Satechi Just Fixed the Speed Drop Problem With an 80Gbps Drive Case

External SSD enclosures have always had a frustrating contradiction at their core. The good ones are fast, but fast enough for long enough is a different story. Sustained transfers, especially when you’re moving large video projects or running a drive-intensive backup, will push most passive enclosures into thermal throttling territory, and that’s when the speed bar you were watching suddenly takes a dive.

That’s the problem Satechi targets with the DotDisk 80Gbps SSD Enclosure, a compact M.2 enclosure designed for the kind of demanding, sustained transfers that would bring most portable drives to their knees. The San Diego-based brand is known for design-forward accessories that don’t compromise on performance, and the DotDisk is built around the idea that fast should also mean consistently fast.

Designer: Satechi

The headline figure is 80Gbps, unlocked through USB4 V2 and full Thunderbolt 5 support. That’s in a different category from the USB 3.2 or even USB4 Gen 2 enclosures most people are still using. In practice, it means multi-gigabyte transfers that used to take several minutes now take seconds, and video editors offloading large ProRes or RAW files won’t have to schedule their coffee break around a progress bar anymore.

The active thermal cooling system is what makes those speeds sustainable. Inside the precision-milled aluminum shell, a microfan and thermal pad work together to keep the drive temperature in check during extended use. This isn’t the passive approach of punching holes in an enclosure and hoping for the best. The active system keeps the DotDisk running at full speed throughout a long session without slowing down mid-transfer.

The enclosure accepts M.2 2280 NVMe SSDs up to 8TB, giving you the flexibility to install whatever drive fits your current needs and upgrade it later without buying a new enclosure. It’s also compatible with Thunderbolt 5, Thunderbolt 4, and USB4, so it works across Mac and Windows setups without friction. You’re not locked into one ecosystem, which matters when you’re moving between a MacBook and a Windows workstation throughout the week.

The body itself is compact enough to slip into any bag pocket and doesn’t demand attention on a desk. A subtle LED indicator confirms the connection without being distracting about it. The box includes a 30 cm Thunderbolt 5 cable, a small screwdriver, and the screws to install your SSD, so you can be up and running without hunting for additional tools. It comes in Silver or Space Black.

At $199.99, the DotDisk lands where you’d expect a well-built, actively cooled Thunderbolt 5 enclosure to sit. That’s a reasonable price given what you’re getting, especially considering that the enclosure is built to outlast the drives you put in it. Supporting SSDs up to 8TB means there’s room to grow your storage over time without having to replace the enclosure along the way. For creators who’ve spent any amount of time watching transfer speeds drop halfway through a session, the active cooling system alone makes the DotDisk worth taking seriously.

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6th-Gen iPod Nano powers triple-display workstation, and it actually works

Move away from the largest computer case mod for a moment and give the 6th-generation iPod Nano a moment of fame again. Before you start thinking what that even means, check out the video above, where a creator from the YouTube channel Will It Work has given the tiny MP3 player a new lease of life with a well-orchestrated triple-display workstation powered entirely by the iPod Nano.

I am writing this on a two-display setup installed on my workstation. But there is no denying the fact that three-display setups are really a craze these days. The setups are not reserved for PC and monitor combos. Even laptops with three screens are keeping up with the trend. This is exactly why the idea of hooking up a tiny iPod Nano to three separate screens really grabbed my attention.

Designer: Will It Work (YT)

The 6th-generation iPod Nano was released in 2010 with a capacitive multitouch screen. It was the last iPod device released by Steve Jobs and was really easy to carry around with its clip-on design. Instead of being carried in the pocket, the device could be clipped to your gear and go where you wanted it to go. Now, the interesting device is put to more use than just playing music.

By connecting the iPod Nano to a 30-pin Apple Keyboard Dock, the DIYer was able to rely on composite video signals from the iPod to three connected Sharp flat screen monitors from the early 2000s. The Keyboard Dock was essentially made for the iPad, but the video shows that it has been tweaked to work with the iPad Nano using a 30-pin spacer adapter. In the video, the creator says he was hopeful that the media controls on the keyboard would be able to control the iPod, but eventually found out that no key on the keyboard actually works with his contraption. It just sits there to finish the workstation setup: the highlight of which of course, is the triple-display connected to the iPod Nano.

While the iPod Nano cannot connect output video and audio directly to the displays (or connected speakers), the creator has used a 3.5mm four-pole jack, which handles audio input and output. With some other adaptors and cables involved, the iPod is hooked to the three Sharp LCD models for visual display as well. A set of Apple Pro speakers has been used for audio output and a stylus interacts with the iPod. Both audio (the music) and video (a picture slideshow) can work simultaneously. Will It Work has been able to establish that in the video.

In addition to playing music and running a slideshow on the three connected LCDs, the iPod Nano-based triple-monitor workstation can also be used to record voice memos. To be able to record memos in podcast-level clarity, the DIYer has hooked up the iPod to a desktop microphone. In the video, he shows how efficiently it can record a voice note and how good the playback quality is.

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DSLR Quality? iPhone 18 Pro Max to Feature First Variable Aperture Lens

DSLR Quality? iPhone 18 Pro Max to Feature First Variable Aperture Lens Close-up render highlighting 512GB and 1TB storage options, with arrows pointing to higher upgrade pricing.

The iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max are set to make waves in the smartphone industry, combining technological advancements with a carefully considered pricing strategy. As Apple celebrates the 20th anniversary of the iPhone, the company is poised to deliver a lineup that balances innovative features with market competitiveness. While base prices are expected to […]

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This Rotating Solar House Grows Fish and Plants Entirely on Its Own

Aquaponic gardening has been getting a lot of attention as a more sustainable way to grow food, especially in urban settings where arable land isn’t exactly plentiful. The concept pairs fish and plants in a closed-loop system where each supports the other, cutting out synthetic fertilizers and reducing water waste. Most implementations, though, tend to be utilitarian and aren’t built to handle seasonal changes without significant supplemental energy input.

That’s the problem Michael Jantzen’s Eco-Aquaponic House was designed to tackle. Built as a public exhibit for a botanical garden, it functions more like a machine than a greenhouse, engineered to grow fish and plants together in an energy-efficient and largely self-sustaining way. Jantzen, whose work merges art, architecture, technology, and sustainable design, has been experimenting with this kind of thinking for over 50 years.

Designer: Michael Jantzen

The system works on a simple but elegant biological loop. Fish waste is cycled through the roots of the surrounding plants as a natural fertilizer. The plants filter the water, which then returns to the fish tank. The cycle repeats continuously with minimal outside input, keeping both fish and plants alive. It’s the kind of closed-loop food production that makes conventional growing methods look rather wasteful by comparison.

What makes the structure particularly clever is how it manages growing conditions year-round without demanding much energy. Six sections rotate around a central pivot point, each serving a different climate function. Two insulated panels wrap around the interior during cold nights to retain heat. Two shade screen sections shield the plants on hot days. Two glass sections open to let in outside air when conditions allow.

The passive thermal management doesn’t stop there. Built around the perimeter of the stationary base are large tubes filled with a heat-retention material that absorbs solar energy during the day and releases it slowly at night, helping keep the fish and plants warm through winter without relying on active heating systems. Those same tubes also moderate daytime temperatures, preventing the interior from overheating when the sun is strong.

On top sits a sun-tracking solar cell array that follows the sun throughout the day, supplying most of the structure’s electrical needs, including the large lamp hung over the central fish tank. Small windows built into the glass sections allow for additional ventilation control when the glass is in the closed position, letting you fine-tune interior conditions depending on what the fish and plants need at any given time.

Inside, plant trays are built into the perimeter of the structure, forming a ring of greenery around the central cylindrical fish tank. Visitors to the botanical garden can get a sense of the system from the outside, or arrange private tours for a closer look from inside through the rear entry door. As a public exhibit, it’s designed as much to teach people about aquaponic gardening as it is to actually grow. It’s a growing facility that takes care of itself season after season, with very little outside intervention required.

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