Google Gemini Embedding 2 Supports Text, Images, Audio, PDFs & Short Videos

Google Gemini Embedding 2 Supports Text, Images, Audio, PDFs & Short Videos Diagram showing Gemini Embedding 2 mapping text, images, audio, and video into one shared vector space.

Gemini Embedding 2 offers a unified framework for embedding and retrieving multimodal data, including text, images, audio, videos and documents, within a shared vector space. As explained by Sam Witteveen, this approach eliminates the need for separate models and indexes for each content type, streamlining workflows and allowing cross-modal comparisons. For example, the system allows […]

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Just got a Galaxy S26 Ultra? Settings you need to change immediately

Just got a Galaxy S26 Ultra? Settings you need to change immediately The Galaxy S26 Ultra connected to a compatible 60W charger showing 0 to 75 percent in 30 minutes.

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is a flagship device that redefines the smartphone experience with over 50 advanced features. From productivity tools like the S Pen to innovative privacy settings, this device is designed to cater to a wide range of users. Whether you’re a tech enthusiast, a professional, or someone who enjoys exploring innovative […]

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Microsoft Xbox Project Helix Dev Kits Arriving 2027 for Custom AMD Chip

Microsoft Xbox Project Helix Dev Kits Arriving 2027 for Custom AMD Chip Windows 11 screen showing Xbox Mode interface with quick access to games and a switch back to desktop tools.

Microsoft’s unveiling of Project Helix at the 2026 Game Developer Conference has introduced a bold step toward unifying Xbox and PC gaming. As highlighted by RGT 85, this next-generation console is built around a custom AMD System-on-Chip (SoC), incorporating features like FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) Next for enhanced visuals and neural texture compression to optimize […]

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This Planter Fits the One Balcony Spot Every Other Pot Ignores

Most balcony railings do exactly one thing: keep people from falling off. The corners, in particular, tend to collect nothing more useful than rust and pigeons. Rephorm, a Berlin-based furniture brand, has a different idea about what that corner could be doing, and the result is a planter that fits where no standard pot ever has.

The Eckling is designed specifically for balcony corners, addressing a gap that rectangular window boxes and round hanging pots have never managed to fill. Most railing planters sit along a straight stretch of rail, so corners get skipped entirely. An L-shaped recess cut into the base of the hemispherical bowl allows it to rest squarely on two railing legs at a corner junction, no extra hardware required.

Designer: Michael Hilgers

This is actually the second generation of Rephorm’s thinking on railing planters. The brand’s original Steckling pot, developed in 2006, introduced the idea of a planter that simply drops onto the rail rather than clipping or hanging. The Eckling borrows that logic and extends it to corner placement. Two plastic cable ties hidden beneath the bowl add security in wind, and the design fits railing stock up to 80mm wide across flat steel, round, and rectangular profiles.

At roughly 44cm in diameter, the Eckling offers about double the planting area of a standard round railing pot. The bowl holds approximately 16 liters of soil, nearly three times the capacity of a typical balcony planter. For anyone who has watched a small pot dry out in a single July afternoon, that volume difference matters. More soil means deeper root runs and longer intervals between watering, practical for herbs or compact perennials filling the wide, shallow bowl.

The material is recyclable polyethylene with a wall thickness Rephorm claims is two to three times that of budget planters from hardware stores. At approximately 2.5kg unfilled, the bowl is noticeably heavier than thin-walled alternatives, and that weight is part of the structural argument. Frost resistance is built into the formulation, so the pot stays through winter rather than being hauled inside each autumn. The matte surface reads closer to coated ceramic than the hollow appearance most balcony planters carry.

One real limitation is worth knowing before ordering. If corner posts project above the top rail line, the L-shaped recess cannot seat properly. The geometry only works when corner posts are flush with or below the horizontal rail, common in modern flat-steel and tube railings but less so in older ornamental ironwork, where vertical elements continue past the handrail. That’s a non-starter for a number of older apartment balconies, so it is worth measuring the railing before committing.

The Eckling is made in Germany, and the design is by Berlin-based architect Michael Hilgers, whose broader practice around what he calls “pragmatic design” tends to focus on modest objects that improve existing infrastructure without replacing it. A balcony corner is about as modest a canvas as it gets.

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MacBook Neo vs. M4 MacBook Air: Is the $599 price tag worth the trade-offs?

MacBook Neo vs. M4 MacBook Air: Is the $599 price tag worth the trade-offs? Side view comparison of ports showing Neo USB-C limits versus Air Thunderbolt 4 and MagSafe charging.

When deciding between the MacBook Neo and the M4 MacBook Air, your choice will largely depend on your budget and specific computing needs. The MacBook Neo, starting at $599, is Apple’s most affordable laptop, designed for basic tasks and casual users. On the other hand, the refurbished M4 MacBook Air, priced at $759, offers significantly […]

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Steam Machine Update : Valve Outlines Proton, FEX and Leptin Plan for One Game Build

Steam Machine Update : Valve Outlines Proton, FEX and Leptin Plan for One Game Build Steam Machine verification target shown as 1080p at 30fps, aimed at consistent performance across living-room PCs.

Valve’s recent updates to its gaming hardware lineup, highlighted by Deck Ready, showcase a renewed focus on performance and compatibility. At the core of these developments is the Steam Machine, a device aimed at delivering 1080p resolution at 30fps as a baseline for smooth gameplay. Alongside this, the Steam Frame introduces a dual-purpose design, supporting […]

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Claude Code Update Adds /btw Feature : Side Thread, Lowers Token Spend

Claude Code Update Adds /btw Feature : Side Thread, Lowers Token Spend Anthropic Claude Code interface with a main task running while a secondary chat window handles extra questions.

Anthropic’s new /btw feature for Claude Code offers a structured way to manage multitasking within a single session. According to Nick Saraev, this feature enables users to address secondary tasks without losing the context of their main work. For example, developers can debug code while referencing related documentation in the same thread. By consolidating tasks […]

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MacBook Neo vs. MacBook Air: Is the $500 Savings Worth the Compromise?

MacBook Neo vs. MacBook Air: Is the $500 Savings Worth the Compromise? MacBook Neo vs. MacBook Air

  Deciding between the MacBook Neo and the MacBook Air can be challenging, as both models cater to distinct user needs. The Neo is positioned as an affordable entry-level option, while the Air offers enhanced performance and versatility. Whether you’re a student, casual user, or professional, understanding the differences between these two laptops will help […]

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New Xbox Console Project Helix Targets late-2027 or 2028 Launch : GDC 2026

New Xbox Console Project Helix Targets late-2027 or 2028 Launch : GDC 2026 Xbox executives present Project Helix details on stage at GDC 2026 during the developer keynote session.

Xbox has officially unveiled its next-generation console, Project Helix, at the 2026 Game Developers Conference (GDC). Built in collaboration with AMD, the system features the custom “Magnus” chip, which integrates neural rendering and DirectX13 to enhance graphics and performance. According to colteastwood, the console emphasizes unifying Xbox and PC gaming ecosystems, with specific advancements like […]

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This 1970s Desk Organizer Works in Every Room But Your Office

Desk organizers have a reputation problem. Most are either forgettable plastic trays that could have come from any office supply aisle, or overdesigned contraptions that look busier than the mess they’re meant to fix. Joe Colombo, the Milanese designer who died at just 41, had a very different take on this problem back in 1970, and it looked like nothing else on a desk then or now.

That design was BOB, a compact object holder made from polyurethane gel that Colombo shaped into something unmistakably organic. The form is elongated and low-profile, almost pill-shaped from above, with one end rising into a soft dome and the other tapering nearly flat. B-Line, an Italian label dedicated to acquiring original molds from discontinued Italian design objects, reissued it in 2023 in five colors: terracotta, slate blue, mustard yellow, warm white, and a translucent frosted version called “ice.”

Designer: Joe Colombo

The top surface divides into three zones with no visible partition between them. The dome end opens into a large oval scoop for bulkier items; the center holds a 3-by-4 grid of individual circular holes, each sized for a single pen or brush; the tapered tail has two horizontal slot grooves that hold flat objects like rulers or small notebooks upright. None of this reads as a spec sheet in person. It reads as a single continuous gesture that happens to organize things.

Colombo was working at a moment when Italian design was treating plastic not as a cheap substitute for better materials, but as a medium with its own formal possibilities. Polyurethane gel has a tactile quality most rigid desk accessories never attempt: it gives slightly under pressure, has a matte surface that’s almost skin-like, and its flexibility is what makes the low, curved profile structurally possible in the first place. A stiffer material would have needed walls. This one doesn’t.

B-Line’s campaign photography makes a quiet argument for where BOB actually belongs. It appears on a marble coffee table holding binder clips and scissors, on a chair seat catching pencils and sunglasses, and on a bathroom vanity with makeup brushes in the pen holes and cotton pads in the scoop. One image places the ice-colored version inside a freezer, either a dry joke about the colorway name or a genuine hint that the flexible polyurethane handles cold fine. Probably both.

That flexibility is worth taking seriously. BOB lies nearly flat on any surface, which means it doesn’t create visual clutter the way upright organizers do. It also means the pen holes require implements long enough to stay upright on their own, which is a quiet limitation Colombo’s grid doesn’t advertise. Short lipstick caps, small erasers, and anything under roughly 10 centimeters will just rattle around rather than stand.

The price reflects provenance more than function. B-Line sells through retail partners, not directly to consumers, and those partners have set their own figures: Design Public at $190, Bauhaus 2 Your House at $427. Colombo’s other B-Line reissue, the Boby trolley, is in MoMA’s permanent collection. BOB is the quieter object from the same designer and the same era, and it raises a question the images don’t quite answer: how many rooms does a well-made desk organizer need to conquer before that price starts to feel reasonable?

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