Honda enters modular camper market with lightweight, solar-powered trailer

Honda has built capable off-roading and towing vehicles, but the company has not had a trailer to match. The Japanese auto manufacturer is changing that now with its own towable solar-powered trailer. Weighing under 1,500 lbs., the prototype is light enough to be towed by nearly every SUV, crossover, or EV in Honda’s lineup and even outside.

Designed to rattle the ultralight, modular camper market, the Honda trailer is customizable to make family camping more accessible and enjoyable. Dubbed the Honda Base Station, it is built to be spacious, airy and bright with a rear hatch entry, a slide-out side kitchen, and a pop-up roof that increases headroom and also creates space for additional sleeping at the campsite.

Designer: Honda

The primary objective behind designing the Base Station is to bring the camper experience to more families. In order to achieve that, Honda has kept the prototype trailer incredibly light, which means it can be towed by a wider range of vehicles, opening its accessibility to a bigger audience. The zero-emission towable Honda trailer features a fiberglass upper shell, which rests on a full aluminum cage, including the chassis.

Courtesy of the tailgate entry, an optional teardrop-style door on the side, and five huge windows around the trailer, the interior is very bright. The Base Station opens up to become spacious and packs power options to make it a capable off-grid camper. On the outside, it doesn’t have anything distinct to show, except for the color-changing LED light strip installed around the trailer’s perimeter. On the inside, it’s a whole new ballgame.

Upon entry you get a low floor, useable for storage and maybe hauling a bike. The queen-size bed on the far end folds down from a futon position to sleep a couple. Modular features allow people to use the Base Station however they want. For instance, the roof can be popped up to create seven feet of stand-up space, or use it for an optional bunk bed. The five windows on the sides can be left as they are or replaced with optional features like a slide-out kitchen, an air conditioner, or an outdoor shower, all while still keeping the overall size of the camper compact enough to fit in an average garage or parking lot.

With the additional sleeping arrangement, Honda affirms, the Base Station should have enough room for a family of four. It is designed for off-grid living; therefore, the camping trailer comes with a lithium battery installed underneath the convertible futon, an inverter for backup, and solar panels to keep the camper and its towing EV powered at all times. All of it can be managed by the Base Station App or onboard touch display indoors, Honda notes.

As mentioned, the Honda Base Station is still a prototype. There is no word on its price and availability timeline as of now, but there is a strong voice within the company that the camper should hit production in the near future.

The post Honda enters modular camper market with lightweight, solar-powered trailer first appeared on Yanko Design.

Amazon’s New World: Aeternum MMO will go offline January 31, 2027

Today, Amazon shared more details about the final chapter of its game New World: Aeternum. The company announced in October that it would wind down support for the MMO, with the Nighthaven season to be its last. New World will be delisted and no longer available for purchase starting today, but the game's servers will not be taken offline until January 31, 2027. People who own the game will be able to continue playing until that date. Nighthaven season will continue through to that end date.

Players who had previously purchased New World: Aeternum will be able to re-download and continue playing up to the shutdown date. In-game currency such as Marks of Fortune will no longer be available to buy starting July 20, 2026, and refunds will not be offered for Marks of Fortune purchases.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/amazons-new-world-aeternum-mmo-will-go-offline-january-31-2027-205449407.html?src=rss

Netflix’s expanded Sony deal includes streaming rights to the Legend of Zelda movie

As part of a new agreement, films from Sony Pictures Entertainment will stream on Netflix first, the companies announced via a joint statement. The new deal expands on the exclusive rights Netflix had to Sony films in the US, and means the service will be the first place people will be able to stream upcoming projects like the live-action adaptation of The Legend of Zelda, and a quartet of biopics about The Beatles.

Sony's films will stream worldwide on Netflix in what's called "Pay-1," the first window of availability after a movie's theatrical and VOD releases. As part of the deal, Netflix is also licensing an undisclosed number of films and television shows from the Sony Pictures back catalog to help fill out its library. Netflix says the new arrangement "will roll out gradually" as licensing rights become available throughout the year, with full availability happening sometime in 2029. Neither company shared how long this new setup will last, but did describe the deal as a "multi-year agreement."

Netflix and Sony's partnership has been fruitful so far. Films like Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, Uncharted and Anyone But You have had popular second lives on the streaming service. In the case of KPop Demon Hunters, Netflix was also able to spin a surprise Sony Animation streaming hit into a profitable theatrical run. Netflix will pay Sony north of $7 billion for this new deal, Variety reports — clearly that's worth it to secure the companies’ relationship for another few years.

Netflix has a similar deal with Universal, which has brought other Nintendo adaptations to the streaming service like The Super Mario Bros Movie. Beyond licensing, the company has an even bigger purchase in mind, though: buying Warner Bros. for $82.7 billion. In an effort to prevent the deal from going through, Paramount is now suing Warner Bros. Discovery for ignoring its own competing bid for the company.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/netflixs-expanded-sony-deal-includes-streaming-rights-to-the-legend-of-zelda-movie-203011384.html?src=rss

Someone Built a Biodegradable 8GB Hard Drive Out of Mushrooms

So here’s a sentence I never thought I’d write: someone made a USB drive out of mushrooms. Well, technically mycelium, the sprawling fungal network that lives underground and occasionally pops up as the mushrooms we eat. But still. We’re talking about storing your family photos, tax documents, and embarrassing early-2000s selfies inside what is essentially cultivated fungus. And somehow, this makes perfect sense.

Enter the Soft Drive, which looks less like a tech product and more like something grown in a lab that studies alien artifacts. Designer Sree Krishna Pillarisetti built this portable drive with a shell made from mycelium, the root-like structure of fungi, combined with hemp and bioplastics from waste materials. You can see the fungal fibers through the translucent case, all wispy and organic, protecting the electronics inside. It’s strange and beautiful and deliberately so. The whole thing is designed to make you feel the weight of your data again, to make storage physical and local and weird in a way that makes you reconsider why we ever outsourced our digital memories to faceless corporations in the first place.

Designer: Sree Krishna Pillarisetti

The translucent casing shows off the wispy, organic texture of mycelium mixed with hemp, wrapped around a standard memory card and heat sink. There’s a woven lanyard attached like it’s a charm you’d wear. It holds 8GB, which sounds quaint until you realize that’s exactly the point. This isn’t about competing with cloud storage. It’s about asking why we ever thought it was a good idea to hand over our entire digital lives to massive, energy-guzzling server farms we’ll never see or control.

The name is doing a lot of heavy lifting here, and I’m here for it. “Soft Drive” as the inverse of “hard drive” is chef’s kiss levels of nomenclature. Pillarisetti, who completed this as his MFA thesis at Parsons, built the entire shell from materials sourced from waste streams: mycelium, hemp fibers, and polylactic acid (PLA). The mycelium acts as natural shock absorption, which is clever because dropping your drive has historically been a nightmare scenario. Fungi don’t crack the way plastic does. They compress, absorb impact, and generally behave like they evolved for this, which, in a roundabout way, they kind of did.

And I personally love how deliberately weird this thing looks. Consumer electronics have spent decades trying to disappear, to become these frictionless black mirrors we barely notice. The Soft Drive does the opposite. It foregrounds its materials, makes you aware you’re holding something that grew, that came from a living process. The translucent case means you see everything: the fibrous mycelium texture, the metallic components inside, the fact that this object has layers and history. It’s the anti-iPhone, and I mean that as a compliment. Pillarisetti calls it a “regenerative memory storage device,” which is a fancy way of saying it can eventually break down and return to the earth instead of sitting in a landfill for the next thousand years. The whole concept pushes toward decentralized local networks, physical sharing, data you can hand someone instead of emailing a Dropbox link. It’s romantic in a way tech hasn’t been in years.

The post Someone Built a Biodegradable 8GB Hard Drive Out of Mushrooms first appeared on Yanko Design.

Flaw in 17 Google Fast Pair audio devices could let hackers eavesdrop

Now would be a good time to update all your Bluetooth audio devices. On Thursday, Wired reported on a security flaw in 17 headphone and speaker models that could allow hackers to access your devices, including their microphones. The vulnerability stems from a faulty implementation of Google's one-tap (Fast Pair) protocol.

Security researchers at Belgium's KU Leuven University Computer Security and Industrial Cryptography group, who discovered the security hole, named the flaw WhisperPair. They say a hacker within Bluetooth range would only require the accessory's (easily attainable) device model number and a few seconds.

"You're walking down the street with your headphones on, you're listening to some music. In less than 15 seconds, we can hijack your device," KU Leuven researcher Sayon Duttagupta told Wired. "Which means that I can turn on the microphone and listen to your ambient sound. I can inject audio. I can track your location." The researchers notified Google about WhisperPair in August, and the company has been working with them since then.

Fast Pair is supposed to only allow new connections while the audio device is in pairing mode. (A proper implementation of this would have prevented this flaw.) But a Google spokesperson told Engadget that the vulnerability stemmed from an improper implementation of Fast Pair by some of its hardware partners. This could then allow a hacker's device to pair with your headphones or speaker after it's already paired with your device.

"We appreciate collaborating with security researchers through our Vulnerability Rewards Program, which helps keep our users safe," a Google spokesperson wrote in a statement sent to Engadget. "We worked with these researchers to fix these vulnerabilities, and we have not seen evidence of any exploitation outside of this report's lab setting. As a best security practice, we recommend users check their headphones for the latest firmware updates. We are constantly evaluating and enhancing Fast Pair and Find Hub security."

The researchers created the video below to demonstrate how the flaw works

In an email to Engadget, Google said the steps required to access the device’s microphone or audio are complex and involve multiple stages. The attackers would also need to remain within Bluetooth range. The company added that it provided its OEM partners with recommended fixes in September. Google also updated its Validator certification tool and its certification requirements.

The researchers say that, in some cases, the risk applies even to those who don't use Android phones. For example, if the audio accessory has never been paired with a Google account, a hacker could use WhisperPair to not only pair with the audio device but also link it to their own Google account. They could then use Google's Find Hub tool to track the device's (and therefore your) location.

Google said it rolled out a fix to its Find Hub network to address that particular scenario. However, the researchers told Wired that, within hours of the patch’s rollout, they found a workaround.

The 17 affected devices are made by 10 different companies, all of which received Google Fast Pair certification. They include Sony, Jabra, JBL, Marshall, Xiaomi, Nothing, OnePlus, Soundcore, Logitech and Google. (Google says its affected Pixel Buds are already patched and protected.) The researchers posted a search tool that lets you see if your audio accessories are vulnerable.

In a statement sent to Engadget, OnePlus said it's investigating the issue and "will take appropriate action to protect our users' security and privacy." Marshall said it patched the issue in November and is working with Google to avoid similar issues in the future (see full statement below). We also contacted the other accessory makers and will update this story if we hear back.

The researchers recommend updating your audio devices regularly. However, one of their concerns is that many people will never install the third-party manufacturer's app (required for updates), leaving their devices vulnerable.

The full report from Wired has much more detail and is worth a read.

Update, January 15 2026, 4:04PM ET: “We can confirm that Marshall has issued the necessary firmware updates and security patches to address the headphones potentially affected,” a company representative told Engadget. “These updates have been available since November and have been offered to all users since then. While this is an industry-wide issue, we take it seriously and are working closely with Google to reduce the risk of similar vulnerabilities in the future.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/flaw-in-17-google-fast-pair-audio-devices-could-let-hackers-eavesdrop-194613456.html?src=rss

Amazon is making a Fallout Shelter competition reality TV show

The second season of Amazon's excellent Fallout show is currently airing, but the company is already looking to expand its programming around the popular franchise. Prime Video has greenlit a unscripted reality show titled Fallout Shelter. It will be a ten-episode run with Studio Lambert, the team behind reality projects including Squid Game: The Challenge and The Traitors, as its primary producer. Bethesda Game Studios’ head honcho Todd Howard is attached as an executive producer.

Amazon's description of Fallout Shelter is: "Across a series of escalating challenges, strategic dilemmas and moral crossroads, contestants must prove their ingenuity, teamwork and resilience as they compete for safety, power and ultimately a huge cash prize."

It seems fitting that the producer is the same as Squid Game: The Challenge, where a show critiquing capitalism is turned into a competition about winning money. A reality show sounds like the sort of thing you'd find in a Fallout game side quest accompanied by pointed commentary about greed rather than an activity people of the Wasteland would take seriously. Maybe the new series will be an interesting mix of survival skills and dark humor that feels true to the Fallout ethos. But, and I say this as a big viewer of reality shows, I’m not holding my breath.

The name echos the free-to-play mobile game Bethesda released in 2015. Fallout Shelter lets people build and improve their out Vault-Tec residence, managing the resources for a growing cadre of underground survivors. It seems pretty likely that there will be some type of tie-in between the game and the show, but any details about that might pop up closer to when the program is ready to air. It's currently casting, and no release timeline has been shared.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/amazon-is-making-a-fallout-shelter-competition-reality-tv-show-190151855.html?src=rss

Huawei Mate X7 Review: When a Foldable Finally Feels Finished

PROS:


  • Exceptionally thin foldable design that feels resolved and comfortable daily

  • Matched dual displays deliver consistent quality folded or unfolded

  • Camera system prioritizes realism, balance, and dependable everyday results

  • Strong battery life with fast wired and genuinely usable wireless charging

  • Thoughtful ergonomics make it feel like a phone first, foldable second

CONS:


  • HarmonyOS requires ecosystem flexibility and willingness to adjust workflows

  • Telephoto zoom range favors balance over extreme long distance reach

RATINGS:

AESTHETICS
ERGONOMICS
PERFORMANCE
SUSTAINABILITY / REPAIRABILITY
VALUE FOR MONEY

EDITOR'S QUOTE:

A foldable that finally disappears into daily life instead of demanding attention.
award-icon

The best foldables are the ones that stop asking for permission. After years of watching the form factor fight against itself, the Mate X7 arrives as something quieter: a device where restraint replaces spectacle, and compromise fades into the background. What makes it notable isn’t ambition. It’s resolution. The proportions feel considered. The materials feel deliberate. The hinge feels invisible in the way all good engineering eventually should. This is not a phone that announces itself as a foldable. It simply behaves like a flagship that opens when you need more space.

What makes the Mate X7 feel distinct is not how much it can do, but how deliberately its form has been resolved. From the first day, the Mate X7 felt less like a concept I needed to accommodate and more like a tool that quietly folded itself into my routine. That’s a subtle distinction, but it’s the one that matters most. This isn’t about novelty anymore. It’s about maturity.

Design and Ergonomics

Folded, the Mate X7 feels surprisingly ordinary in the best way possible. The thickness stays under ten millimeters, which means it slips into pockets without that familiar resistance most book style foldables still have. Unfolded, it measures approximately 4.5 millimeters. Both displays run at 2.4K resolution on LTPO OLED panels with adaptive refresh from 1 to 120 Hz, the outer screen peaking at 3,000 nits and the inner at 2,500 nits. The curved edges soften the contact points in your hand, and the weight feels evenly distributed rather than top heavy. I never found myself adjusting my grip to compensate for the hinge or camera module.

The black vegan leather rear panel changes how the phone sits in the hand. It’s softer than glass, warmer than metal, and far less prone to slipping during one handed use. Fingerprints don’t cling to it the way they would on a glossy surface. Over time, the leather develops a subtle patina rather than showing wear, which frames aging as character rather than damage. It feels like a material choice made for daily comfort, not display.

The redesigned camera module warrants more attention than it usually gets in foldable reviews because it does more than house optics. This shift away from the circular camera island feels less like a styling decision and more like a correction to how foldables have been carrying visual mass. The Time Space Portal design stretches vertically, which aligns with the natural proportions of a folded device instead of fighting them. It also spreads mass along the back rather than concentrating it near the top, which helps explain why the Mate X7 never feels top heavy in the hand. This design only works because Huawei re-engineered the camera system to fit within the physical constraints of a thinner foldable body, allowing it to read as a surface element rather than a mechanical bulge. What you end up with is a camera module that feels integrated into the body instead of attached to it. Paired with the leather rear panel, the camera module reads less like a hardware interruption and more like part of a continuous material composition.

The interface plays a quiet but important role in how the Mate X7 feels to live with. When the phone is folded, core interactions stay comfortably within thumb reach instead of drifting upward or outward. Unfolding the device doesn’t feel like switching modes so much as expanding the same workspace. Apps reflow predictably rather than rearranging themselves in ways that break muscle memory. That predictability matters because it reinforces the physical design choices. You unfold when you want more space, not because the interface forces you to. The software respects the hardware’s proportions, which is why the Mate X7 feels cohesive rather than clever.

Unfolded, the eight inch inner display changes posture more than behavior. You don’t suddenly use the phone differently. You simply see more of what you were already doing. Email triage feels less cramped. Reading long articles feels natural instead of compressed. The crease fades into the background quickly, and because both displays share the same resolution class, refresh rate range, and color tuning, the transition between folded and unfolded never feels like a downgrade or upgrade. It feels consistent.

That consistency is what makes the design work. The Mate X7 doesn’t force you to choose between screens. It lets you forget about the distinction.

Hinge and Durability

Foldables still live or die by trust. The Mate X7 builds that trust quietly. The hinge opens with steady resistance and closes with a controlled final movement. There’s no snap. No wobble. No audible feedback that makes you hesitate. After days of frequent folding and unfolding, it never felt looser or stiffer than it did out of the box.

Knowing there is a layered structure under the inner display changes how you interact with it. You stop hovering your fingers. You stop being overly careful. The screen responds like a screen, not like something you’re afraid to touch. That psychological shift is important, and it’s something many foldables still fail to achieve.

Water resistance doesn’t turn this into a rugged phone, but it removes anxiety from daily life. Light rain, splashes near a sink, condensation from a cold bottle. These moments no longer feel like threats. You don’t think about them. You keep using the phone.

Performance and Thermal Behavior

The Mate X7 uses a Huawei-designed chipset paired with an updated internal cooling system built specifically for the thermal constraints of a foldable chassis. Rather than emphasizing raw performance numbers, the focus here is sustained responsiveness and thermal stability during extended use. That design intent shows up immediately in daily operation.

Performance on the Mate X7 never called attention to itself, which is exactly what I want from a device in this category. Swiping, scrolling, and switching between apps felt effortless. I never found myself waiting for a transition or wondering if the system would keep up. Rather than chasing benchmark headlines, the platform here prioritizes consistency, keeping animations fluid, app launches quick, and daily use free from friction or compromise.

It’s clear that HarmonyOS isn’t just running on this hardware. It’s tuned for it. The software and silicon work together in a way that feels quiet rather than flashy. Menus respond the moment you touch them. Transitions between folded and unfolded states don’t stutter. High refresh rates stay smooth without feeling like the system is straining to maintain them. That kind of optimization is easy to overlook until you use a device where it’s missing.

When I put the Mate X7 through longer stretches of use, the thermal behavior became the real story. Video calls, heavy browsing, photography, and frequent multitasking ran together without noticeable heat buildup. The vapor chamber cooling system does its work invisibly. The phone stayed comfortable in my hand even during more demanding sessions, and I never found myself shifting my grip to avoid a warm spot. That matters more on a foldable because heat has fewer places to go. The Mate X7 handles that constraint well.

The result is a device that feels steady rather than startling. Performance here isn’t about peak numbers. It’s about consistency across hours of use, which is exactly what allows a foldable to function as a primary phone instead of something you second-guess.

Battery Life and Charging

The Mate X7 carries a 5,300 mAh silicon anode battery, with 66 W wired charging and 50 W wireless. In practice, that capacity translates to a full day of mixed use with time split between the outer and inner displays without feeling like a gamble. Even on heavier days, I wasn’t watching the percentage with concern by evening.

Charging reinforces that confidence. Wired charging is fast enough that short top ups meaningfully extend the day. Wireless charging is practical rather than symbolic. Together, they change how you plan your usage. You stop budgeting power. You start trusting the device to keep up.

That confidence is what allows a foldable to function as a primary phone instead of something you plan around.

Camera Experience

The camera system consists of a 50 megapixel main sensor with a variable physical aperture that opens to f/1.49, a 50 megapixel telephoto with 3.5x optical zoom housed in a vertical periscope structure, and a 40 megapixel ultrawide at f/2.2. Video captures at 4K.

The camera on the Mate X7 doesn’t ask you to think about it. You raise the phone, frame the shot, and trust the result. That trust builds quickly because the camera behaves the same way whether you’re indoors, outdoors, or somewhere in between. It doesn’t surprise you. It doesn’t overprocess. It just works, and that consistency is what allows photography to feel like a natural extension of using the phone rather than a separate task you have to manage.

The 50 megapixel main sensor handles light with a kind of patience you notice over time. In bright conditions, it holds back instead of pushing saturation or sharpening edges artificially. In low light, the variable physical aperture opens wider, which means the sensor gathers more light without relying entirely on software to compensate. The result is images that retain structure in shadows and control in highlights. Colors stay grounded. Skin tones stay believable. The camera doesn’t chase drama. It preserves what’s actually there.

The 50 megapixel telephoto uses a vertical periscope design, which is what allows it to exist inside a body this thin. At 3.5x optical zoom, the range feels deliberately restrained. It’s not trying to reach the moon. It’s trying to be useful at the distances where you actually want more detail. In practice, details hold together. Color stays consistent with the main sensor. Macro capability follows the same logic. You move closer and the lens responds without hunting or losing sharpness. It feels considered, not novelty driven.

Video capture at 4K benefits from the same restraint. The processing pipeline stays out of the way. High contrast scenes remain readable. Motion stays controlled without aggressive smoothing. Skin tones don’t drift toward artificial warmth or coolness. HDR processing handles mixed lighting without making the image feel overworked. The result is footage that looks balanced, not corrected. You notice this most when reviewing clips later. They look like what you saw, not like what the software decided you should see.

What ties all of this together is the vertical camera module. Because Huawei engineered the optics to fit a constrained space, the camera system doesn’t dominate the device. It doesn’t create a top heavy grip. It doesn’t force a thicker body. Instead, it sits inside the form as a functional element rather than a visual statement. That’s what allows the Mate X7 to feel like a phone that happens to take excellent photos, rather than a camera that happens to fold.

Software and Daily Use

The Mate X7 runs HarmonyOS, optimized specifically for foldable layout behavior and dual display continuity. Transitions between folded and unfolded states happen without disruption. Apps reflow logically. Multitasking feels natural rather than forced.

The absence of Google services remains a practical consideration, but it’s no longer the hard stop it once was for many users. Workarounds exist, and in daily use, most essentials are accessible. Whether that trade off is acceptable depends on your ecosystem priorities, but it no longer overshadows the hardware itself.

Sustainability and Longevity

Sustainability on the Mate X7 is less about messaging and more about what happens when a device is designed to survive years of repetition. A device that lasts longer is inherently more responsible. The Mate X7 feels built to survive years of daily use rather than a single upgrade cycle, largely because it avoids unnecessary complexity. Materials are chosen for strength. The hinge is engineered for repetition. The screens are designed to be used, not protected from the user.

That longevity changes the ownership equation. This doesn’t feel like a phone you replace quickly. It feels like one you settle into.

Value and Perspective

The Mate X7 sits firmly in premium territory, but its value comes from reduction rather than addition. Fewer compromises. Fewer warnings. Fewer behavioral adjustments. You’re not paying for spectacle. You’re paying for cohesion.

It feels less like a statement piece and more like a refined tool. For users willing to step outside familiar software ecosystems, the hardware experience justifies that decision.

Considerations

Living with the Mate X7 asks you to be intentional about your software habits. HarmonyOS is capable and well optimized for this hardware, but it operates outside the ecosystems most people have built their workflows around. That requires awareness, not compromise. Whether it fits depends on how tied you are to specific services and how willing you are to adjust.

This is not a device chasing peak numbers. The performance tuning here prioritizes stability over raw output, and that balance holds up well in daily use. In sustained, heavy scenarios, the ceiling does become visible, but it rarely surfaces during normal workflows. For users who push hardware constantly, it is worth understanding upfront. For everyone else, the experience remains smooth and dependable.

The 3.5x optical zoom is a deliberate choice, not a limitation hidden by marketing. It exists because a longer reach would have required a thicker body or a heavier module. If long range photography defines how you shoot, this restraint matters. If it doesn’t, the telephoto performs exactly as it should.

This is still a foldable. The engineering has matured, the materials have improved, and the confidence I felt using it was real. But a device that folds will always ask for a different kind of respect than one that doesn’t. This invites normal use, not careless use.

Final Thoughts

Living with the Huawei Mate X7 feels less like adapting to the future and more like finally arriving there. The device doesn’t ask for patience. It doesn’t demand care. It doesn’t rely on novelty to justify itself. It works.

That may be the most meaningful evolution in foldable design so far. It earns trust by disappearing into daily life and only reminding you it’s special when you need more space, more light, or more time.

That’s what a finished product feels like. In that sense, the Mate X7 feels less like the next foldable and more like the first one that understands what it’s supposed to be.

The post Huawei Mate X7 Review: When a Foldable Finally Feels Finished first appeared on Yanko Design.

How to claim Verizon’s $20 credit for Wednesday’s service outage

Verizon is offering a very small mea culpa after Wednesday's massive outage, which drew more than 1.5 million reports on Downdetector and lasted hours. Initially, the carrier posted on X that it will offer a $20 credit, but customers must redeem it in the myVerizon app. The company then said the credit could be claimed though customer service (via phone or chat), but our editors’ attempts to do so via chat were met with a message to wait for a text with further instructions.

Engadget editors began receiving the texts this morning (Jan 16) with a link to redeem. From there, you need to log into your account and visit the Account Overview section. Up top, there should be a Take Action or Mobile Actions button with a red notification circle. Click that and you’ll see a pop-up about the credit and a Redeem Now button. After you click that, you’re done, and Verizon says you should see the credit in one or two billing cycles. Of course, you’ll want to keep an eye out that it actually happens and contact the company if it doesn’t show up.

"This credit isn’t meant to make up for what happened. No credit really can," the company wrote. "But it’s a way of acknowledging your time and showing that this matters to us." Incensed customers have largely replied with incredulity, both at the miniscule amount, and that it isn't being applied automatically. The entire redemption process takes a few clicks and about a minute to complete, which makes it even more frustrating that it can’t be automatically applied to every customer’s bill.

Update, January 15 2026, 11:57 PM ET: Verizon says the credit can be claimed through customer service via phone, chat and online in addition to the myVerizon app. 

Update, January 16 2026, 10:29 AM ET: This story has been updated with detailed info about the redemption process which Verizon now says is completed with a link that will be texted to customers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/how-to-claim-verizons-20-credit-for-wednesdays-service-outage-171909695.html?src=rss

Heist game Relooted gets a release date

The intriguing Africanfuturist heist game, Relooted, is out on February 10. Developed by independent South African studio Nyamakop, the game focuses on a ragtag crew from Johannesburg that liberates real-life African artifacts from a series of fictionalized Western museums.

Relooted is best described as a 2.5d side-scrolling action platformer with stealth and puzzle elements. You have to carefully plan each heist with your fellow teammates, knowing where to place each crew member and how you’re going to get in and out in one piece. Once you’ve grabbed the artifact you’re looking for in each mission, an alarm will sound and you have a limited amount of time to escape, so good preparation is vital.

The studio’s previous game, the platformer Semblance, was significant for being the first South Africa-developed IP to come to a Nintendo console when it launched on Switch in 2018. At E3 that same year, Nyamakop programmer Cukia Kimani and designer Ben Myres talked to Engadget about the difficulties of getting your game in front of the major platform-holders as an indie developer based in sub-Saharan Africa. Without notable local industry events or reps in the country, the developers had to do a lot of globe-trotting in order to get their game noticed.

At the time of writing there’s no Switch or Switch 2 release lined up for Relooted, but the game is coming to PC and Xbox consoles next month.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/heist-game-relooted-gets-a-release-date-173456541.html?src=rss

Someone Made a Flat-Pack Stool from Glass That Loops Like Frozen Water

Flat-pack furniture is usually shorthand for budget compromises, cardboard boxes stuffed with dowels, and Allen keys that disappear the moment you need them. It is something you tolerate for convenience rather than admire, defined by getting furniture to your door cheaply rather than making you excited about assembly. The tension between wanting sculptural pieces and needing things that can actually ship and fit through narrow stairwells rarely gets resolved gracefully.

Tide Stool treats flat-pack as a starting point for luxury instead of a constraint. Designed by Vinayak Syam for DreamDeadline Works and produced by House of Sach, it is built from toughened glass legs, precision 3D-printed joinery, and hand-finished upholstery. The structure rises from a flat kit into a flowing form, shaped by curves and loops rather than brute-force mass, with the name being very much intentional.

Designer: Vinayak Syam

Instead of chunky wooden legs, Tide uses transparent glass fins that fold and loop around a central axis, carrying load through geometry. The panels curve out and back in, sharing weight across their profiles, so strength comes from the path the glass takes rather than thickness. It flips the usual hierarchy where glass is treated as fragile skin and heavier materials are trusted with structural work.

Receiving Tide as a flat set of glass pieces and joinery turns assembly into a building ritual rather than a chore. Slotting the fins into 3D-printed nodes lets you watch the structure emerge from motion, where overlapping curves and visible joints become part of the composition. The design makes those connections part of the visual language, so engineering reads as an aesthetic feature rather than something to hide.

The upholstered top sits above the glass base as a soft disc that comes in more than thirty colour finishes. Upholstery is offered in fabric and vegan leather, with Deep Sienna being the leather option and the rest using elevated textiles. That palette lets the same glass base feel quiet and monochrome in one space or warm and expressive in another, without losing its sculptural identity.

Flat-pack construction makes shipping and moving easier, especially for people who rearrange or relocate often, yet once assembled, the stool reads as a single object rather than a kit. The toughened glass and looping geometry give real load-bearing confidence while keeping the footprint visually light. It is the rare piece that respects both logistics and living rooms without asking you to choose between practicality and presence.

Tide turns apparent fragility into a quiet expression of resilience. The transparent legs, visible joinery, and soft seat work together to make strength feel like a product of balance and flow rather than heaviness. For anyone tired of choosing between sculptural furniture and flat-pack practicality, a glass stool that arrives as parts and stands like a tide frozen mid-rise feels like a surprisingly thoughtful middle ground.

The post Someone Made a Flat-Pack Stool from Glass That Loops Like Frozen Water first appeared on Yanko Design.