Earlier this year, Amazon threatened to cut US Postal Service deliveries by as much as two thirds. Now, the parties have reached tentative a deal that will see USPS deliveries reduced by 20 percent, The Wall Street Journal reported. While not as drastic as first menaced, the reduced volume will still deal a financial blow to the USPS.
"We’re pleased to have reached a new agreement with USPS that furthers our longstanding partnership and will let us continue supporting our customers and communities together," an Amazon spokesperson told the WSJ.
Amazon is the USPS's largest customer, accounting for 15 percent of its volume and $6 billion in revenue. A two-thirds cut would have been a disaster for the USPS, but a 20 percent reduction could result in more than $1 billion in lost revenue nonetheless. Amazon would have needed to scramble as well, as it relies heavily on the post office for rural and last-mile deliveries.
Amazon's contract with the USPS was set to expire in September 2026, and in October Amazon said it wanted to strike a deal by December 2025. However, the USPS abruptly pulled out of negotiations, according to Amazon, and implemented a new bidding process for last-mile deliveries. "Our goal was to increase our volumes with USPS, not reduce them — until USPS abruptly walked away at the eleventh hour in December," Amazon said at the time.
Amazon was reportedly considering expanding its own delivery network if the USPS deal fell through, though the company may have started those rumors itself to prod negotiations. The Postal Service decided to re-engage with Amazon after bids from several Amazon rivals fell short of its volume and revenue expectations, according to the WSJ's sources. The new agreement is still subject to approval by the federal Postal Regulatory Commission.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/amazons-new-usps-deal-will-see-postal-deliveries-cut-by-20-percent-054608944.html?src=rss
When comparing flagship smartphones, the Galaxy S26 Ultra and Google Pixel 10 Pro XL emerge as two of the most compelling choices available today. Both devices represent the pinnacle of modern technology, yet they cater to different user preferences and priorities. The Galaxy S26 Ultra is a powerhouse designed for those who demand top-tier performance, […]
There’s a reason it’s called a charging ‘brick’. It charges, and it’s honestly brick-shaped. Laptops and phones have gotten thinner in the past decade, but their chargers honestly haven’t. GaN technology changes that. I’ve sung praise for GaN chargers in the past, and I swear by the one in my laptop bag right now, which replaces 4 different chargers while being the size of a hockey puck. Now Rolling Square’s gone and made the GaN charger even smaller.
Holding the title of the world’s smallest 100W charger, the aptly named Supertiny is 65% smaller than Apple’s 96W charging brick, but packs enough power to fast-charge your laptop without breaking a sweat. At just 2 inches long and 1.38 inches wide, the Supertiny is as small as your Airpods case, fitting in your palm or even your pocket. It comes in three global plug formats (US with foldable prongs, EU, and UK), weighs between 100 and 115 grams depending on the variant, and packs a single USB-C port to supercharge your laptop. But pair it with Rolling Square’s inCharge Life 2in1 cable and you can now fast-charge your laptop as well as your phone together.
Gallium Nitride has been around since the 1990s, first used in LEDs and satellite solar cells, but it took decades for the tech to migrate into consumer charging. The advantage is straightforward: GaN produces significantly less heat than traditional silicon, which means you can push more power through a smaller chipset without needing massive heat sinks or bulky casings to prevent thermal meltdown. Silicon-based chargers lose a chunk of energy as heat, which is why your old laptop brick could double as a hand warmer after an hour of use. GaN flips that equation. It’s ruthlessly efficient, converting around 95% of the energy from the wall into actual charging power, with only 5% lost to heat. That efficiency gain is what allows Rolling Square to cram 100W of power delivery into a form factor that genuinely feels like it shouldn’t be possible.
The Supertiny measures 2 inches long on the US version with foldable prongs, 3.19 inches on the EU model, and 2.81 inches on the UK variant (the EU and UK versions come with fixed prongs). To achieve this ridiculously compact format, the company rebuilt the internal voltage transformer from scratch, optimizing how components align to reduce wasted space and lower operating temperatures. Advanced heat conduction silicon and thermal sheets route heat away from critical areas, and the exterior design plays a functional role too. The ribbed pattern running along the sides prevents your fingertips from making full contact with the surface when you unplug it after charging. Flat surfaces conduct heat directly to your skin, ribbed surfaces don’t. It’s a small detail, but it’s the kind of thing that separates thoughtful industrial design from spec-sheet engineering.
The charger outputs 100W max through its single USB-C port, with support for Power Delivery 3.0 and PPS (Programmable Power Supply) that adjusts voltage between 3.3V and 21V depending on what your device needs. That means it’ll fast-charge a MacBook Pro, a Dell XPS, a Lenovo ThinkPad, or any other USB-C laptop at full speed. In case you’re wondering, yes, it can handle e-bikes and e-scooters too, albeit at 100W. For phones and tablets, it delivers fast charging across iPhones, Samsung Galaxy devices, Google Pixels, and pretty much anything else with a USB-C port. The lack of multiple ports is deliberate. Rolling Square designed this charger for people who want maximum power in minimum space, and adding extra ports would have inflated the size.
If you need to charge two devices simultaneously, Rolling Square offers the inCharge Life 2in1 cable as an optional add-on. This modular cable splits the 100W output intelligently between two devices, letting you charge your laptop and phone together from a single power source. The cable stretches 1.5 meters (about 5 feet), features a durable nylon braid reinforced with aramid fiber, and uses premium metal connectors built to last. Rolling Square backs it with a lifetime replacement guarantee: if the cable ever fails, you submit a short video showing it fully cut along with your order number, and the company ships a replacement immediately. No returns, no forms, no hassle.
Rolling Square is a Switzerland-based company that’s been refining everyday tech problems since 2014, starting with the original inCharge keyring cable that packed multiple charging connectors into a tiny form factor you could attach to your keys. The company followed that up with the AirCard wallet tracker, the TAU keyring power bank, and a lineup of modular MagSafe accessories under the EDGE Pro branding. The Supertiny is their 19th product launch, and it fits the company’s design philosophy cleanly: solve one specific problem extremely well, make it as small as physics allows, and build it to last. Rolling Square products tend to be the kind of gear you don’t notice until you need them, at which point you wonder how you ever lived without them.
The Supertiny 100W GaN Charger comes in three versions: US, EU, and UK plugs. Early pricing starts at $46 for a single unit, or a $68 bundle that also includes the inCharge Life 2in1 cable. Rolling Square is shipping the chargers globally starting in May 2026, and all three versions carry full international safety certifications including TUV Rheinland. The company backs the product with a two-year warranty and a 30-day return policy. I touted GaN chargers as a tech must-have in 2025, so if you’re reading this now and you still don’t own one, take it from me. You, your cluttered workdesk, and your heavy laptop bag will thank me.
We are living through a slow, quiet rebellion against digital everything. Vinyl record sales have been climbing for years. Film cameras are back on shelves. People are buying paper planners again. And now, a wooden perpetual wall calendar made in France in the 1970s is having a moment through a Korean design shop called Wertwerk, and I am completely on board.
The piece is exactly what it sounds like: a wall-mounted calendar built from a warm wood base, with a row of plastic sliders numbered 1 through 31 that you manually shift to mark the date. No batteries. No notifications. No algorithm nudging you toward anything. Just wood, a little plastic, and the deliberate act of moving a slider every morning. That’s the whole thing. And yet, it manages to do something almost no digital tool can: make you stop and actually notice what day it is.
What makes this particular object so interesting is the decade it comes from. The 1970s were a sweet spot in product design, especially in France, where makers were beginning to marry natural materials like wood with the new optimism of plastic. The result was objects that felt warm and industrial at the same time, organic and modern, useful and beautiful. A wooden calendar with plastic sliders is a textbook example of that tension. It doesn’t feel like a throwback. It feels like a design decision that simply worked the first time and never needed revisiting.
The word “perpetual” is doing a lot of heavy lifting here, and it deserves a moment. A perpetual calendar doesn’t expire. It doesn’t have a year printed on it. It covers every day and every month indefinitely, because those numbers don’t change; only the arrangement does. You can hang this on your wall and it will be just as functional in 2045 as it was in 1975. Compare that to your phone’s calendar app, which will feel dated in five years and be incompatible with something in ten. The perpetual calendar was designed with an understanding that good things don’t need to be replaced, just updated slightly, by hand, once a day.
Wertwerk is the Seoul-based shop behind this particular find, and they deserve full credit for the eye. Their name pulls from the German words for “worth” and “work,” and that philosophy runs through everything they source. They’ve built a devoted following by seeking out vintage objects that carry actual value beyond nostalgia. Their pieces sell out fast, sometimes within hours. They’re not selling aesthetics for aesthetics’ sake. They’re making a case that a well-made object from fifty years ago can do something a new one cannot: carry the evidence of its own history.
I’ll admit I’m biased toward objects that reward you for paying attention to them. The wooden perpetual calendar does exactly that. Each time you slide the date, you’re reminded that time is something you track, not something that tracks you. It’s a small distinction, but it adds up over days and months. Moving a physical date marker is categorically different from glancing at a lock screen, and not in a pretentious way. It’s just more deliberate.
The design also photographs beautifully, which is partly why it’s gaining traction in design communities. The wood grain set against the geometric order of numbered sliders reads as both nostalgic and contemporary. It’s the kind of object that looks intentional in a space, not decorative for decoration’s sake, but genuinely considered.
If you’ve ever bought something because it made you feel a certain way before you even used it, this is that kind of object. It quietly tells anyone who notices it that you care about how things are made and how long they last. Not everyone reads a wall calendar that way. But for those who do, this one from Wertwerk is worth finding before it disappears, and based on how fast their inventory moves, that won’t take long.
Most hotels ask you to check in. Genji Kyoto asks you to pay attention. Nestled along the Kamo River in Kyoto, Japan, this 19-room boutique hotel is the kind of place that architects talk about in hushed, reverent tones. And for good reason. It was designed by Geoffrey P. Moussas of Design 1st, a New York-born, MIT-trained architect who has called Kyoto home since 1994. That detail matters more than it might seem.
Moussas didn’t fly in with a mood board and a deadline. He has spent over three decades restoring and redesigning more than 40 traditional Japanese structures: machiya townhouses, tearooms, kura storehouses, and even a 400-year-old Buddhist temple. His work has been featured in the Financial Times, CNN, and NHK, and exhibited at Kiyomizu Temple and Nijo Castle. When someone like that builds a hotel, you’re not just booking a room. You’re stepping into a lifetime of accumulated understanding.
The concept behind Genji Kyoto traces back to an 11th-century Japanese novel, The Tale of Genji, widely considered one of the world’s first novels. When the design team discovered that the hotel’s site was historically tied to the story’s actual locations in Kyoto, the whole project shifted. The design moved away from a simple machiya prototype and toward the aesthetic world of the Heian period, over a thousand years ago. But Moussas wasn’t interested in imitation. His approach was to distill the spirit of Heian architecture, specifically the Shinden Zukuri style, characterized by pavilions woven through interconnected gardens, rather than recreate its surface. That distinction is everything. It’s the difference between a themed restaurant and a genuinely good one.
The guiding philosophy here is a Japanese concept called Teioku Ichinyo, which translates roughly to “building and garden are one.” Every spatial decision at Genji Kyoto flows from this idea. Gardens aren’t decorative; they’re structural. They guide movement, frame views, and carry what the Japanese call ki, the life force that animates a space. Even the small tsubo pocket gardens tucked around the guest rooms, a tradition dating back to Heian palace residences, do serious work, turning what could be a blank interior wall into a living, breathing view.
The materials are just as considered. Cedar-imprinted concrete shows up throughout the hotel, hard surfaces pressed with the warmth of wood grain, creating a tension that reads as both ancient and completely new. Large-scale washi paper panels function as architectural elements, not just decoration. Guest rooms have solid cherry wood floors, tatami mats made from natural rush, and furniture entirely handmade by Kyoto craftsmen. Jun Tomita, who handled interior design alongside Moussas, drew motifs directly from The Tale of Genji for every custom piece. And then there’s the detail I keep coming back to: during construction, a heritage water basin and a small shrine were discovered on-site. Rather than remove them, the team built the garden around them. That kind of decision tells you everything about where the priorities were.
There are 19 rooms in total, each one different. River views, city views, garden views. No two stays are the same, and that’s by design. Each room also features an original painting by a Kyoto artist, with every piece drawing on a different theme from The Tale of Genji, so even the art tells a chapter of the same story. Moussas has said he wanted guests to have a different experience every time they return, and the hotel is built to make that true. The rooftop garden and bar take it further still, offering panoramic views that make the hotel feel like it belongs to the entire city, not just its footprint.
Genji Kyoto’s real achievement isn’t any single detail. It’s the commitment to depth over spectacle. A lot of contemporary design is about the first impression, the photograph, the wow moment. This hotel asks for more time than that. It reveals itself in layers, the way a good book does. You have to slow down. You have to look twice. That’s a rare ask in hospitality. And it’s a rarer thing to pull off.
Disney has inked a deal with the Korea Esports Association that will bring several gaming tournaments to its streaming platform. Disney+ will be the global live streaming home for Esports Champions Asia Jinju 2026, the 2026 League of Legends KeSPA CUP and some preliminary events ahead of the 20th Asian Games Aichi-Nagoya 2026. This agreement expands KeSPA's arrangement with Disney, which only streamed its esports events to viewers in Asia last year.
Esports Champions Asia is the first event on the calendar, occurring April 24-26 with professional teams from across the continent squaring up in tournaments for games including Street Fighter 6, The King of Fighters XV, TEKKEN 8 and the eFootball series. Disney+ will also be an official streamer for the PUBG Mobile and Eternal Return competitions during that weekend.
It could be helpful for western esports fans to have a single location for watching the major events happening in Asia. However, many tournaments are currently free to watch on Twitch or YouTube, so now needing a Disney+ subscription to catch some of these international competitions might feel onerous. Esports might run the risk of turning into the fragmented set of rights deals that plagues traditional sports leagues, where a game could be on one of a half dozen different paid services each night. It's also likely going to mean co-streamers take a hit to their viewership, since Disney seems unlikely to offer the same sort of broadcast access that has made the practice popular on Twitch.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/the-league-of-legends-kespa-cup-will-air-globally-on-disney-224455083.html?src=rss
At a time when living spaces are shrinking while expectations from them continue to expand, this design presents a thoughtful response that is both rooted in tradition and aligned with contemporary needs.
Emerging from the context of rising housing pressures in Taiwan, where compact homes are increasingly becoming the norm, the project addresses a fundamental question: how can furniture adapt to limited space without compromising comfort or experience? Rather than treating furniture as static, single-purpose objects, the designer reimagines them as dynamic systems capable of transformation.
Designer: Che-Chia Hsu
At the heart of this piece lies a deep engagement with traditional Chinese woodworking techniques, particularly the precision of tenon joints. These joints move beyond being structural solutions and become expressions of calculated craftsmanship, where geometry, material behavior, and human interaction converge. The result is a construction that feels both minimal and robust, relying on accuracy instead of excess.
The furniture set is designed to integrate storage and seating within a compact footprint. A chair is concealed within the table and can be pulled out, unfolded, and expanded into a functional seat. The process is intuitive: the chair is extracted, the seat and backrest are opened, and the backrest angle is adjusted using velcro. The transformation is smooth and unobtrusive, allowing the object to shift roles effortlessly.
What distinguishes this design is its reliance on the user’s own body as part of the structural system. Instead of depending entirely on rigid supports, the chair uses the tension generated by the sitter to stabilize the backrest. This introduces a subtle interaction between user and object, where the act of sitting becomes integral to how the design performs. The experience feels efficient, responsive, and quietly intelligent.
Material choices reinforce this balance between function and experience. Lightweight pine wood panels provide durability while ensuring ease of movement. Paired with gray cotton linen fabric, the design introduces a tactile softness that enhances comfort. The fabric is breathable and visually understated, complementing the natural warmth of the wood. Together, these materials create a calm, cohesive aesthetic suited to contemporary interiors.
The development of the project reflects a layered and rigorous process. The designer began by studying traditional joinery techniques through literature, followed by hands-on training under a woodcraft master. This immersion enabled a deeper understanding of the craft beyond theory. Building on this foundation, the designer explored ways to translate these techniques into a modern, functional context through research and experimentation.
What emerges is a design that treats constraint as a starting point rather than a limitation. The piece brings together traditional knowledge and contemporary living patterns, shaping an object that adapts, responds, and participates in everyday use. It reflects a way of designing where space, material, and human interaction are considered together, resulting in furniture that feels considered, purposeful, and in tune with the realities of modern living.
At a time when living spaces are shrinking while expectations from them continue to expand, this design presents a thoughtful response that is both rooted in tradition and aligned with contemporary needs.
Emerging from the context of rising housing pressures in Taiwan, where compact homes are increasingly becoming the norm, the project addresses a fundamental question: how can furniture adapt to limited space without compromising comfort or experience? Rather than treating furniture as static, single-purpose objects, the designer reimagines them as dynamic systems capable of transformation.
Designer: Che-Chia Hsu
At the heart of this piece lies a deep engagement with traditional Chinese woodworking techniques, particularly the precision of tenon joints. These joints move beyond being structural solutions and become expressions of calculated craftsmanship, where geometry, material behavior, and human interaction converge. The result is a construction that feels both minimal and robust, relying on accuracy instead of excess.
The furniture set is designed to integrate storage and seating within a compact footprint. A chair is concealed within the table and can be pulled out, unfolded, and expanded into a functional seat. The process is intuitive: the chair is extracted, the seat and backrest are opened, and the backrest angle is adjusted using velcro. The transformation is smooth and unobtrusive, allowing the object to shift roles effortlessly.
What distinguishes this design is its reliance on the user’s own body as part of the structural system. Instead of depending entirely on rigid supports, the chair uses the tension generated by the sitter to stabilize the backrest. This introduces a subtle interaction between user and object, where the act of sitting becomes integral to how the design performs. The experience feels efficient, responsive, and quietly intelligent.
Material choices reinforce this balance between function and experience. Lightweight pine wood panels provide durability while ensuring ease of movement. Paired with gray cotton linen fabric, the design introduces a tactile softness that enhances comfort. The fabric is breathable and visually understated, complementing the natural warmth of the wood. Together, these materials create a calm, cohesive aesthetic suited to contemporary interiors.
The development of the project reflects a layered and rigorous process. The designer began by studying traditional joinery techniques through literature, followed by hands-on training under a woodcraft master. This immersion enabled a deeper understanding of the craft beyond theory. Building on this foundation, the designer explored ways to translate these techniques into a modern, functional context through research and experimentation.
What emerges is a design that treats constraint as a starting point rather than a limitation. The piece brings together traditional knowledge and contemporary living patterns, shaping an object that adapts, responds, and participates in everyday use. It reflects a way of designing where space, material, and human interaction are considered together, resulting in furniture that feels considered, purposeful, and in tune with the realities of modern living.
Kalshi can't be stopped in New Jersey. A 3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled on Monday that New Jersey has no authority to regulate Kalshi's prediction market allowing people to bet on the outcome of sports events. That power rests with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the panel ruled 2-1.
The CFTC is headed by President Donald Trump appointee Michael Selig, who vocally and actively supports prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket, calling them "exciting products." The Trump family agrees: Donald Trump Jr. is a paid adviser to Kalshi and an unpaid adviser to Polymarket, and Truth Social, which is run by the Trump Media and Technology Group, is set to start a prediction market of its own.
Online prediction markets are an emerging phenomenon that allow users to bet on the outcome of basically anything, from local athletic competitions to lethal military invasions. Though they're new, these marketplaces have already shown evidence of insider trading on an extreme scale, with suspicious bets and big payouts tied to the US and Israel's military strikes in Iran, and also the US' brief invasion in Venezuela. According to blockchain analyst DeFi Oasis, fewer than 0.04 percent of Polymarket accounts captured more than 70 percent of profits, totaling $3.7 billion.
Multiple state gaming regulators have filed legal challenges against Kalshi and Polymarket in recent months, and just last week the CFTC sued Arizona, Connecticut and Illinois over their attempts to regulate prediction markets. While each state has its own angle of attack, from election issues to underage betting, they're all broadly claiming that prediction markets are just illegal gambling businesses. Today's ruling marks the first federal-level decision in one of these cases and it's in favor of the prediction markets.
New Jersey sent Kalshi a cease and desist letter in 2025, claiming the service violated the state's ban on collegiate sports betting. Kalshi escalated the situation and sued New Jersey, arguing that its sports contracts are actually swaps, a type of financial investment that's (conveniently) regulated by the CFTC. A lower-court judge previously sided with Kalshi, prompting New Jersey to appeal. Two of the three judges in that appeal ruled that Kalshi's sports-related event contracts were indeed swaps. Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour called Monday's ruling "a big win for the industry."
US Circuit Judge Jane Richards Roth dissented, writing that Kalshi's "offerings were virtually indistinguishable from the betting products available on online sportsbooks, such as DraftKings and FanDuel."
New Jersey Attorney General Jennifer Davenport has the option to ask the full 3rd Circuit to rehear the case, and the issue is also pending in several other courts.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/new-jersey-has-no-right-to-ban-kalshis-prediction-market-us-appeals-court-rules-214448284.html?src=rss