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Ayaneo’s Konkr Fit Handheld Packs AMD Ryzen AI 9 And Windows, Targeting the Steam Deck and Legion Go 2

Ayaneo’s budget Konkr brand is expanding beyond Android. After launching the Pocket Fit with Snapdragon G3 Gen 3 and the more powerful Pocket Fit Elite with Snapdragon Elite 8, the company has unveiled its first Windows handheld under the Konkr name. The new device drops “Pocket” from its title for good reason.

The Konkr Fit features a 7-inch OLED display, significantly larger than the 6-inch screens on its Android siblings. Powering this Windows handheld is an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 processor, marking a departure from Snapdragon mobile chips. The device also packs an impressive 80Wh battery, dwarfing the capacity found in competitors like the Lenovo Legion Go S and even the Legion Go 2.

Designer: Ayaneo

80Wh in a handheld gaming device puts the Konkr Fit in genuinely rare company. The Legion Go S limps along with 55.5Wh, while even Lenovo’s newer Legion Go 2 only manages 74Wh. We’re talking about potentially game-changing longevity here, especially considering Windows handhelds typically drain batteries faster than their Android counterparts. The Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 is a hungry chip, sure, but you’re still looking at a device that might actually survive a cross-country flight without searching desperately for an outlet. Battery anxiety has plagued this entire product category since the Steam Deck launched, and Ayaneo seems to understand that cramming in more capacity solves more problems than any amount of software optimization ever will.

The HX 470 belongs to AMD’s Strix Point lineup, the same family powering proper gaming laptops. You’re getting Zen 5 cores and RDNA 3.5 graphics, which means AAA titles at respectable settings become genuinely playable. Compare that to the Snapdragon Elite 8 in the Pocket Fit Elite, which excels at emulation and Android titles but starts sweating with demanding PC games. Ayaneo clearly wants this positioned as a real PC gaming device, not just an emulation box with delusions of grandeur. The processor alone tells you they’re betting on people who want to run their Steam libraries natively, not folks content with streaming or playing mobile ports.

Borrowing heavily from its Android siblings makes sense when you consider the Pocket Fit’s design already works. Hall Effect joysticks handle the analog inputs, which means drift shouldn’t plague these controllers the way it does cheaper alternatives. Adjustable triggers and dual back buttons carry over unchanged. The company offers two colorways: Retro Gray with red accents and a straight Yellow option. Both feel very much in line with the broader handheld gaming aesthetic that’s emerged, though the gray and red combo has some Steam Deck vibes whether Ayaneo wants to admit it or not.

Two USB-C ports now sit at the top edge, giving you actual flexibility for charging while gaming or connecting accessories without blocking your hands. Larger inlet vents dominate the back panel compared to the Pocket Fit, addressing what will inevitably become thermal challenges with a chip this powerful. Even the screws holding the backplate are exposed, suggesting Ayaneo expects enthusiasts to crack this thing open for maintenance or upgrades. These aren’t cosmetic flourishes. Windows gaming generates serious heat, and pretending otherwise is how you end up with a handheld that thermal throttles ten minutes into Cyberpunk 2077.

The OLED panel upgrade from the Pocket Fit’s LCD matters beyond the obvious visual improvements. Response times eliminate the ghosting issues that plague cheaper LCD panels during fast-paced gaming. Deep blacks mean better contrast in dimly lit game environments, which basically describes half of modern AAA titles. At 7 inches, you’re getting enough screen real estate that Windows UI elements remain readable without squinting, though whether Windows 11 plays nicely with a 7-inch touchscreen remains an open question. Microsoft has never really figured out how to make their OS work elegantly on small displays, and I doubt Ayaneo’s custom launcher will magically solve decades of interface design problems.

Pricing remains a company secret, but simple math suggests this slots above the $399 Pocket Fit Elite. The Ryzen AI 9 HX 470 costs more than Snapdragon chips, Windows licensing adds expense that Android avoids, and that 80Wh battery doesn’t come cheap. My gut says somewhere between $500 and $600, which plants this squarely in Steam Deck OLED territory. That’s awkward positioning for a brand that built its identity on being the affordable alternative to Ayaneo’s own thousand-dollar flagships. Then again, Ayaneo could just drop the details and prove me wrong.

The post Ayaneo’s Konkr Fit Handheld Packs AMD Ryzen AI 9 And Windows, Targeting the Steam Deck and Legion Go 2 first appeared on Yanko Design.

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This Utility Knife Has a Satisfying Click-and-Slide Instead of a Rattle

Most utility knives live in junk drawers until you need to open a box. You dig out something with a flimsy plastic slider, a rattling blade, and a body that feels like it costs exactly one dollar. They are treated as disposable, even though you use them constantly for packages, tape, and workshop tasks. There is room for a small knife that feels as considered as the rest of your desk or carry.

BQ S1 is a compact gravity-slide utility knife built around a simple intention: a tool that looks clean, feels natural, and works flawlessly. The flat, CNC-machined metal body hides a gravity-assisted blade mechanism inside, with no aggressive tactical styling or gimmicks. It is designed to make everyday cutting feel deliberate rather than disposable, turning deployment into a motion that is actually satisfying instead of frustrating.

Designer: Mario Lee from BQEDC

Click Here to Buy Now: $49 $70 (30% off). Hurry, only 14/270 left! Raised over $70,000.

The S1 uses a gravity-assisted slide mechanism instead of a traditional linear slider. A sideways thumb swipe makes the internal plates pivot, and the blade glides out under its own weight, then locks securely in place. The motion and sound are tuned to feel instinctive and precise, creating a satisfying click and slide rather than a sticky, two-handed struggle with a plastic track that catches every time.

The body is machined from aluminum or titanium with tight tolerances, giving you sharp exterior lines, smooth chamfered edges, crisp blade guides, and defined side texture for grip. The layout is lefty-friendly, with every angle and surface shaped to enhance control, comfort, safety, and precision. It feels equally natural in either hand when cutting cardboard, trimming tape, or opening packages at your desk or in a workshop.

A bright red safety lock sits at the top, offering tactile feedback when engaged and making it obvious when the blade is secured. The compact 80mm length, lightweight build, and reinforced lanyard hole make it easy to carry on a keychain, in a pocket, or clipped to a bag. It is small enough to disappear when not in use, solid enough that you do not worry about it falling apart.

The S1 uses standard utility blades you can find almost anywhere, steel, tungsten-coated, or ceramic, with no proprietary refills. Blade changes are handled by a simple slide button sequence: slide to release, swap the blade, slide back, done. That choice keeps running costs low and makes it easy to keep a sharp edge without hunting for special cartridges or depending on a single supplier.

Opening deliveries, cutting packing tape, trimming cardboard for prototypes, these are small routine tasks that most people handle with whatever dull knife is within reach. The BQ S1 is designed to turn those moments into clean, precise actions where the blade extends smoothly, locks with confidence, and cuts without tearing or snagging. It is not trying to be a survival knife or a fidget toy, just a well-made cutter.

For people who care about the details of the tools they touch every day, a utility knife that feels cool to use instead of something you hide in a drawer starts to make sense. The gravity-slide motion, the CNC-machined body, the red safety lock, and the universal blade compatibility all add up to a tool that quietly earns its place in your pocket or on your keychain, not because it does anything wildly different, but because it does everyday things better.

Click Here to Buy Now: $49 $70 (30% off). Hurry, only 14/270 left! Raised over $70,000.

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Award-Winning Microhome Actually Replenishes Groundwater While You Live In It

If you live in a place where drinking water and groundwater is not a major problem, then you’re one of the lucky ones. There are a lot of places in the world where that is a major concern, and it definitely affects their living conditions. One such place is Punjab, India, where they’re currently experiencing one of the world’s most severe groundwater depletion crises due to intensive farming.

Enter a groundbreaking microhome designed by New York-based architects Aleksa Milojevic and Matthew W Wilde. Living on Groundwater is not just a tiny house but a prefabricated home standing on only 25 square meters that helps to actively repair the environmental conditions that support it, making the residents active agents in groundwater recharge.

Designers: Aleksa Milojevic and Matthew W Wilde

This innovative microhome has an integrated system that is able to harvest rainwater, uses greywater recycling systems, and also has an on-site injection well that is able to return treated water back to the aquifer. This is a unique hydro-positive housing model that has a low carbon footprint and is able to give back to the environment more than it takes. It is also able to reframe microhomes as not just cute places to live in but as environmental infrastructure designed to repair ecological conditions. Think of it as a home that doesn’t just exist on the land. It actively heals it.

Design-wise, it has an elegant rural aesthetic that fits right in with the Punjab agricultural landscape. It sits lightly above the fields on a raised timber frame so that it minimizes disturbance to the ground and at the same time allows water flow, air movement, and vegetation to pass freely underneath. This thoughtful elevation means the earth beneath can continue to breathe and function naturally, rather than being compressed and sealed off like traditional foundations would do.

The home features a permeable facade that lets natural light and the surrounding views become part of the house’s ambiance. It responds to seasonal variations while maintaining a visual connection to the surrounding landscape. Imagine being able to adjust your home’s relationship with the outdoors depending on the weather and time of year. During hot summers, it provides shade and ventilation, while in cooler months, it can capture warmth and light.

The sleeping area is designed in a loft style so that the ground level is freed up to be the living and working area, maximizing every inch of the compact 269-square-foot space. Inside, you get modular cabinetry and convertible work surfaces, ensuring that the furniture adapts to your needs instead of dictating how you should live. The walls and roof assemblies are prefabricated, so the design can be replicated across different rural contexts without losing its functionality or environmental benefits.

The brilliance of this design didn’t go unnoticed. Living on Groundwater won first prize in the Kingspan-funded MICROHOME #10 competition organized by Buildner, earning €20,000 and recognition from an international jury. The judges highlighted the project’s “technically sophisticated integration of building systems, local ecology, and water resilience,” praising how it positions the microhome not merely as a low-impact dwelling but as an active agent in environmental repair.

What makes this project particularly compelling is that it was developed through shared research on Indian agricultural history undertaken during a Yale University seminar and field study in Punjab. The designers didn’t just parachute in with a generic solution. They studied the land, understood its challenges, and created something that truly responds to the specific needs of the region.

In a world facing intensifying housing pressures driven by climate instability, rising construction costs, and growing demographic needs, Living on Groundwater offers a hopeful vision. It proves that small-scale architecture can be both beautiful and purposeful, compact without feeling cramped, modern without being cold, and sustainable without sacrificing livability. It’s the kind of thoughtful design that reminds us that the best solutions often come from truly understanding a problem and designing with nature, not against it.

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This Tiny Home Maximizes Space With An Extra-Wide Design

Vancouver Island’s Rewild Homes has introduced the Dove, a single-storey tiny house that breaks away from conventional dimensions to offer full-time residents a more spacious living experience. Measuring 30 feet long and 10 feet wide, the Dove sits on a triple-axle trailer and challenges the standard 8’6″ width typically seen in tiny homes. That extra width makes a remarkable difference in creating an interior that feels genuinely livable rather than cramped, positioning the Dove as a serious option for those considering permanent downsizing.

The exterior showcases a West Coast aesthetic with durable metal siding accented by cedar trim, topped with a sloping metal roof. This material choice balances longevity with visual warmth, creating a home that looks equally at home in rural settings or more developed tiny house communities. The design maintains a clean, modern profile while nodding to traditional cabin architecture, giving the Dove a timeless quality that should age well both structurally and stylistically.

Designer: Rewild Homes

Inside, the single-floor layout eliminates the ladder-accessed lofts that many find impractical for daily living. The kitchen area features ample butcherblock counter space, including a designated eating bar that creates a proper dining zone without requiring a separate table. This setup works particularly well for the Dove’s intended capacity of two people, allowing one person to cook while the other sits comfortably nearby. The open floor plan takes full advantage of that 10-foot width, creating sightlines that make the 30-foot length feel more generous than the square footage might suggest.

The walk-through bathroom stands out as a genuine luxury in the tiny house category. A beautiful tiled shower occupies a substantial portion of the space, large enough to feel like a proper bathroom rather than an afterthought. The walk-through design connects different zones of the house while maintaining privacy, a layout choice that reflects thoughtful planning rather than simply fitting fixtures wherever they might squeeze in.

The ground-floor bedroom eliminates the need to climb to a sleeping loft each night, a feature that significantly improves accessibility and aging-in-place potential. Rewild Homes equipped the Dove with practical appliances, including a combination washer/dryer unit, a propane range, and propane on-demand water heating. These choices support off-grid capability while maintaining the conveniences most people expect from a permanent residence.

Built in Nanaimo, British Columbia, the Dove represents Rewild Homes’ commitment to quality materials and custom construction. The extra-wide frame and single-storey design create a home that accommodates full-time living without the compromises that make many tiny houses feel like temporary solutions. For couples or individuals seeking a properly scaled-down home rather than a novelty dwelling, the Dove delivers functional space within a compact footprint.

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LEGO recreates iconic battle from Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

The LEGO Group has carried over the momentum from last year, introducing sets that the community wants, as well as some releases that are their own brainchild. Last year, LEGO hinted at a Legend of Zelda collaboration with Nintendo, and now the official set is releasing. This one joins the likes of the three Pokémon sets and the Harry Potter set released by the group this month.

The LEGO set will replicate one of the most iconic boss battles in the title’s history, depicting the Ocarina of Time bash taking place among the ruins of Hyrule Castle Town, as Link and Princess Zelda take on the monstrous Ganon. The official set is even better than initially anticipated by community experts, adding to the numerous options LEGO fans have at their disposal.

Designer: LEGO Group

The 1,003-piece set dubbed the Ocarina of Time: The Final Battle is a faithful diorama of the most iconic arcade games for the Nintendo N64 console line-up. Ganondorf, in his final boss human form (that’s buildable piece by piece), takes up the most territory of the set, as minifigures of Link and Zelda are depicted taking on the monster. The base of the set shows Ganon’s ruined castle and damaged tower, as the rubble masks the three recovery hearts. Other inclusions of the set include the Master Sword, a couple of fabric capes, dual honking swords of Ganon, and the Hylian Shield.

When the set depicting the intense scrap in the ruins of Hyrule Castle is put together, it measures 6.5 inches high, 11 inches wide, and 7 inches deep. That makes it ideal for your gaming desk setup or work shelf to display your love for the title. If you look closely at the official pictures, the base recreates the arena of Hyrule from the N64, and has the Triforce-badged display base. LEGO has paid attention to detail in the creation, as one can spot the little elements of the Ocarina. Things like the pile of rubble, the Megaton Hammer, or Navi the fairy floating among the chaos. In fact, a hidden button activates the lid mechanism, as the ruins erupt and the super villain announces his presence for ultimate supremacy.

Compared to the 2-in-1 Great Deku Tree set, this one is smaller since it represents only a single title. The price tag of $130 is also accommodating for fans who don’t want an elaborate set to fit in their scheme of things. Ocarina of Time: The Final Battle set is up for pre-order right now, and the official launch is slated for 1st March. Even for a neutral fan who loves playing arcade games for fun, this LEGO build is one to consider.

 

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HONOR’s 6.1mm thick Magic8 Pro Air Has a 5500mAh Battery and Triple Cameras (iPhone Air Can’t Match That)

Sometimes the most interesting phones aren’t the ones pushing boundaries into weird new territory. They’re the ones that look at existing boundaries and ask why they exist in the first place. Honor’s Magic8 Pro Air sits at 6.1mm thick, which matches the iPhone 16 Pro’s obsession with thinness, but then it throws in a full triple camera array and a 5,500mAh battery just to prove a point. That point being: maybe we’ve been too quick to accept compromises that aren’t actually necessary.

The whole package reads like a direct response to Apple’s recent design choices, except Honor isn’t playing the “our number is bigger” game. They’re playing the “why can’t we have nice things” game, and honestly, it’s refreshing. For years, flagship phones have operated under this assumption that serious camera systems and all-day batteries require chunky bodies. The Magic8 Pro Air suggests that’s more about engineering priorities than physical limitations. Whether it actually delivers on that promise in real-world use is another story, but the ambition alone is worth paying attention to.

Designer: HONOR

Sure, a triple-camera array on a phone that thin is impressive, but what knocks my socks off more is the fact that this phone packs nearly 75% more battery than the iPhone Air. For context, the iPhone Air maxes out around 3,149mAh and sits at roughly 5.6mm. Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Edge packs slightly more at 3,900mAh into a 5.8mm frame. Honor somehow found an extra 1,600mAh while adding just 0.3-5mm more than the competition. That translates to a good 5+ hours more of daily use before reaching for a charger or power bank. Let’s not ignore how impressive that is.

The triple camera setup tells a similar story of refusing easy compromises. We don’t have full specs yet on the sensor sizes or focal lengths, but the fact that Honor committed to three lenses instead of following Apple’s single-camera approach on the standard iPhone 16 says something about their priorities. Modern computational photography has convinced a lot of companies that one good sensor plus aggressive software processing can replace optical versatility. Honor clearly disagrees, or at least thinks consumers disagree enough to matter. They’re betting that people still want actual telephoto reach and ultrawide perspective without relying entirely on digital trickery and crop-zoom theatrics.

What makes this launch particularly on-point is the tagline. Honor’s marketing team went with “thin but not lacking” in Chinese, which translates the subtext into actual text. They know exactly what conversation they’re entering. Apple spent the last few years teaching the market that premium means thin, and thin means sacrifice – whether it’s a camera lens on the iPhone Air, a 3.5mm jack on the iPad Pro, or just ports on their MacBook Airs. Honor looked at that equation and decided the sacrifice part was optional, which either makes them bold or delusional depending on how the phone actually performs once reviewers get their hands on it.

The broader implications here matter more than one phone from one manufacturer. If Honor can ship a 6.1mm device with flagship battery life and proper camera versatility, then every other manufacturer now has to explain why they can’t or won’t. The “we had to choose between thin and capable” excuse stops working when someone demonstrates the choice was never binary. This puts pressure on Samsung, Google, and especially Apple to either match the capability or justify why their engineering led to different conclusions. Competition works best when companies stop accepting the same limitations and start solving problems their competitors declared unsolvable.

Honor’s brand-recall in Western markets still has room for improvement, although they’re perhaps one of the most reputed brands in their home country of China. The Magic8 Pro Air might be brilliant, but if people don’t know where to easily buy one, the competitive pressure stays theoretical. Still, specs like these have a way of forcing conversations that manufacturers would rather avoid. Apple doesn’t need to worry about Honor’s market share to feel the heat when tech reviewers start asking why the iPhone 17 can’t pack a bigger battery at the same thickness – and every tech reviewer should absolutely call on Apple to be less compromising. The Magic8 Pro Air wins just by existing and working as advertised. Everything after that is bonus points.

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iPhone Fold Specs Leak Online: Aluminum + Titanium Body, A20 Chipset, and the Rebirth of TouchID

If someone told you in 2019 that we’d see seven generations of Samsung Galaxy Folds before Apple released a single foldable iPhone, you’d probably have believed them because that’s exactly how Apple operates. Wait, watch, then swoop in like they just invented the whole concept. Well, 2026 might finally be the year, assuming these leaks are legit and not just wishful thinking from analysts who’ve been predicting the iPhone Fold since the Obama era.

The rumor mill is churning out some pretty specific claims right now. We’re talking actual dimensions, chip specs, and price points that’ll make your wallet weep. But more interesting than the what is the how and why. Apple’s supposedly been tackling the exact problems that have kept foldables from going mainstream, which either means they’ve cracked the code or they’re about to learn the same expensive lessons Samsung already learned. Let’s unpack what we actually know versus what’s tech journalism fan fiction.

Designer: Apple

The specs coming out of supply chain analyst Jeff Pu’s investor briefings paint a picture of a device Apple’s positioning right alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup. September 2026 launch date, which means they’re treating this as a flagship product rather than some experimental side quest. The inner display clocks in at 7.8 inches when you unfold it, putting it in direct competition with Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 8. The outer screen sits at 5.3 inches, which is actually smaller than what Samsung’s offering. That’s either Apple prioritizing pocketability or a sign they couldn’t fit a bigger screen without compromising the design. Probably both, knowing how Apple thinks about these things.

The whole device reportedly measures 4.5mm when unfolded, which is genuinely insane when you consider what’s packed inside. For context, that’s thinner than most credit cards and absolutely thinner than any iPhone that’s ever existed. The folded thickness supposedly hits around 9mm, which still slides into a pocket easier than carrying an iPad mini everywhere. Apple’s apparently using a combination of aluminum and titanium for the frame construction, same lightweight-but-strong approach they’ve been pushing across the Pro iPhone lineup. The real party trick though is the hinge mechanism, which multiple sources claim uses liquid metal components to handle the stress of constant folding without creating that ugly crease everyone hates about foldables.

The A20 chip powering this beast is built on TSMC’s 2-nanometer process, same silicon going into the iPhone 18 Pro models. Apple’s apparently not treating this as a lesser device that gets last year’s processor, which tells you how seriously they’re taking the category. Battery capacity is rumored between 5,400 and 5,800 mAh, making it the largest battery Apple’s ever put in an iPhone because powering two displays simultaneously turns out to require actual juice. That’s almost double the capacity of a regular iPhone 15 Pro, and it needs to be.

The crease is the hot-topic on everyone’s mouths, with the rumor being Apple’s somehow found a way to obliterate it. Every foldable phone on the market has that visible line running down the middle when you unfold it, and it drives people absolutely insane. Apple’s supposedly using a liquid metal hinge design combined with some display technology wizardry to make the crease “nearly invisible” according to the leaks. I’ll believe it when I see it, but if they actually pulled this off, it would immediately make every other foldable look outdated. Samsung’s been iterating on this problem for seven years and still hasn’t fully solved it.

Touch ID is coming back, which is wild after Apple spent the better part of a decade convincing everyone Face ID was the future. The decision makes sense though when you think about the form factor. Authentication needs to work whether the phone is folded, half-open, or fully unfolded, and Face ID gets wonky when you’re holding a device at weird angles or using it propped up like a tiny laptop. A fingerprint sensor in the power button solves all of that instantly. It’s the same approach they took with recent iPads, and it works.

Pricing is where this whole thing either makes sense or falls apart completely. The leaks point to somewhere between $2,000 and $2,500, with recent intel skewing toward the higher end. That’s Mac Studio money for a phone that folds. That’s almost double what an iPhone 17 Pro Max costs. Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 8 will probably land around $1,999, so Apple’s betting people will pay a premium for whatever magic they’ve supposedly worked on the crease and overall build quality. Whether that bet pays off depends on a lot of factors, but I guess seeing Apple’s vision of a folding phone first-hand will really help seal the deal regarding whether this 6-7-year wait has finally paid off.

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This Airport Lounge Turned Mondrian’s Boogie-Woogie into Wood Islands

Long layovers usually mean seas of identical metal chairs, bright signage, and constant motion that makes rest feel impossible. Even premium lounges often feel like slightly nicer waiting rooms, not places with a point of view beyond arranging seating in rows. Schiphol’s Lounge 2 sits in the flat Haarlemmermeer polder outside Amsterdam, which gave Beyond Space a specific landscape and design history to work with when redesigning the 1,000 square meter space.

The studio looked at that polder and the Dutch De Stijl movement it inspired, particularly Mondrian’s orthogonal paintings. His late Boogie-Woogie works are essentially abstractions of that landscape, grids of lines and colored planes forming rhythmic compositions. Beyond Space took those paintings as an organizing principle, using sequences of orthogonal lines and planes to define where and how people sit instead of just dropping furniture onto a floor.

Designer: Beyond Space

Entering the lounge, you realize you are not looking at rows of chairs but a low wooden city. Connected seats form islands of different sizes that plug into the existing architecture, creating pockets for solo travelers, pairs, and larger groups. You can choose a corner that feels tucked away, a spot with a direct runway view, or a cluster where a family can spread out without blocking circulation.

Instead of Mondrian’s red, yellow, and blue, the designers used solid wood from European tree species Mondrian once painted in his early landscape work. That swap keeps the De Stijl grid and rhythm but trades visual shouting for warmth and calm. In a terminal full of screens and branding, the consistent wood tones and leather upholstery act like a noise-cancelling layer without resorting to beige blandness.

The orthogonal layout hides surprising variety, armchairs with side tables, benches, back-to-back arrangements, and larger platforms for groups. Power outlets are integrated into the wooden blocks, so charging a laptop does not mean hunting for a wall socket or sitting on the floor. The grid gives order, but within it you can find a spot that matches how you actually want to wait.

Because seating follows a clear grid aligned with the architecture, it is easier to orient yourself and remember where you were sitting when you come back with coffee. The repetition of similar forms, combined with daylight from large windows and a neutral floor, creates visual tranquility rare in airports. It feels designed to let your brain idle instead of constantly scanning for threats.

The lounge treats waiting not as dead time to fill with more screens, but as a chance to sit in a space with a clear idea behind it. By abstracting the landscape outside and channeling Mondrian without copying his colors, Beyond Space turns a generic airport zone into a small wooden blueprint of Dutch design history that just happens to be comfortable between flights.

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Wear Your Real Watch: This Case Turns Apple Watch into a Mini Handheld

Full smartphones often feel like overkill, but the Apple Watch on your wrist is still awkward for anything beyond quick glances. There’s also the complication of wanting to wear a mechanical or analog watch without giving up notifications, Apple Pay, and quick replies. Stacking both on one arm feels ridiculous, and choosing between connectivity and wearing the watch you actually like is the kind of small annoyance that lingers.

elrow’s miniphone Standard and miniphone Ultra are 3D-printed cases that turn an Apple Watch into a narrow, palm-sized device with a lanyard. The Standard fits the 46mm Series 10 and 11, while the Ultra fits the Apple Watch Ultra 1, 2, and 3. Both are about 95mm tall, with textured translucent bodies, visible screws, and an open back so you can charge without disassembling the case.

Designer: elrow industries

Leaving your iPhone in a bag and carrying the miniphone instead means you still get calls, messages, and Apple Pay, but you are not staring at a six-inch screen every time a notification pings. Holding the watch in a slightly larger body makes tapping icons feel more like using an old iPod than pecking at your wrist, and clipping it to a pocket means it stays out of sight until you need it.

The translucent PLA+ on the Standard and PETG on the Ultra, textured surfaces, and stainless or black-coated steel hardware give the cases a rugged, workshop vibe. The integrated lanyard hole and included paracord with an orange bead make it easy to carry without pockets. It feels more like a small tool than a fashion case, which suits the “tool watch” idea of keeping your mechanical watch on.

Moving the watch off your wrist means that continuous heart rate, ECG, blood oxygen, and sleep tracking are basically gone. You are also told to turn off wrist detection for better battery and notifications, which changes how Apple Pay, auto-lock, and some security features behave. Activity rings and step counts become unreliable when the watch lives in a pocket or on a lanyard, and fall detection may not work as intended.

WatchOS assumes a wrist, from raise-to-wake gestures to how workouts and reminders work. In a miniphone case, some of that feels off or becomes less useful. You are treating the Apple Watch as a tiny connected widget for notifications and quick controls, not as a health tracker logging your life, which is fine if that is what you wanted in the first place.

The miniphone cases make the most sense if you already use the Apple Watch as a lightweight communicator and remote, not as a medical device. If you love wearing a mechanical watch while still having a pocketable slice of watchOS nearby, or you want less phone without going fully offline, a 3D-printed case that trades sensors for simplicity is a strangely logical, if niche, step.

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This Building Is Designed to Look Like a Molecule Exploding at 100x Scale

Most cutting-edge science happens in anonymous lab buildings that could be anything from offices to data centers. Fields like protein folding, which quietly underpin medicine and biotech, rarely get a public face. Architecture could act as a billboard or sculpture for that work, making invisible processes more legible to everyone outside, but most research centers settle for glass boxes with vague names on the lobby wall.

Michael Jantzen’s Folded Protein Molecule Research and Exhibition Center is part of his Fantasy Art, Architecture, Science series and proposes a facility where scientists researching protein folding could work and exhibit findings. The twist is that the entire complex is shaped like an exploded protein diagram, using the same coils, arrows, and rods that researchers use to visualize molecules. The building becomes its own subject matter, scaled up so you can walk through it.

Designer: Michael Jantzen

Protein folding is how a linear chain of amino acids twists into a three-dimensional structure that lets it function. Scientists represent these structures with bright symbols, coils for helices, arrows for sheets, bent rods for turns. Jantzen takes those flat symbols and imagines walking through them at architectural scale, turning abstract science into something you approach, enter, and move around inside instead of staring at on a screen.

The three black cubes house research spaces, and the large silver sphere forms the exhibition hall, but they sit entangled in bright red arrows, white coils, green spheres, and smaller cubes. The functional rooms are inside these solids while symbolic elements wrap around and pierce them, so the working building is literally knotted up in its own subject matter. You would approach across an open landscape and see a giant folded molecule rising from the ground.

The arrows and coils arch over the complex like a frozen moment in a folding process, creating a canopy you move under. A long ribbon-like path leads toward an opening at the sphere’s base, suggesting a main entrance that feels more like entering land art than a museum. Visitors experience protein folding as a spatial journey, wandering through loops and under arrows before reaching labs or galleries inside.

Portions of the black cubes and smaller cubes attached to arrows are clad in solar panels, helping to power the center. It ties a facility dedicated to molecular science to renewable energy in the landscape. The same surfaces that read as abstract protein domains also quietly collect sunlight, merging symbolism and function in one set of geometric volumes without needing separate infrastructure or signage.

This proposal blurs the line between research campus, sculpture park, and science museum. It is unlikely to be built exactly as shown, but the idea, that a research center could wear its subject matter on the outside and invite people to wander through a giant protein, is compelling. For a field as abstract and important as protein folding, architectural storytelling might be what pulls it out of the lab and into public imagination.

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