any other way. It’s proof that in the right hands, going smaller doesn’t mean settling for less.

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LEGO’s Pan Am DC-3 Is a Love Letter to the Golden Age of Flight

Few names in aviation carry the kind of romantic weight that Pan American World Airways does. Before the airline folded in 1991, it was the symbol of a particular kind of glamour, the kind where stewardesses wore pillbox hats and passengers dressed up just to board. The Douglas DC-3, the twin-engine workhorse that helped define commercial flight in the 1930s, was very much a part of that story. So when LEGO announced it was giving the DC-3 the full Icons treatment, complete with Pan Am livery, it felt less like a product launch and more like an event.

The set, officially known as the LEGO Icons Douglas DC-3 Pan Am Airliner (11378), arrived in April 2026 at $219.99, and with 1,903 pieces, it lands squarely in the serious-collector territory that LEGO has been quietly expanding for years. If you have been following the Icons aviation lineup, you already know what kind of company the DC-3 is keeping. The Concorde came before it, and the Shuttle Carrier before that. LEGO is clearly building something here, both literally and in terms of brand story, and the DC-3 is a strong chapter.

Designer: LEGO

What the build delivers is genuinely impressive. The plane spans 30 inches wide and 20 inches long, so this is not a shelf-sitter you tuck between other things. It takes up space, and it should. Removable panels reveal a detailed cockpit and passenger cabin complete with an aisle and seating. A single dial operates the retractable landing gear, which is the kind of satisfying interactive detail that makes you want to show the thing off to anyone who walks into the room.

But the detail that surprised me most is the crew. Four exclusive minifigures come with the set: a pilot, purser, stewardess, and flight attendant, all dressed in historically inspired Pan Am uniforms. They even get their own dedicated display, a Pan Am-branded minifigure stand separate from the aircraft. It is a small touch, but it does a lot of heavy lifting. It reframes the whole model from a static replica into something closer to a scene, a moment frozen in time from the early days of commercial aviation.

The display stand and information plaque round out the package nicely. LEGO clearly understands that this kind of set does not get built and then stuffed in a drawer. It gets built and then lived with, placed on a desk or in a living room where it quietly does the work of making a space feel more considered.

My honest take is that the $219.99 price point will give some people pause, especially when the Concorde, which has more pieces, retails for $200. You are paying a small premium here, and a portion of that is almost certainly going toward those four minifigures and the Pan Am licensing. Whether that tradeoff feels worth it depends entirely on how much the Pan Am branding means to you. For aviation history fans, it will absolutely matter. For general LEGO enthusiasts, the question is a little more open.

The bigger story, though, is how well this set understands its audience. It is not trying to be a toy. It is a collectible object with a genuine cultural story behind it, packaged in a format that lets you do the satisfying, almost meditative work of putting it together yourself. The DC-3 is not just a plane. It was one of the machines that made the world feel smaller, that turned flying from a novelty into something ordinary people could dream about. Building a 1,903-piece replica of it in your living room, crew and all, carries a quiet kind of meaning that justifies the box on your shelf.

LEGO has been getting better and better at this particular alchemy, turning history into something you can hold. The Pan Am DC-3 might be the most poetic version of that yet.

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This Minimal “Zero-AI” Macropad Was Built for the Way Freelancers Really Work

Our obsession with productivity has created a technology landscape that values data over discipline. We are encouraged to believe the path to better work is paved with more features, more integrations, and more automation, leading to tools that are powerful yet overwhelming. These systems promise efficiency by tracking our every move, analyzing habits, and optimizing our schedules. But in doing so, they can strip away our agency, turning the human process of creative work into a set of metrics managed by an algorithm. The result is a strange irony where the tools we build to manage time quietly end up consuming it.

The Freelancer Macropad by Studio Playground is a quiet rebellion born out of the subculture of moonlighting and freelancing. It is a tool built on the belief that awareness is more valuable than automation. Its simple interface, a single knob and a large key, puts the user in complete control, demanding a moment of physical intention to log the passage of time. Creator Shivam Dehinwal could have easily made this a dream device for data enthusiasts by using AI to track time seamlessly in the background. Instead, he made the deliberate choice to build a tool that requires your participation, arguing that the most powerful productivity feature is your own focused attention.

Designer: Studio Playground (Shivam Dehinwal)

For a salaried employee, time is the employer’s concern. The clock is managed by structure: a calendar of meetings, a fixed start and end to the day, a paycheck that arrives regardless of whether Tuesday was three hours of deep work or three hours of inbox archaeology. Freelancing dismantles that entirely. Every hour sold carries a direct monetary weight, and context switching between a branding project for one client and a deck for another can silently bleed a day into an unaccountable blur. The Macropad’s functionality is distilled for one purpose, to track your allocation of time, and that singular focus is precisely what makes it suited to the freelance condition.

 

The body sits in a calm, muted blue against a cream-toned chassis, with a yellow flower-shaped rotary knob that reads as playful and precise rather than gimmicky. Using the knob you can switch between projects, and using the spacebar you can pause and play the time counter. A small OLED display to the left surfaces the active project name and elapsed time without tipping into information overload. You only need a computer during setup to add projects, and after that the Macropad runs independently from a phone, power bank, or computer. When you need the log, a long press of the spacebar outputs a time receipt directly into any text editor of your choice, a Google Doc, a Word file, even an email body.

Still in beta, the Macropad has already surfaced different modalities of use, and those insights are actively driving further development of the project. Pricing and broader availability remain open questions, and the product’s trajectory will depend on whether enough people see dedicated physical hardware as a ritual worth investing in. You can follow progress at Shivam’s Instagram, @shivam_playground. I suspect the people who need this most will know it the moment they see it, because what the Macropad quietly hands back is something the app ecosystem has been slowly taking away for years: a real sense of ownership over your own time.

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