Monthly Archives: March 2026
Apple’s New Two-Phase Launch: Is the iPhone 18 Plus the Spring Surprise?

Apple appears to be exploring the reintroduction of the “Plus” model with its anticipated iPhone 18 lineup, signaling a potential shift in its mid-tier smartphone strategy. Reports suggest that Apple may adopt a split launch approach for the iPhone 18 series, with Pro models expected to debut in September and other variants, including the rumored […]
The post Apple’s New Two-Phase Launch: Is the iPhone 18 Plus the Spring Surprise? appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.
5 Best Spring Gadgets That Are Taking Over Every Tech-Savvy Student’s Wishlist

Spring changes the way students think about their tools. The semester finds its stride, the days stretch longer, and the quiet audit of what is actually working versus what has simply been tolerated becomes impossible to defer. For tech-savvy students, this impulse is never casual. It turns into a deliberate reckoning with every device in the bag, every cable on the desk, and every piece of hardware that earns or fails to earn its place in a schedule already running at capacity.
Most gadget guides aim too low. They recycle the same categories, suggest the predictable safe picks, and miss the specific texture of what a tech-savvy student’s day actually looks like in spring. Tools that genuinely serve that day are portable without sacrifice, precisely designed, and specific enough in their purpose to feel built for the exact problem they solve. The wishlists circulating among students who think carefully about design land on exactly that — and every product here was chosen to reflect it.
1. OrigamiSwift Folding Mouse


The mouse is the peripheral that students consistently overlook until a trackpad fails them mid-session. The OrigamiSwift changes that calculation. Drawing on origami’s structural logic, this Bluetooth 5.2 mouse collapses flat and springs into a full-sized ergonomic device in under 0.5 seconds. At 40 grams and 0.18 inches thin when folded, it disappears into a jacket pocket without adding noticeable weight. Soft-click buttons suit shared study spaces, and a USB-C battery sustains three months on a single charge.
For students moving between a library desk, a café table, and a campus bench in one afternoon, this is the mouse that travels without being noticed until needed. Compatible across Mac, Windows, Android, and iPadOS, it works equally on a personal laptop and a shared lab machine with no additional setup. The ergonomic form handles extended sessions without fatiguing the wrist, turning a recurring compromise into a peripheral that finally earns its place.
What We Like:
- Folds to 0.18 inches and 40 grams, fitting into a jacket pocket without adding meaningful bulk to the daily carry
- Three-month USB-C battery life removes it entirely from the weekly charging routine, so one less thing to think about
What We Dislike:
- Bluetooth-only connectivity limits use on older shared desktops or lab machines that lack wireless support
- The folding mechanism takes a brief adjustment period for students accustomed to the immediate grip of a conventional fixed-body mouse
2. Xiaomi UltraThin Magnetic Power Bank 5000 15W


Power banks occupy a strange design dead zone. Most work as promised and are forgotten the moment they enter a bag. The Xiaomi UltraThin Magnetic Power Bank 5000 15W reframes the category. At 6mm thin — slimmer than any current smartphone — it holds 5,000mAh inside an aluminum alloy shell. Silicon-carbon battery chemistry with 16% silicon content enables higher energy density without expanding the footprint, and a fire-resistant fiberglass rear surface manages heat during wireless charging.
This solves the persistent problem of the charging backup that stays home because it feels too heavy to justify. At 6mm, it sits magnetically against a compatible phone and delivers 15W wirelessly while moving between buildings, sitting through a lecture, or waiting at a transit platform. No cable between bank and phone, no rummaging for the right end. It sits in a pocket as an extension of the device rather than a separate burden to manage throughout the day.
What We Like:
- Silicon-carbon chemistry achieves 5,000mAh within a 6mm profile, making it the thinnest power bank available at this capacity tier
- Magnetic cable-free attachment delivers 15W wirelessly while the phone stays pocketed between classes, with zero management required
What We Dislike:
- 5,000mAh covers roughly one full smartphone charge, which falls short on heavy-use days involving continuous navigation, recording, and streaming
- Magnetic wireless charging is limited to compatible phone models, restricting the cable-free feature for students outside that ecosystem
3. HubKey Gen2

The average student laptop setup involves a quiet accumulation of compromises: a dongle for the display, a separate hub for ports, a cable for audio, and none of it cohering. The HubKey Gen2 addresses this from a single USB-C connection. An 11-in-1 hub in a compact cube, it adds two HDMI ports, each capable of driving a 4K display at 60Hz, four fully customizable physical shortcut keys, and a central control knob that handles everyday actions without navigating software menus.
Spreading a research document across two 4K panels changes the quality of a work session in ways only understood from the inside. Reference material stays open while the draft stays active. Code and documentation share the same eyeline. The shortcut keys reduce the cognitive overhead of memorizing keyboard combinations, and the central knob delivers volume control with tactile immediacy that no software slider replicates. For students working across design, development, or video, this cube earns its place on day one.
What We Like:
- Dual 4K HDMI outputs at 60Hz each simultaneously expand a laptop into a proper two-monitor workstation from a single connection
- Physical shortcut keys and a central control knob bring immediate, tactile control to routine tasks that software menus handle more slowly
What We Dislike:
- Cube form factor suits a stationary desk, but does not pack into a travel bag as cleanly as a flat or cable-style hub alternative
- Full 11-in-1 performance depends on the connected laptop’s USB-C port supporting the required power delivery and data bandwidth specifications
4. BraX open_slate

Almost every tablet arrives sealed, with decisions already made inside the chassis: fixed storage, an inaccessible battery, a software support window that closes on the manufacturer’s schedule. The BraX open_slate rejects that model. This 12-inch 2-in-1 includes an M.2 2280 slot for user-swappable storage, a replaceable 8,000mAh battery rated at 20 hours of runtime, and a 120Hz display driven by a MediaTek Genio 720 chip paired with either 8GB or 16GB of RAM.
The open_slate removes the most predictable frustration of the tablet ownership cycle: the moment a device slows enough to become an obstacle, and the only available response is full replacement. Swappable storage means a capacity upgrade takes an afternoon. A user-replaceable battery means two years of student use does not write off the entire device. For students making a deliberate, multi-year investment in one tablet, this is currently the only option making that argument with hardware to back it.
What We Like:
- User-replaceable M.2 storage and battery extend the device’s usable lifespan well beyond the typical two-to-three year sealed-tablet replacement cycle
- A 20-hour claimed battery runtime on a 120Hz display covers a full academic day without requiring a charge mid-session
What We Dislike:
- MediaTek Genio 720 is a capable mid-range chip, but it is not suited for students with intensive video rendering or compute-heavy creative workloads
- The open modular hardware requires a degree of technical confidence that students coming from fully managed, sealed device ecosystems may need time to build
5. Battery-Free Amplifying iSpeakers


The Battery-Free Amplifying iSpeakers operate on a principle that is easy to underestimate until the sound fills the room. A smartphone sits in the machined Duralumin cradle, and sound waves are directed and amplified through the chamber without any electrical input. The body is the same aluminum alloy used in aircraft construction, chosen for its vibration resistance and acoustic properties. Chamber proportions were developed using the golden ratio, a structural decision that shapes the internal acoustic geometry deliberately.
No charging reminder, no Bluetooth pairing, no firmware update mid-session. A phone in the cradle and the room shifts immediately, audio gaining presence and warmth that a phone speaker lying flat on a desk cannot approach. For study sessions running on focus music, ambient sound, or a lecture replay, the difference registers in seconds. Duralumin handles daily movement without showing wear, and because it operates entirely outside the electrical ecosystem, it performs identically in ten years as it does today.
Click Here to Buy Now: $179.00
What We Like:
- Zero power requirement means no charging, no battery degradation, and no dependency on any cable or power source at any point
- Aircraft-grade Duralumin construction delivers acoustic quality and physical durability that holds across years of regular daily use without deterioration
What We Dislike:
- Passive acoustic amplification improves meaningfully on bare phone speaker output, but cannot match the volume or bass depth of even entry-level powered speakers
- Cradle sizing is optimized for specific smartphone dimensions, and compatibility may vary with larger phones or thick protective cases
The Setup That Actually Works for You
The five products here do not share a category, price point, or use case. What they share is design precision that addresses real daily friction rather than just performing a feature list. A wishlist built on that standard holds up across the full stretch of any semester. These are tools chosen because someone thought carefully about the problem first, and that clarity comes through every time you reach for one.
Spring is short. It moves quickly from the first warm afternoon to the last exam, and the tools you work with shape how much of that time goes toward actual output. The difference between owning something well-considered and tolerating what came with freshman year becomes obvious around week ten. Choosing now means spending the rest of the semester working with something that performs exactly the way a well-chosen tool should.
The post 5 Best Spring Gadgets That Are Taking Over Every Tech-Savvy Student’s Wishlist first appeared on Yanko Design.
The Secret Espionage Tech Hidden Inside Your Credit Card

Credit cards are more than just convenient payment methods, they’re a culmination of decades of technological innovation, some of which have surprising origins. As Veritasium explores, the magnetic stripe, EMV chip and NFC systems that power modern transactions owe their existence, in part, to espionage breakthroughs during the Cold War. For instance, the Soviet-engineered listening […]
The post The Secret Espionage Tech Hidden Inside Your Credit Card appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.
Beat-based dungeon crawlers, card-battling soccer sims and other new indie games worth checking out
Welcome to our latest roundup of what's going on in the indie game space. As ever, we've got some new games for you to dive into this weekend, and a glimpse at some upcoming titles. But, first, a look at indie studio Albatross Interactive's take on a multiplayer mode from a much-loved blockbuster.
Terminal War is a 4v4 third-person shooter and it seems like the small team of developers is trying to keep things grounded. Ammo and supplies are scarce, and there's an emphasis on melee combat with the promise of "brutal executions." The action is set in the late '90s, a few years after a global war, with three factions battling for control and survival in a collapsed version of the United States.
Albatross Interactive isn't shy about the inspiration behind Terminal War. “They canceled The Last of Us Factions 2," the team wrote on X. "So we're building it [sic] our version."
In September 2019, nine months before the game’s eventual release, Naughty Dog confirmed The Last of Us Part 2 wouldn’t have a multiplayer mode. At the time, it told players "you will eventually experience the fruits of our team's online ambition."
That still hasn’t exactly come to pass. The studio formally announced The Last of Us Online in June 2022 and canceled it 18 months later. As such, the Factions mode in 2014's The Last of Us Remastered for PS4 remains the franchise's only remaining multiplayer mode.
Albatross Interactive, which says it's building Terminal War from scratch, plans to reveal more gameplay soon. The game is slated to hit Steam in early access as soon as this summer.
The team expects Terminal War to remain in early access for around 12-18 months, though it noted that "we're a small studio and we'd rather take the time to get it right than rush to a finish line. The timeline will ultimately be shaped by community feedback, the scope of content we deliver, and the standard of quality we hold ourselves to." The studio plans to bring the game to consoles as well.
New releases
I’m into the current iteration of Acclaim as an indie publisher (albeit one with a plan to revive its own historic franchises). Its latest title, GridBeat from Ridiculous Games, is a rhythm-based dungeon crawler in which you're trying to escape from a corporate network after pinching a trove of valuable data. Malware and security protocols are on your tail. Navigating the mazes, interacting with objects and boss battles are all synced to a beat.
GridBeat is available on Steam and Nintendo Switch. It typically costs $20, but there's a 10 percent discount on Switch until April 2. It's 15 percent off on Steam until April 9.
Given how much time I spent playing Football Manager 26 last year, Nutmeg is right up my alley. Getting veteran commentator Jim Rosenthal to pitch the soccer management sim in the launch trailer certainly doesn't hurt.
This is a card-battler take on soccer management and it’s set in the '80s and '90s. You can start out in the lower divisions and can work your way up to the top of the English soccer system. You'll hire and fire staff, and select your team and formation before taking on an opponent. Completing challenges and doing well in training will earn you more card packs.
The trailer reminds me of collecting Panini stickers as a kid as well as the smell of my friends’ Subbuteo figures. I would have said my favorite thing about this is that everything takes place at an era-appropriate desk with a TV that shows results and standings in the style of Teletext and an old computer that has some retro mini-games you can play. However, Sumo Sheffield and Publisher Secret Mode are donating a small portion of every sale of Nutmeg to charity, which is a nice gesture.
Nutmeg is out now on Steam. It'll usually cost you $25, but there's a whopping 40 percent discount until April 2.
Devil Jam is a metal-themed spin on the roguelite formula that Vampire Survivors popularized with a dash of Hades-esque characterization mixed in. It's been out on Steam since November and it hit consoles this week. It costs $8 on PS5 and Switch, and $7.59 on Xbox Series X/S.
You'll wield a cursed guitar as you battle demonic enemies and bosses. As ever with this type of game, it's all about finding fun, powerful builds by synergizing abilities. You can put those together in a 12-slot gear system. I dig the art style and animation in this game from Rogueside too. I especially love that one character dashes by powersliding on their knees.
A couple of months after its debut on Steam, Space Warlord Baby Trading Simulator landed on Xbox Series X/S for $20 this week. The latest game from prolific studio Strange Scaffold is a stock market simulator in which you speculate on the "simulated lives of babies" and how successful (or not) said alien sprogs will be in the future. It takes aim at real-life prediction markets where people can gamble on everything from the Time Person of the Year to nuclear tests.
Upcoming
Here's another game you can actually check out this weekend, as a playtest is taking place on Steam until March 31. Salvation Denied is a co-op construction sim/tower defense game from Firevolt and publisher Digital Vortex Entertainment.
You can get together with up to three friends to build experimental structures at the behest of a foreman who looks like he's stepped right out of Team Fortress 2. You'll have tools like a gravity gun, foam gun and jetpacks on hand to help you form these structures, along with heavy machinery that can move or recycle sections of the build. Coordinating with proximity voice chat could be critical as you and your buds deal with natural disasters like acid rain and meteor showers.
I'm almost always going to be on board with a game that's all about chaos, so I'm interested in checking out Salvation Denied. It's set to hit Steam this fall before landing on PS5 and Xbox Series X/S in 2027.
Someone has stolen the sun. Reclaiming it is your goal in Light Dude, which is from solo developer Ramy of Dergham Games. It's an action game in which the lights go out when you move, so you'll need to figure out your approach to each level and how to avoid hazards before moving forward. There's a first-person mode here too.
Light Dude is slated to hit Steam sometime this spring. A demo is available now.
Solo developer Mateo Covic (aka ZoroArts) is looking to follow up on the success of Paddle Paddle Paddle with another friendslop game. Covic said it took just four weeks to create Cool Story Bro. Up to four players each have five minutes to write a short story that includes four words. These are picked at random or taken from a pool of player suggestions.
Special items appear throughout each round, such as a revolver, which can take another player out of the game for 10 seconds, and one that swaps everyone's stories. If you're the first player to type an item's name, you can use it.
After everyone has finished writing their story, players take turns to read theirs out for the rest of the group. The others vote on whether they liked the tale. If you really hate someone else's short story, you can blow them up with a rocket launcher. If only I had that option at some of the poetry readings I’ve been to.
This seems fun and silly, and the kind of thing that could easily blow up on Twitch (there's an integration that allows viewers to suggest words). Cool Story Bro is slated to hit Steam sometime in April.
Fittingly enough, it's been a long time since Third Shift announced its debut project, Forever Ago. Six years, in fact. The game re-emerged this week during the Xbox Partner Preview showcase. Publisher Annapurna Interactive is bringing it to Xbox Series X/S, PS5, Nintendo Switch 2, Xbox on PC, Steam and Epic Games Store this fall. It'll be available on Xbox Game Pass (and Xbox Cloud) on day one.
This is a road trip adventure in which you take on the role of Alfred. Following a personal tragedy, he ventures north in his minivan to seek redemption. With an instant camera in hand, Alfred will meet new people and explore forests, deserts and mountains. It's another narrative-heavy game from Annapurna, which appears to be leaning heavily into nostalgia this year given that Mixtape is only a few weeks away.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/beat-based-dungeon-crawlers-card-battling-soccer-sims-and-other-new-indie-games-worth-checking-out-110000472.html?src=rssApple’s $1,999 Gamble: Is the iPhone Fold Worth Twice the Price of a Pro?

Apple is reportedly preparing to unveil its first foldable smartphone, the iPhone Fold, a move that could significantly influence the foldable phone industry. By addressing persistent challenges such as screen creases and durability, Apple aims to establish a new benchmark in this competitive market. Through the use of advanced materials and innovative engineering, the iPhone […]
The post Apple’s $1,999 Gamble: Is the iPhone Fold Worth Twice the Price of a Pro? appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.
Valve’s $800 Steam Machine Could Now Cost Over $1,200

The Valve Steam Machine, once a promising mid-range gaming PC option, is now facing significant pricing challenges due to the rising demand for AI technologies. As highlighted by Sam.Alexander.Reviews, the increasing competition for critical components like DDR5 RAM and GPUs has led to substantial cost hikes, pushing the Steam Machine’s price well beyond its original […]
The post Valve’s $800 Steam Machine Could Now Cost Over $1,200 appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Leaks: The "Overdue” Upgrade is Finally Happening
Samsung is poised to make a significant impact on the foldable smartphone market with the anticipated Galaxy Z Fold 8 and its wider variant. Departing from the conventional tall and narrow design, the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide introduces a shorter, broader form factor. This innovative approach aims to enhance usability and media consumption, addressing […]
The post Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Leaks: The “Overdue” Upgrade is Finally Happening appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.
Why OpenAI is Losing $200 Million a Month and What it Means for ChatGPT

OpenAI, once celebrated as a trailblazer in artificial intelligence with the unprecedented success of ChatGPT, now finds itself at a crossroads. Economy Media explores how the company’s rapid rise has exposed critical vulnerabilities, from escalating financial losses, estimated at $200 million per month, to a noticeable slowdown in innovation. For instance, recent updates to its […]
The post Why OpenAI is Losing $200 Million a Month and What it Means for ChatGPT appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.
macOS 26.4 Adds iPhone’s Best Battery Feature to the MacBook

Apple has officially launched macOS 26.4, a comprehensive update designed to enhance your Mac’s functionality, improve performance, and refine the overall user experience. This release introduces a variety of updates across key areas, including Safari, Reminders, Apple Music, battery management, Spotlight search, iClou,d and app compatibility. Each feature has been carefully crafted to address user […]
The post macOS 26.4 Adds iPhone’s Best Battery Feature to the MacBook appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.