Google I/O : Google and Samsung Are Changing Smart Glasses Forever

Google I/O : Google and Samsung Are Changing Smart Glasses Forever A stylish model showcasing the Gemini-powered smart glasses.

Google has unveiled intelligent eyewear powered by its Gemini AI platform during Google I/O. Developed in partnership with Samsung, Warby Parker and Gentle Monster, these glasses offer features such as real-time augmented reality overlays and instant text translation. For instance, users can view live translations of foreign text directly within their line of sight, enhancing […]

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This €265 Aluminum Table Was Designed Backward to Waste Just 4%

Furniture manufacturing has a quiet waste problem that rarely makes it into the marketing copy. Most pieces require significantly more raw material than what ends up in the finished product, with offcuts, excess, and scraps treated as an acceptable cost of doing business. Some studios have started designing around this inefficiency, treating material constraints not as a limitation but as a creative starting point.

Germany-based Momentum Studio took exactly that approach with its 06 Side Table. Rather than designing a form and then figuring out how to cut it from aluminum, the studio worked the problem in reverse, focusing on how to extract a meaningful shape from a flat sheet with as little waste as possible. The result is a table that looks like it came from a sketch, not a spreadsheet.

Designer: Momentum Studio

The laser-cut parts were nested with enough precision to use 96% of the raw aluminum area, leaving just 4% as offcuts. That figure wasn’t incidental; it was a major focus during development. By designing the two flat panels to fit together as efficiently as possible, the studio kept material costs low enough to offer the piece at €265 while keeping the entire production strictly made in Germany.

What emerged from that constraint is a silhouette that could easily pass for something from the Bauhaus era. The outer body is formed from two rectangular panels with softly rounded corners, each carrying a large circular cutout that creates an opening through the structure. A circular shelf sits midway inside, and a round tabletop closes the form at the top. The geometry is simple but hard to reduce further.

The material is Aluminium AlMg3, hand-brushed and waxed for what Momentum Studio calls a raw finish. That deliberate restraint means the aluminum will develop a natural patina over time, something the studio frames not as a defect but as part of the piece’s evolving character. The screws are stainless steel, and the assembled table weighs 6.75kg at 47cm x 47cm x 47.5cm.

The table ships flat-packed and goes together without any tools in about five minutes. That’s a practical bonus for a piece that doesn’t look like it should be easy to put together. The lower circular shelf is sized well enough for a book, a small object, or whatever habitually ends up beside a reading chair or bed. The tabletop above handles whatever you’d normally want within arm’s reach.

The design commitment extends to its broader material philosophy, which the studio describes as selecting materials for their permanence rather than their convenience, aiming to create objects designed to age with dignity and outlast generations. It’s the kind of table that stays in a room for a long time, which seems to be exactly the point. For a piece built from raw, waxed aluminum, that ambition doesn’t seem far-fetched.

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Two Major Upgrades Are Coming to the Apple Watch Ultra 4

Two Major Upgrades Are Coming to the Apple Watch Ultra 4 Apple Watch Ultra 4

The Apple Watch Ultra 4 is poised to deliver its most substantial updates since its debut in 2022. With a focus on refined design and innovative health monitoring, this next-generation smartwatch aims to enhance usability, durability, and wellness tracking. These advancements are expected to reinforce its position as a leader in wearable health technology, catering […]

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How Gemini 3.5 Flash Rivals Google’s Pro Models at a Fraction of the Cost

How Gemini 3.5 Flash Rivals Google’s Pro Models at a Fraction of the Cost Google Gemini 3.5 Flash launch presentation interface.

Google’s Gemini 3.5 Flash marks a pivotal moment in the evolution of AI models, bypassing traditional preview phases to launch directly into general availability. This shift highlights Google’s confidence in the model’s readiness for real-world applications, offering businesses and developers a production-ready solution that balances performance with cost-effectiveness. According to Prompt Engineering, one standout feature […]

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Why the iPhone 18 Pro Max Will Be Apple’s Most Aggressive Release Yet

Why the iPhone 18 Pro Max Will Be Apple’s Most Aggressive Release Yet The new iPhone 18 Pro Max displaying advanced AI features

Apple is preparing to make a bold statement with the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max, navigating a challenging landscape shaped by global RAM shortages and rising component costs. While many competitors are expected to respond with price hikes, Apple may chart a different course, either maintaining current price points or enhancing value without substantial […]

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What the New Garmin Cirqa and Vivosmart 6 Leak Actually Reveals

What the New Garmin Cirqa and Vivosmart 6 Leak Actually Reveals Side by side comparison of Garmin Cirqa and Vivosmart 6

Garmin’s upcoming wearables, the Vivosmart 6 and Circa, have sparked significant interest following recent leaks, which TechAvid explores in detail. The Vivosmart 6 is set to include built-in GPS, a long-awaited upgrade from its predecessor, allowing users to track outdoor activities without relying on a smartphone. Meanwhile, the Circa takes a different approach as a […]

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The Secret Feature Apple is Testing for the iPhone Fold Ultra

The Secret Feature Apple is Testing for the iPhone Fold Ultra Side profile showing the minimized screen crease on the foldable iPhone

Apple’s rumored foldable iPhone, potentially named the iPhone Fold Ultra, has generated substantial excitement within the tech industry. However, reports suggest that the development process is facing significant challenges, particularly with the durability of its hinge mechanism. This critical issue could delay the device’s launch until 2027. Despite these obstacles, Apple is making strides in […]

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Milan 2026’s Most Interesting Chandelier Is Named After a Computer

Milan Design Week 2026 was, by most accounts, a fair deeply in love with the handmade. Craft, texture, labour, and the visible trace of human effort were the recurring themes that season. So it felt like a deliberate and well-timed provocation when, inside Nilufar’s historic gallery on Via della Spiga, Andrea Mancuso unveiled LUMIAC: a chandelier that moves on its own, generates its own choreography of light, and takes its name from a 1950s computer.

The name is no accident. LUMIAC stands for Light Unit Mechanized Intelligence Apparatus Computer, a direct nod to MANIAC, one of the earliest autonomous computers built in the 1950s and one of the machines that essentially launched the age of computation. Mancuso chose this reference deliberately, grounding the piece in the origins of electronic thinking rather than in the shinier, more marketable language of today’s AI conversation.

Designer: Andrea Mancuso

That distinction matters more than it might seem at first. Anyone can slap the word “intelligent” on a product in 2026 and call it a day. Mancuso went further back, to a time when the boundary between human logic and machine logic was first being tested, and asked what it would look like to translate that early electronic reasoning into light and movement.

What you actually see at Nilufar is a cast aluminium and glass ceiling lamp that generates what the designer calls a choreography of light and movement. It does not sit still, and it does not simply illuminate. It behaves. That single word does a lot of work here. Not “performs,” not “functions,” but behaves. The shift in language reframes the entire object, placing it in a category of things that act rather than simply exist, and once you see it that way, it is very hard to unsee.

Surrounding the chandelier is a spatial installation developed in collaboration with Kriskadecor, a Spanish company that has spent a century, since 1926, transforming aluminium chains into architectural and expressive surfaces. At the gallery, two superimposed curtains of chains enclose LUMIAC in a kind of ceremonial cocoon. The outer layer is coffee-toned, anchoring the perimeter of the space. The inner curtain is amethyst, softer and more translucent. At the base, the two blend into one another in a gradient that feels less like a decorative choice and more like a gradual change in atmosphere.

The collaboration works because neither element competes for dominance. The chains frame LUMIAC without trying to match its presence, which is harder to pull off than it sounds. Too often, spatial installations feel like a product surrounded by visual noise. Here, the room has a mood. The closest word for it is quietly unsettling, though that sounds like a criticism and it is not. It is unsettling in the way that a genuinely good question is.

Mancuso’s earlier work pulled from deep time: geology, cave paintings, the slow logic of the natural world. LUMIAC is a turn in direction but not in spirit. The same designer who once looked at rock formations and asked how they got there is now looking at a moving machine and asking where this all ends up. That kind of long-view thinking is genuinely rare when the pressure to be current and commercially relevant is so relentless in the design world.

The piece also lands with particular weight given the broader cultural moment. Conversations about AI in 2026 tend to swing between uncritical enthusiasm and existential alarm, and design is not immune to either extreme. LUMIAC does something more interesting by stepping back to the very beginning of the machine-human conversation and holding that origin point up to the light, literally. It is a reminder that these questions are not new, even if the technology is.

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