Samsung’s 3-Screen Comeback: The Secret Strategy Behind the Galaxy Z Tri-Fold 2

Samsung’s 3-Screen Comeback: The Secret Strategy Behind the Galaxy Z Tri-Fold 2 Close-up of a tri-fold hinge concept showing where Samsung may reduce thickness and improve folding stability.

Samsung continues to push the boundaries of foldable technology with its second-generation Galaxy Z Tri-Fold. This ambitious device reflects the company’s dedication to refining multi-foldable designs, addressing the challenges of its predecessor while exploring new possibilities. By focusing on improved design, enhanced usability, and market viability, Samsung aims to solidify its position as a leader […]

The post Samsung’s 3-Screen Comeback: The Secret Strategy Behind the Galaxy Z Tri-Fold 2 appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

The Side Table That Holds One Book Right in Its Legs

Most furniture design is an exercise in addition. More drawers. More shelves. More compartments to fill with things we forget we own. It is refreshing, then, to come across a piece that does the exact opposite and still lands somewhere quietly brilliant.

Meet the Notch Side Table, designed by Liam de la Bedoyere of Bored Eye Design. It is a flat-pack side table made of wood, clean-lined and minimal in the way that good, thoughtful furniture tends to be. From certain angles, it looks almost unremarkable. Two sets of paired legs, a flat top, honest grain. Then you look between the legs and notice the cutout, a precisely carved notch sized to hold a single book suspended between the panels, spine facing out, held steady by the tension of the slot. That is it. That is the entire idea. And somehow, it is one of the more satisfying design moves I have seen in a while.

Designer Name: Liam de la Bedoyere (Bored Eye Design)

The designer’s own framing says it best: material is removed to add use. Rather than building up, de la Bedoyere carved away. By taking wood out, he created a dedicated slot that functions as a book holder without adding any extra hardware, brackets, or fussy mechanisms. The notch is load-bearing in the most elegant sense of the word. It is structural and functional all at once, and it costs the table almost nothing to include. That kind of efficiency is harder to achieve than it looks.

Bored Eye Design is a one-person independent studio, and the Notch feels like the kind of piece that could only come from someone working without a committee. There is a specificity to it, an opinion embedded in the design, that bigger furniture brands tend to sand down in favour of mass appeal. De la Bedoyere has been quietly putting out thoughtful concepts through his Instagram, and the Notch is the one that feels most resolved. It has a clear point of view.

That point of view, as far as I can read it, is about intentionality. The notch holds exactly one book. Not a stack, not an assortment of odds and ends, just one. That constraint is a feature, not a limitation. It asks you to choose. It reminds you, every time you walk past it, that you had a book you were reading, that you actually meant to pick it back up. The book is not tucked away out of sight. It is displayed between the legs of the table like a small personal exhibit.

That is a subtle but genuinely interesting cultural statement about how we relate to the things we claim to care about. Books are increasingly used as decor, stacked artfully on coffee tables in colours that match throw pillows. The Notch does not stack them. It slots one in at midpoint, visible and accessible, in a way that feels more honest than a colour-coordinated pile ever could.

Practically speaking, the flat-pack construction means the table ships flat and assembles without tools that would make your Sunday miserable. The joinery is clean, and the interlocking parts are visible in the design in a way that feels deliberate rather than accidentally exposed. Looking at the disassembled photos, there is a puzzle-like quality to the whole thing that makes it more interesting, not less.

The material is ash wood with a warm, pale grain, and the photos styled with what appears to be a Dieter Rams monograph slotted in the notch feel entirely on brand. That orange spine against the pale timber is doing real editorial work, and it is hard not to appreciate the faintly meta quality of a design book being cradled by a well-designed table.

Whether the Notch moves into full production beyond its current personal project status, I genuinely hope it does. Furniture that nudges you toward more thoughtful habits without being preachy about it is rare. The Notch does not lecture you about slowing down. It just makes it a little easier to do exactly that, by doing less with considerably more conviction.

The post The Side Table That Holds One Book Right in Its Legs first appeared on Yanko Design.

MacBook Neo 2 Leaks: A19 Pro Chip and Doubled SSD Speeds Rumored

MacBook Neo 2 Leaks: A19 Pro Chip and Doubled SSD Speeds Rumored MacBook Neo 2

The MacBook Neo 2 is shaping up to be a significant upgrade to Apple’s well-regarded MacBook Neo series. With the anticipated inclusion of the powerful A19 Pro chip and a notable increase in RAM, this device is expected to deliver enhanced performance while maintaining its reputation as an affordable and reliable option for everyday users. […]

The post MacBook Neo 2 Leaks: A19 Pro Chip and Doubled SSD Speeds Rumored appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Chipolo and Secrid team up for a new trackable wallet

Chipolo has built a name for itself as the independent tracking company which happily integrates its products with both Apple and Google’s item-finding networks. Today, it’s announcing a partnership with wallet maker Secrid that, if you haven’t guessed already, sees the pair launch a compatible miniwallet. The Chipolo x Secrid Miniwallet Trackable is tailor-made to suit Chipolo’s Card tracker and accentuate all of its positives.

For instance, the tracker sits on the back of the wallet, with the Find button accessible from the outside to make it easier to find your phone. If you misplace your device, you can simply press the button and follow the noise back to whichever couch cushions it slid between. Even better, the wallet is designed to amplify the Card’s speaker, ensuring you’ll never not hear it when it goes off. The pair claim that the unit will boost the sound by up to 3dB, for the far more likely these days event you misplace your wallet.

The pair are also buffing the hardware’s sustainability credentials, made in the EU from responsibly sourced materials. And the tracker itself is made from 50 percent recycled plastic and has a wirelessly rechargeable battery that’ll regain all of its mojo after just two hours sat on a Qi pad. If any, or all of that, appeals, then you can order it from today for $140, €120 or £120, depending on your local currency.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/chipolo-and-secrid-team-up-for-a-new-trackable-wallet-130035324.html?src=rss

How Claude is Quietly Automating Complex Video Editing Workflows

How Claude is Quietly Automating Complex Video Editing Workflows Split screen comparing traditional video editing timelines with Claude AI text prompts

Claude is making waves in the video editing space by automating tasks that once required significant time and expertise. In a recent feature by Nate Herk, the focus is on how Claude uses natural language commands to simplify complex processes like motion graphics, subtitle generation and animations. For instance, with its web-based application, Claude Design, […]

The post How Claude is Quietly Automating Complex Video Editing Workflows appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

How Non-Programmers Are Building Custom AI Agents in Minutes

How Non-Programmers Are Building Custom AI Agents in Minutes Toolhouse no-code interface showing voice command input for AI agent creation

Building AI agents is becoming more accessible with advancements in no-code platforms. A recent walkthrough by World of AI demonstrates how beginners can create functional AI agents using straightforward methods. One example involves setting up an agent to summarize lengthy documents or manage email responses by defining workflows through natural language commands. These systems rely […]

The post How Non-Programmers Are Building Custom AI Agents in Minutes appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

iOS 27 Rumors: Top Features We Need (and What’s Leaked So Far)

iOS 27 Rumors: Top Features We Need (and What’s Leaked So Far) Clipboard history panel concept showing saved text snippets and links, matching the iOS 27 clipboard manager request.

Apple’s upcoming iOS 27, expected to be unveiled at WWDC 2026, is poised to deliver a fresh wave of enhancements to its mobile operating system. Over the years, iOS has been synonymous with innovation, but it has also faced criticism for recurring bugs, limited customization, and occasional performance issues. With the competitive smartphone market evolving […]

The post iOS 27 Rumors: Top Features We Need (and What’s Leaked So Far) appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Amazon allegedly pressured companies to raise product prices with other retailers

Rob Bonta, the Attorney General of California, has released an unredacted copy of a legal document that the state filed in relation to its lawsuit against Amazon, containing details of the company’s alleged price fixing scheme. In it, the state of California accuses the e-commerce company of reaching out to brands and asking them to “fix” the retail prices of their products on competitors’ websites. Due to Amazon’s “overwhelming bargaining leverage” and out of fear of punishment, the brands agree to raise their products’ prices on other retailers like Walmart and Target or to remove them altogether, the filing reads.

California filed an antitrust lawsuit accusing Amazon of price fixing back in 2022. It said the company prevented sellers from offering lower prices on other sites and that vendors risked losing buy buttons and prominent listings if they defied Amazon. In February this year, Bonta filed for a preliminary injunction, asking the court to put a stop to Amazon’s “illegal conduct” while the state’s lawsuit is ongoing and waiting to go to trial next year.

In the unredacted filing, California said that Amazon instructs vendors and brands to increase their prices on other retailers and threatens them with “significant penalties for failure to comply.” State officials gave several examples in the filing, including one incident wherein Amazon allegedly emailed security systems provider Arlo.

The company talked to Arlo about “external price matching,” along with a screenshot of one of its cameras on Walmart, noting that its price of $549.93 “did not go back up.” Arlo reportedly responded that it would get it addressed, and Amazon told the company to “get [it] corrected by EOD.” Afterward, Arlo sent Amazon a screenshot, showing the same Walmart page now listing the camera’s price at $649.99. Amazon ended the conversation by thanking Arlo for its “quick action.” Other samples include Amazon asking Levi’s to “resolve” the lower prices of its khaki pants on Walmart and Hanes to increase the prices of its clothing items on Walmart and Target.

Amazon shrugged off the filing’s release and called California’s case against the company weak. “The Attorney General’s motion is a transparent attempt to distract from the weakness of its case, coming more than three years after filing its complaint and based on supposedly ‘new’ evidence it has had for years,” an Amazon spokesperson told Engadget. “Amazon is consistently identified as America’s lowest-priced online retailer, and we’re proud of the low prices customers find when shopping in our store. Amazon looks forward to responding in court at the appropriate time.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/amazon-allegedly-pressured-companies-to-raise-product-prices-with-other-retailers-115302642.html?src=rss

Amazon allegedly pressured companies to raise product prices with other retailers

Rob Bonta, the Attorney General of California, has released an unredacted copy of a legal document that the state filed in relation to its lawsuit against Amazon, containing details of the company’s alleged price fixing scheme. In it, the state of California accuses the e-commerce company of reaching out to brands and asking them to “fix” the retail prices of their products on competitors’ websites. Due to Amazon’s “overwhelming bargaining leverage” and out of fear of punishment, the brands agree to raise their products’ prices on other retailers like Walmart and Target or to remove them altogether, the filing reads.

California filed an antitrust lawsuit accusing Amazon of price fixing back in 2022. It said the company prevented sellers from offering lower prices on other sites and that vendors risked losing buy buttons and prominent listings if they defied Amazon. In February this year, Bonta filed for a preliminary injunction, asking the court to put a stop to Amazon’s “illegal conduct” while the state’s lawsuit is ongoing and waiting to go to trial next year.

In the unredacted filing, California said that Amazon instructs vendors and brands to increase their prices on other retailers and threatens them with “significant penalties for failure to comply.” State officials gave several examples in the filing, including one incident wherein Amazon allegedly emailed security systems provider Arlo.

The company talked to Arlo about “external price matching,” along with a screenshot of one of its cameras on Walmart, noting that its price of $549.93 “did not go back up.” Arlo reportedly responded that it would get it addressed, and Amazon told the company to “get [it] corrected by EOD.” Afterward, Arlo sent Amazon a screenshot, showing the same Walmart page now listing the camera’s price at $649.99. Amazon ended the conversation by thanking Arlo for its “quick action.” Other samples include Amazon asking Levi’s to “resolve” the lower prices of its khaki pants on Walmart and Hanes to increase the prices of its clothing items on Walmart and Target.

Amazon shrugged off the filing’s release and called California’s case against the company weak. “The Attorney General’s motion is a transparent attempt to distract from the weakness of its case, coming more than three years after filing its complaint and based on supposedly ‘new’ evidence it has had for years,” an Amazon spokesperson told Engadget. “Amazon is consistently identified as America’s lowest-priced online retailer, and we’re proud of the low prices customers find when shopping in our store. Amazon looks forward to responding in court at the appropriate time.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/amazon-allegedly-pressured-companies-to-raise-product-prices-with-other-retailers-115302642.html?src=rss

How the Aviation Industry is Turning Captured Carbon and Sunshine Into Jet Fuel

How the Aviation Industry is Turning Captured Carbon and Sunshine Into Jet Fuel Commercial airliner flying through a sunny sky representing sustainable aviation

The aviation industry faces a significant challenge in reducing its carbon footprint, with medium- and long-haul flights heavily reliant on liquid fuels due to their high energy density. In a recent exploration by Two Bit da Vinci, the spotlight is on sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), a synthetic alternative created from agricultural waste, water and renewable […]

The post How the Aviation Industry is Turning Captured Carbon and Sunshine Into Jet Fuel appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized