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We’re your go-to infotainment hub, keeping you updated on everything Web 3.0, business, fashion, lifestyle, and education. @CheatKott_Godfather
😎 Google’s smart glasses are coming this fall
Google just revealed its Android XR vision — and the first smart glasses launch this fall. The first wave focuses on lightweight audio glasses, not full AR displays.
Powered by Gemini, the glasses understand what you’re looking at. Ask about restaurants, parking signs, or get live translation — all hands-free.
Google partnered with Gentle Monster and Warby Parker for the design, clearly aiming for something people actually want to wear all day.
And yes, they work with iPhone too. Looks like the smartphone is slowly becoming just the “brain in your pocket.” 👓
⚡️ Xiaomi built a crossover with supercar energy
Xiaomi unveiled the YU7 GT, a high-performance electric SUV that already set a Nürburgring record for its class.
Specs are wild: 1003 hp, 0–100 km/h in 2.92s, top speed 300 km/h. That’s supercar territory — in a crossover.
Inside? Massage seats, smart panoramic roof, and a 25-speaker sound system. Basically a rolling cyberpunk lounge.
Starting price in China: around $54K. Xiaomi is clearly no longer “just a phone company.” 🚗⚡️
🤖 Space robots are evolving correctly — now with 4 arms
Orbit Robotics unveiled HELIOS, a humanoid robot built for zero gravity. Instead of legs? Two extra arms. And honestly, it makes perfect sense.
In space, you don’t walk — you grab, pull, and stabilize yourself. HELIOS can anchor itself with two arms while using the others for repairs, cargo handling, and maintenance.
Astronauts spend huge amounts of time on routine station work. HELIOS is meant to take over the boring tasks so humans can focus on science instead of moving boxes around.
It looks like a sci-fi boss fight… until you realize it’s basically the ultimate orbital handyman. 🚀
🎙 Insta360 put E Ink screens on lav mics
Insta360’s new Mic Pro looks less like audio gear and more like a cyberpunk accessory. Each transmitter gets a tiny color E Ink display for names, logos, or labels.
Inside are three microphones with smart audio modes: shotgun-style focus, cardioid voice capture, even figure-8 for two-person dialogue.
There’s also 32 GB onboard backup recording, so if your main track dies — you’re still safe.
Up to 30 hours with the charging case, Bluetooth support, USB-C — creator gear keeps getting weird in the best way.
⌚️ A Space Shuttle… on your wrist
Amida dropped the Digitrend NASA Tribute — limited to just 100 pieces, and it’s pure space nerd candy.
It’s a “driver’s watch”: time is displayed sideways so you don’t twist your wrist. Hours jump, minutes slide — looks digital, but it’s fully mechanical inside.
Top it off with a retro NASA logo and ceramic inspired by shuttle heat tiles — basically space tech aesthetics in watch form.
Price: ~$3.4K. Totally unnecessary… which makes it even better. 🚀
🏍 First solid-state bike hits the road
Verge just shipped the TS Pro Gen 2 — a motorcycle powered by a claimed solid-state battery. 137 hp, 1000 Nm, 0–100 km/h in 3.5s.
The real headline: up to 600 km range and 80% charge in 10 minutes. If true, that’s a massive leap beyond lithium-ion.
But there’s a catch: the key 400 Wh/kg claim isn’t independently verified yet. Chemistry and long-term durability remain unclear.
So for now, it’s either a breakthrough — or a very expensive experiment at $34,900.
🎮 A Game Boy… for your Switch cartridges
Elago dropped a tiny Game Boy-style case that holds 3 Nintendo Switch cartridges + 3 microSD cards.
Slide a game in and its cover shows through the “screen.” Add clickable buttons and a scroll wheel — instant fidget toy energy.
Price: $15. Physical media may be dying — but the vibes are alive.
🍏 Apple turns 50 — from garage to trillions
Apple’s 50th anniversary. Back in 1976 — just a garage, a soldering iron, and two founders with big ideas. Today — one of the most valuable companies ever.
The wild part? Apple nearly died multiple times — and came back stronger each time. From iMac to iPhone, they didn’t just build products — they reshaped how billions live.
50 years later, still at the top. Not many legends scale like that.
🌚 Musk wants to launch satellites from the Moon
Elon Musk just dropped another wild idea: build an AI satellite factory on the Moon and launch payloads using an electromagnetic mass driver. Basically, a railgun for space logistics.
It actually makes sense — low gravity, no atmosphere = perfect for launching without rockets. Chips made on Earth, assembled on the Moon, then fired into orbit.
Plot twist: Musk used to mock lunar missions. Now he says Moon in ~10 years, Mars later.
Step one: build the base. Then aim for Mars. 🚀
💳 Mastercard goes full crypto mode
Mastercard launched a global crypto partnership with 85+ players — including Binance, Circle, Ripple, PayPal, Gemini, and Paxos. The focus: real-world infrastructure — cross-border transfers, B2B payments, and settlements.
This isn’t crypto vs banks anymore. It’s crypto inside the financial system.
Stablecoins, faster rails, fewer посредников — the merge is already happening.
🔥 A scooter that literally won’t fall
OMOWAY unveiled OMO X — a self-balancing electric scooter that stays upright at all times. Powered by a CMG gyroscope (space-grade tech), it’s basically a two-wheeled robot.
For beginners — no learning curve. For everyone else — car-level features: cruise control, auto parking, summon, blind spot monitoring. Add modular design and cloud-based stabilization tuning.
Top speed 110 km/h, range ~200 km, price around $3,800. Preorders coming soon.
Falling off your bike might officially be a thing of the past.
📸 A digital camera that forces you to shoot like film
Meet Rewindpix — a Kickstarter camera that mimics film shooting, minus the chemicals. No screen, just an optical viewfinder and a manual advance lever for every shot. Yes, you crank it.
The magic is in digital “films”: tweak grain, tones, light leaks, save presets, and get finished photos straight out of camera. No editing needed.
13 MP sensor, xenon flash, Wi-Fi, and full standalone mode.
Price: $110. Film vibes — without film pain.
🎬 Keanu Reeves quietly backed a dream for 5 years
Sounds too wholesome to be real — but it is. A 15-year-old girl got backlash after writing about The Queen’s Gambit. Instead of quitting, she decided to make a documentary about women in chess.
Then Keanu Reeves stepped in — no noise, no PR — as executive producer, supporting the project for five years.
Now Madwoman’s Game is heading to the Miami Film Festival. Sometimes the best stories happen off-screen.
💡 A light-based computer solving “impossible” problems
Optimizing a 50-stop delivery route? Brute force would outlive the universe. Even quantum machines struggle.
Researchers built an optical Ising machine that uses pulses of light instead of transistors or qubits. Light on = 1, light off = 0. The pulses interact in a fiber loop and naturally settle into the lowest-energy — optimal — solution.
Built from off-the-shelf lasers and modulators, it handles 256 spins at room temperature. Internet hardware, repurposed for next-gen computing.
⏺️ Market update: fear takes over
Bitcoin is hovering around $70K, ETH stays above $2K, while alts bleed. No fresh money — pure selection phase.
📉 Losers: IP –8%, NIGHT –7%, JUP –7% 📈 Gainers: ZRO +15%, STABLE +10%, H +5%
😱 Fear & Greed Index: 10 — extreme fear. When fear peaks, smart money starts watching closely.
🦖 Colossal is building artificial eggs to revive giant birds
The company trying to resurrect mammoths just unveiled an artificial egg incubator — and it already hatched multiple chicks.
The end goal? Bringing back the giant moa, a 3-meter-tall bird from New Zealand that went extinct centuries ago. Problem is: no living bird can realistically incubate an egg that size.
So Colossal built a silicone-based artificial egg with a membrane that mimics real shell oxygen exchange. Scientists can even watch embryos develop in real time while testing genetic edits.
For now it’s chickens. Next: emus and ostriches. Then maybe… moa.
We officially live in a timeline where extinct birds might come back through biotech. 😶
🧮 AI solved a math problem humans struggled with for 80 years
An OpenAI model just cracked a famous 1946 problem posed by mathematician Paul Erdős — something researchers couldn’t solve for decades.
The challenge: arrange points on a plane so the maximum number of pairs sit at the same distance. Everyone believed square grids were basically optimal.
The AI proved otherwise. Not with one trick example — but with an infinite family of better constructions.
The scary part? It connected geometry with algebraic number theory — fields humans rarely linked together here.
This wasn’t faster calculation. It was a genuinely new mathematical insight. 🤖
🚀 Starship V3 just reached space for the first time
SpaceX launched the fully redesigned Starship Version 3 — and yes, it came with the usual chaos. One Raptor engine failed at liftoff, the booster splashed into the Gulf, and Ship lost an engine mid-flight. Very SpaceX: “something broke, but the mission worked.”
The important part: Ship 39 reached space and deployed 22 satellites, including two real Starlinks with onboard cameras capturing insane footage of Starship in orbit.
Then it survived reentry plasma, extreme thermal stress, and performed a controlled splashdown in the Indian Ocean.
At this point, Starship launches feel less like tests… and more like the start of a new space era. 🌍🚀
⏱️ A clock powered by… vacuum
A German DIY creator built a clock that displays time using air pressure — or rather, the lack of it.
A flexible membrane gets pulled inward by vacuum at specific points, forming digital segments. No screen, no light — just physical dents as pixels.
Best part? The shape persists even after power is off, until pressure resets.
Totally useless. Totally brilliant.
🎬 Google Vids just became a real AI studio
Google upgraded Vids into a full-on AI video creation suite.
With Veo 3.1, you can turn text or images into videos — even on a free plan (10 generations/month). Add Lyria 3 music, AI avatars with consistent identity, and built-in screen recording.
Ultra users get up to 1000 videos/month — basically a content factory.
Google is clearly building tools for creators… without cameras.
📈 Crypto pumps on geopolitical cooldown
A reported ceasefire between the US and Iran and reopening of the Strait of Hormuz gave markets some relief.
Bitcoin climbed back above $72K, alts followed: ZEC +23%, EDGE +17%, ZRO +17%. Still, some pain — DEXE -13% dropped hard.
Fear & Greed Index at 46 — fear fading, but no euphoria yet.
Same story: first tension drops, then charts go up 🚀
😎 Nothing is building smart glasses — Carl Pei gave in
After resisting the idea for years, Carl Pei is finally moving into AI smart glasses. Nothing is working on a pair with cameras, mics, and speakers, targeting H1 2027.
The twist: heavy AI runs on your phone and the cloud, keeping the glasses light and wearable.
The real question is design — if Nothing nails its signature look, this could stand out fast.
Also, Nothing is going multi-device: AI earbuds are coming, while Phone (3) is on hold.
🎹 A Nintendo that plays games… and music
Love Hultén did it again. The NES-SY2.0 looks like a wooden NES, but inside it’s a fully functional synth with MIDI keys and controls.
Powered by NES Poly, it delivers authentic 8-bit chiptune, enhanced with modern effects and a real-time visualizer.
Best part? You can still plug in real NES cartridges and play games. Console + instrument in one.
You can’t buy it. But it’s the kind of object that makes you wish you could.
⚡️ Minecraft just got dangerously cute
The latest update turns survival mode into a full-on cute overload. All mobs now have baby versions with new models, animations, and sounds.
The real twist — golden dandelion: feed it to a baby, and it stays small forever. Yep, pocket-sized pets are now a thing. You can also craft name tags and get emotionally attached instantly.
Live now on Java and Bedrock. You’re not surviving anymore — you’re adopting. 🙂
🖱 Claude can now control your computer
Anthropic upgraded Claude — it can now move your mouse, click, open files, and use apps like a human. No setup needed.
It first tries integrations (Slack, Calendar), and if those fail — it operates your screen directly. New feature Dispatchlets you assign tasks remotely and come back to finished work.
Still early-stage: slower, иногда глючит, and not ideal for sensitive data.
But the shift is clear — AI isn’t just assisting anymore. It’s doing the work.
🎬 IMAX isn’t sharper — it’s bigger
The new Dune: Part Three trailer shows a clear IMAX vs standard difference. And it’s not just quality — it’s aspect ratio.
Regular cinema uses wide formats (16:9+), while IMAX goes near-square (1.43:1), showing way more image vertically. The standard version is basically a cropped IMAX frame.
Side-by-side, the difference is obvious: IMAX feels масштабнее, regular feels trimmed.
Release date: December 18. This is one you watch in IMAX.
🕷 Spider-Man is back — and it’s darker now
The first trailer for “Brand New Day” with Tom Holland just dropped — and the tone has shifted. Set 4 years after No Way Home, the world has forgotten Peter Parker… and he’s on his own again.
Less multiverse chaos, more street-level crime and grounded struggles. Marvel seems to be taking Spidey back to his roots — but with higher stakes.
Release date: July 31, 2026. A fresh start begins.
🖱 AirPods turned into a vintage Mac mouse
Spigen dropped the Classic LS case for AirPods Pro 3, styled like an old-school Macintosh mouse. Straight out of 1984 vibes.
The fun part — a clickable button that opens the case like a real mouse. And yes, MagSafe and wireless charging still work.
There’s also a matching MagSafe wallet for full retro aesthetics. Price: $45 for the case, $40 for the wallet.
Apple’s 50th anniversary isn’t here yet — but the nostalgia already is.
🎬 Super Bowl LX: trailers and ads worth watching
Super Bowl once again flexed pop culture. The biggest surprise — The Adventures of Cliff Booth, a sequel to Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Written by Tarantino, directed by David Fincher, with Brad Pitt back. Rumors say Netflix this year.
SpaceX aired its first Super Bowl ad — pure Starlink, no rockets. Minions & Monsters goes full chaos: Minions try to summon Cthulhu (July 1 release). Uber Eats brings McConaughey and Cooper questioning if football exists just to sell food. Pepsi lands a clean jab at Coke with a white bear, Taika Waititi, and zero AI.
🤖 Atlas learned to flip — after crashing first
Boston Dynamics released footage of Atlas nailing a run-up roundoff into a backflip, plus the wipeouts along the way. Real training, real falls.
It’s the final stress test of the research Atlas. The secret sauce is zero-shot transfer: train in simulation, deploy to hardware without tuning. Hence the flips—and the natural gait.
Production Atlas is coming: 56 DoF, tactile hands. Hyundai plans factory deployment by 2028, assembly tasks by 2030.