The iPhone 17e builds upon the foundation of the iPhone 16e, offering a blend of familiar design and meaningful upgrades. While it retains the recognizable aesthetic of its predecessor, enhancements in performance, durability, and functionality make it a standout addition to Apple’s mid-tier lineup. The detailed video below from Zollotech gives us more insights into […]
Most backyard pools spend their lives being thoroughly underused. They’re great for a hot afternoon cool-down and perfectly fine for the occasional float, but not exactly built for anyone who wants to swim laps. The obvious fix is a swim jet system, until you look into what installing one actually costs. Professional installation means plumbing connections, dedicated electrical work, and a contractor quote that tends to start somewhere around five figures.
The iGarden Swim Jet X Series sidesteps that problem entirely. Rather than something built into a pool, it is something you bring to one. A jet head mounts to the pool’s edge with a clamp-and-bracket assembly, no drilling required, while a separate power box sits on the deck nearby. Attach it, switch it on, and the pool becomes considerably more useful than it was ten minutes ago.
That power box is worth a closer look. It is a compact cube with a brushed metal finish, a circular display showing battery level and session time, and a clean row of buttons for power, flow, and timer control. The main unit itself has suitcase-style wheels and a retractable handle, so moving the whole system poolside, storing it in the shade, or taking it somewhere else entirely takes almost no effort.
The entire system runs on a low-voltage architecture, making sure that the product is completely safe to use. The swim jet carries an IP68 waterproof rating, while the power box is rated IP65. The system will automatically cut off power if there is accidental contact or if the battery/power unit shifts out of position, and a safety grille covers the jet intake. The safety design is thorough without being complicated.
On the performance side, the flagship X35-P60 runs a 1,000W permanent magnet synchronous motor or PMSM, pushing flow speeds up to 3.5 meters per second. An AI inverter control system modulates the motor output in real time, keeping the current steady and laminar through a focused, straight-lane flow. The current remains consistent even as a swimmer pushes hard against it.
That steady resistance changes how the pool actually gets used day to day. A morning session at a moderate gear setting feels genuinely like open-water swimming, sustained and uninterrupted, without the constant wall turns. The six speed levels mean the same device works for casual paddling at the lower end and serious interval training at the top. The X35-P60 also runs for up to 10 hours on a single charge, enough for a full day of use without needing a top-up.
At the structured training end of the spectrum, the P3 and P4 settings unlock sprint programming through the companion app, with sessions configurable in blocks from 15 up to 90 minutes and workout history logged after each one. Dial the current back on a weekend afternoon, and the pool becomes a gentle flow that kids can float and play in. One device, one pool, several completely different experiences across a single day.
The iGarden Swim Jet X Series is compatible with plunge pools, fiberglass, concrete, gunite, and vinyl-lined pools, which cover almost every residential configuration. When the season ends, it packs into a storage bag, rolls on its wheels to a friend’s place when the occasion calls for it, and leaves no trace behind when removed. The pool stays exactly as it was. The swim jet is just a guest, and a rather useful one at that, starting at just $799.
To mark its launch, iGarden is throwing in a couple of reasons to move quickly. Everyone who pledges within the first 48 hours gets shipping at $25 flat, half the standard rate, and one randomly selected backer from that same 48-hour window will receive their iGarden Swim Jet X Series unit completely free. Not a bad way to kick off a launch.
Meet RAD, short for Rivian Adventure Department, which is either a very clever name or a very brave one. In practical terms, it is Rivian’s newly formalized performance and development group. The team takes its trucks and SUVs into demanding events, learns what breaks, what grips, what flies, and channels those lessons into future products and features. It has been operating inside Rivian for years without a formal name. Think of it as Rivian’s version of BMW M or Toyota GR, except its proving ground is desert rallies and frozen lakes rather than the Nurburgring.
Rivian unveiled RAD at the 2026 FAT Ice Race in Big Sky, Montana, which feels like the correct setting for a division built around speed, control, and chaos management. FAT stands for Fahren auf Eis, German for “driving on ice,” and the event mixes vintage cars, modern performance machines, and now, 1,025-horsepower electric SUVs. The quad-motor R1S came in second on RAD’s debut, a solid first result. The bigger story is what RAD signals about where Rivian is heading. The company had the adventure image locked down already, and it now wants a firm grip on performance too, seemingly content to make that argument sideways on ice.
Designer: Rivian
RAD’s first deliverable for actual owners is the RAD Tuner, and it is more substantive than a typical software feature drop. It gives quad-motor R1S and R1T owners on Gen 2 hardware touch sliders to build custom drive modes across more than 10 powertrain and suspension variables, including power output, torque bias, stability control intervention, and brake regeneration. Two presets come built in: Desert Rally, developed from Rebelle Rally data, and Hill Climb, shaped by Pikes Peak runs. Both modes came from a team driving a 1,025-horsepower EV through punishing terrain and noting what actually worked. That feedback loop between competition and production software is what separates a real performance division from a badge on a brochure.
Speculation around RAD-badged production models is already building, and Rivian is doing nothing to quiet it. The R2, Rivian’s more compact SUV arriving in the second half of 2026, showed up at the FAT Ice Race dressed in full RAD livery, which is not a styling accident. The Drive has laid out the theory that quad-motor R1 models get rebranded R1 RAD, with a tri-motor R2 in the R2 RAD slot. When Rivian’s spokesperson was asked about the conspicuously missing R2 tri-motor from the launch lineup, the reply was “so much more to come” with an actual winking emoji. If RAD graduates to a production badge, Rivian enters the same conversation as the Ford Raptor, the Ram TRX, and every performance sub-brand that has figured out how to charge a premium for pushing factory hardware past its polite defaults.
The EV industry has spent years anchored to range figures and charging infrastructure debates, both necessary conversations, but ones that leave genuine enthusiasm largely unaddressed. Rivian is making the argument loudly that electric trucks can be athletic, competition-tested, and interesting to the crowd that wakes up on a Saturday morning wanting to do something dumb and fast. The RAD Tuner is a modest first chapter, but the direction is unambiguous. Performance divisions grounded in real competition data take years to build and are hard to fake from scratch. Rivian has that foundation in place.
Most tiny houses compete on how much they can cram into a small footprint, with fold-out tables, lofted beds, and hidden compartments behind every surface. The Mysa 200, built by Utah-based Irontown Modular, goes the other direction entirely, delivering a compact, single-level dwelling that trades clever gimmicks for genuine livability.
Named after the Swedish word for “cozy,” the Mysa 200 reads more like a small cabin than a typical tiny house. At 20 ft long and 10 ft wide, it’s noticeably broader than the standard 8.5-ft width most tiny houses stick to to remain towable. That extra foot and a half might not sound like much on paper, but inside, it transforms the space from corridor-like to something that actually feels like a room you’d want to spend time in. Because it isn’t built on a trailer, the home requires a truck and crane for delivery, making it better suited as a permanent or semi-permanent structure like a vacation retreat, backyard guesthouse, or weekend getaway tucked into a wooded lot.
The exterior pairs metal and wood finishes, giving it a modern rustic look that would blend comfortably into most rural or semi-rural settings. An optional porch extends the living space outdoors, and generous windows pull natural light deep into the interior. Step inside the 200-sq-ft floor plan and the restraint becomes immediately apparent. Irontown Modular hasn’t attempted to squeeze a full household into this footprint.
The bulk of the space serves as a combined living and sleeping area anchored by a large double bed that doubles as a general lounging spot. A dry bar with built-in storage and a fridge sits nearby, though buyers can opt for a proper kitchenette if they prefer. Climate control comes courtesy of a mini-split air-conditioning unit paired with a ceiling fan.
The bathroom punches above its weight class. A full-width glass-enclosed shower, vanity sink, and flushing toilet give it a sense of completeness that many tiny houses at this size struggle to achieve. Pricing starts at $50,700, which positions the Mysa 200 at the more accessible end of the tiny house market.
Buyers can customize exterior materials, adjust the interior layout, and add a porch extension. Delivery details aren’t listed, so interested buyers will need to contact Irontown Modular directly. In a category that often rewards complexity, the Mysa 200 makes a quiet case for doing less and doing it well.
Most of us have a box. Or a bag, or a corner of the closet where clothes go to wait for a fate we haven’t quite settled on yet. Not trash, not donation, just quietly pushed aside. The jeans that stopped fitting but once made you feel unstoppable. The sweater that pilled after three washes but somehow survived four more years. Parting with clothes is harder than it sounds, and the fashion industry has largely treated that emotional gap as a non-problem.
ByBye, a concept designed by Gyeong Wook Kim, Sooa Kim, Gayeon Kim, and Mingyeong Shin, disagrees with that approach in the most literal way possible. It’s a countertop-sized machine that takes your worn and discarded garments and transforms them, through a process of grinding, compression, and heat, into flower pots. Real, usable, actually beautiful flower pots.
Designers: Gyeong Wook Kim, Sooa Kim, Gayeon Kim, Mingyeong Shin
I want to sit with that idea for a second, because it’s a genuinely clever reframe of the problem. The designers describe ByBye not as a disposal system but as a “system of reform.” That language matters. When we throw clothes away, the garments disappear. When we donate, we hand off the moral weight to someone else. But ByBye asks you to stay present for the transformation and gives you something physical to show for it.
The mechanics are straightforward but impressively considered. You feed garments into the top opening, which uses a sliding rail mechanism to regulate input and automatically closes once the designated weight is reached. Inside, a shredder breaks the fabric down into fine particles. Those particles are then fed into a flower pot mold, compressed by a pressing plate, and hardened through high-temperature treatment. The finished pots rise up from the molding mechanism. The whole process takes about ten minutes per piece, and a companion app tracks fabric weight, the number of pots produced, and total production time.
What comes out of the machine is genuinely surprising. The pots carry a terrazzo-like texture from the mixed fibers, soft and speckled in muted blues, pinks, and greens depending on the fabric input. They look like something you’d find at a design fair, not something born from a pile of worn-out t-shirts. That aesthetic outcome feels important to the whole concept. If the result were dull or utilitarian, the emotional payoff wouldn’t land. Instead, you end up with an object that holds some trace of the original garment, and then holds a plant on top of that.
The project raises questions I keep turning over. Can the machine handle all fabric types, including synthetic blends that behave very differently under heat and compression? What’s the upper limit on pot durability when working with processed textiles? These feel like the natural next steps for a concept this promising, and I genuinely hope the team is pushing toward them.
What ByBye gets absolutely right is the emotional architecture of the experience. The name alone, a gentle play on “bye bye” and “by” as in made by, signals that this isn’t designed to make you feel guilty about your wardrobe. The copy throughout the project, “Hello? Nice to Wear You,” “Let Your Clothes Begin Again,” reads more like an invitation than an environmental lecture. That tone is rare in sustainable design, which has a tendency to lead with shame rather than possibility.
The designers put it plainly in their project statement: “Not a system of disposal, but a system of reform where clothing is seen again, and made anew.” That’s a design philosophy worth paying attention to. Fashion produces staggering amounts of textile waste every year, and while no home appliance is going to fix that alone, concepts like ByBye shift the conversation in a useful direction. They make the ending feel less like a loss and more like a beginning. Parting with clothes is still going to feel like something. But now it might feel like planting something too.
Many of us remember the halcyon days of being a kid in the ‘90s, spending a weekend afternoon with remote control in hand and a seemingly endless well of stuff to watch on TV. Now you can relive the experience thanks to the appropriately named Channel Surfer web app. It's essentially a YouTube discovery tool that surfaces interesting videos, but presented in a retro homage to the cable channel screen.
Channel Surfer is the work of developer Steven Irby. He has 40 channels on the app right now, mostly grouping content by theme. There are channels for typical cable fare like news and sports, but also music, movies and a number of more tailored tech subjects like AI, gaming, gadgets and space.
"I built Channel Surfer because I’m tired of the algorithms and indecision fatigue," he told TechCrunch, which is where we discovered the app. "I miss channel surfing and not having to decide what to watch. I want to just sit and tune into what’s on and not think about what to watch next."
It seems Irby isn't alone, because he posted on X that the number of views he's getting for Channel Surfer already broke 10,000 on its first day.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/youtube/this-web-app-lets-you-channel-surf-youtube-like-a-90s-kid-watching-cable-220651107.html?src=rss
The International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the union that covers warehouse workers, drivers and a diverse collection of other laborers, has come out against Paramount Skydance's merger with Warner Bros. Discovery. In a press release, the Teamsters announced that it has submitted a report to the US Department of Justice's Antitrust Division outlining its concerns about the impact of the deal, and is urging the DOJ to intervene in the merger.
"This merger threatens the livelihoods of the very workers who built these studios into industry giants," Teamsters General President Sean M. O’Brien said in a statement. "We've seen what happens when corporations consolidate power: jobs disappear, production leaves American communities and workers pay the price. The DOJ has a responsibility to stop deals that eliminate competition and harm working families. Unless Paramount and Warner Bros. can guarantee enforceable protections for domestic production and labor standards, this merger can’t be allowed to move forward."
The Teamsters are primarily concerned with how merging the two companies will consolidate power, and eliminate jobs in the process. "Previous mergers have a well-documented track record of harming workers — Disney’s 2019 acquisition of 20th Century Fox resulted in eliminated production units, significant job losses and canceled projects," the union says. Motion Picture Teamsters, the division of the union concentrated in Hollywood that transports the equipment, props and crew members that make productions possible, stand to be most impacted.
The high likelihood the merger impacts competition in the market is why the Teamsters expect the DOJ to step in, or in the case Paramount and Warner Bros. aren't able to provide "enforceable commitments to increasing and maintaining domestic production, strong labor standards and guarantees against layoffs and erosion of union jobs," block the deal entirely.
Engadget has asked the Teamsters union what it plans to do if the Department of Justice doesn't intervene. We'll update this article if we hear back.
If it's allowed to eat Warner Bros., Paramount Skydance has committed to producing 30 theatrical films annually, evenly split across the two studios’ slates. The larger issue is that the company's offer to acquire the studio is predicated on the idea it will quickly pass the muster of government regulators. Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison is the son of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, who's known to have close ties with President Donald Trump, and has already benefited from favorable treatment from the administration. There's a real possibility that Paramount's new merger could similarly sail through, regardless of the Teamsters' concerns.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/teamsters-urge-doj-to-block-paramounts-warner-bros-merger-215115721.html?src=rss
The newly verified X account for Iran's supreme leader could be putting the company on the wrong side of US sanctions, according to a watchdog group. The Tech Transparency Project, which last month published a report on X granting premium perks to sanctioned officials in Iran, now says that the verified account for the country's new leader raises fresh questions about the issue.
The TTP notes that the X account for Iran's new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, appears to be paying for an X premium subscription despite being on the US government's list of sanctioned individuals since 2019. As the group points out, the Iran-based account was created this month and currently bears a blue checkmark, which typically indicates the account holder is paying for a subscription.
Last month, TTP found that X was providing premium subscriptions to Iranian officials sanctioned by @USTreasury, a transaction that may violate sanctions.
It didn't end there.
An account for Iran's new supreme leader created this month also carries the blue premium checkmark.🧵 pic.twitter.com/5K9Ss1Sex8
— Tech Transparency Project (@TTP_updates) March 12, 2026
The account belonging to Mojtaba Khamenei has been boosted by other state-linked accounts in Iran, including the one that previously belonged to Khamenei's father. That account has had a gray checkmark, which indicates it belongs to a verified government official. Verified accounts on X are rewarded with extra visibility on the platform, along with other perks. The younger Khamenei's verified account has already gained more than 20,000 new followers in the hours since TTP first posted about it.
"The new Supreme Leader's account is just the latest account for a sanctioned entity apparently paying X for premium services," TTP director Katie Paul said in a statement to Engadget. "TTP has identified dozens of accounts, many linked to designated terrorists, that subscribed to X premium over the past three years. What's more concerning than the blatant disregard for U.S. sanctions law is the fact that Musk's companies have a contract with the Pentagon while X is actively profiting from U.S. adversaries."
As Paul notes, this isn't the first time TTP has raised questions about whether X is running afoul of US sanctions via its premium service. In 2024, the group published a report noting that X was accepting paid verification from more than two dozen sanctioned individuals and groups. The company said at the time that it had a "a robust and secure approach in place for our monetization features."
X didn't respond to a request for comment. But in the hours after Engadget reached out about Khamenei’s account, the blue checkmark was removed. The company also removed blue checks from a handful of Iran-based accounts flagged by TTP last month following reporting from Wired.
Update, March 13, 2026, 9:08AM PT: This story was updated to reflect changes made to Khamenei’s account following publication.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/x-could-be-breaching-us-sanctions-on-iran-watchdog-warns-213550284.html?src=rss
Sri Lankan designer Thilina Liyanage has built a recognizable portfolio around one core idea: that architecture in wild spaces should speak the language of those spaces. His previous concepts have drawn from bird forms, insect geometries, and the angular logic of animal skeletons, earning him a following among readers who track biomimetic architecture with the same enthusiasm others reserve for gadgets. His latest, the Rhino Safari Deck, takes that approach to one of its most literal and structurally ambitious expressions yet. Rendered under overcast skies above a scrubby, semi-arid landscape scattered with cacti and boulders, the structure earns its name in full. From a distance, you are looking at a rhino. The silhouette is unmistakable: a squat, armored mass with a pronounced horn erupting from the roofline, flanked by secondary angular spires that read as ears, the whole thing hunched forward on its platform like the animal mid-charge.
Liyanage named the project “Kifaru Point,” using the Swahili word for rhino, which sets the geographic and tonal intention clearly. The structure is conceived as a wildlife observation deck, elevated above the terrain on a concrete plinth with a timber-decked lower platform that wraps around the base. A set of steel-railed stairs leads visitors up from the rocky ground level, and the shaded gathering area beneath the main structure provides a transition space before the ascent continues to the upper observation level. The interior views glimpsed in the renders show open, framed apertures that funnel sightlines out across the flat scrubland below, the kind of panoramic sweep that makes the elevated position feel earned rather than arbitrary. As a piece of safari infrastructure, Kifaru Point is doing something most viewing platforms do not bother attempting: it turns the act of looking at animals into an architectural experience that is itself worth looking at.
Designer: Thilina Liyanage
The entire form is built from triangulated steel frames, with each panel clad in ribbed, corrugated steel slats that create a warm, striated texture across the facets. Spherical steel nodes connect the struts at every junction, giving the whole skeleton a Meccano-meets-brutalism quality that suits the rugged setting perfectly. There is no smooth surface anywhere on this building. Every plane is either angled, folded, or interrupted, and the aggregate effect genuinely reads as armored hide from the outside while remaining open and structurally legible from within. The corrugated steel and timber combination ages well in outdoor conditions, which matters for a structure intended to sit in a landscape indefinitely rather than perform at an exhibition and disappear.
What Liyanage is clearly working through in this series is the question of how a building earns its place in a landscape. The typical eco-lodge answer involves receding into the environment through natural materials and muted palettes, becoming invisible by design. Kifaru Point goes the opposite direction: it announces itself as a landmark, a destination, something you orient toward from across the plain. The rhino reference gives it a totemic presence that goes beyond novelty. Rhinos are ancient, armored, and critically endangered, and a safari deck that reads visually as one of those animals is making an argument about the relationship between the people who come to observe wildlife and the wildlife itself. Biomimetic architecture has a long tradition of borrowing animal logic for structural efficiency, but borrowing it for symbolic weight, for the purpose of rhino conservation awareness built into a building’s silhouette, is a less common move and a more interesting one.
The rendered setting positions Kifaru Point among desert shrubs and saguaro-like cacti, suggesting a location somewhere in southern or eastern Africa, though the landscape has a looseness that keeps the concept legible across multiple possible sites. The palette of weathered steel and warm timber sits comfortably against the muted greens and grays of the terrain, and the overcast sky in most of Thilina Liyanage’s renders gives the structure a moody weight that a blue-sky backdrop would have undercut entirely. He knows how to light his visualizations for atmosphere, and that skill is doing real work here, making a conceptual project feel like a building that already exists and is already waiting for visitors to climb its stairs and look out across the plain at whatever is moving in the distance.
Adobe's long-time CEO has shared that he plans to step down. Shantanu Narayen has been the chief exec at the tech company for 18 years, a tenure where he led Adobe in the major shift to become a software-as-a-service provider. The exact timeline for his exit is still up in the air, as Narayen will depart when the board of directors names his successor. He will remain on the board as its chair after leaving the CEO post.
While Adobe was not the first to take the SaaS route, it was one of the first major tech operations to do so. Software such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere and Lightroom from the brand have been mainstays in creative fields for years, so the launch of the Creative Suite subscription, which is now called Creative Cloud, was a pretty revolutionary change for its customers.
In an memo to employees, Narayen reflected on his nearly two decades at the helm. Adobe has grown from about 3,000 employees to more than 30,000, while its financial performance has leapt, revenue skyrocketing from less than $1 billion to more than $25 billion. He also looked toward the future and the seemingly-inevitable presence of artificial intelligence.
"The next era of creativity is being written right now — shaped by AI, by new workflows and by entirely new forms of expression," he wrote. "Adobe has never waited for the future to arrive. We’ve anticipated it. We’ve built it. And we’ve led it. What gives me the greatest confidence isn’t just our technology — it’s our people. Your ingenuity, resilience and commitment to customers are what will define this moment."
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/adobe-ceo-shantanu-narayen-plans-to-step-down-after-18-years-212705623.html?src=rss