⚙️ Palms Get Their Own AC

Hi, Hardwirers!
The charger dresses up, the SSD self-destructs, the monitor grows a second face, and the wrench eats an entire toolbox just to fit in your pocket.
Palms Get Their Own AC

What is it: Therabody launched CryoTherm Palm, a cordless thermoregulation device that cools both palms during rest breaks between intense efforts. The portable unit uses calibrated cold settings, plus heat, cold, and contrast therapy, aiming to help athletes manage heat, reduce perceived exertion, and recover between sets, timeouts, halftime, or training intervals. Read more →
PSU Splits in Two

What is it: Thermaltake showed Dockpower, a PC power supply that separates the main power unit from the cable dock so builders can upgrade wattage without redoing cable management. The Computex 2026 design uses a screw-secured two-part body, server-grade gold-plated contacts, 80+ Gold certification, and planned 750W to 1200W models launching in Q3. Read more →
Fitbit Bands Go DIY

What is it: Google released full measurements and accessory guidelines for Fitbit Air, letting anyone design or make bands for the screenless wearable. Instead of locking exact specs behind approved accessory programs, Google published blueprints, sensor-clearance guidance, and material recommendations, making Fitbit Air unusually friendly to makers, sewing projects, and 3D-printed experiments. Read more →
SSD Destroys Itself by Text

What is it: TeamGroup's P250Q-M80 external SSD can remotely destroy its own data and hardware after receiving a text-message command. Built for sensitive field use, the drive first erases stored information, then triggers an internal high-voltage circuit to physically damage the NAND flash, turning data security into something closer to a spy-movie panic button. Read more →
Pocket Cooler Blows Real Cold

What is it: Cold Air Ultra is a handheld cooling device that tries to do more than push warm air around like a normal fan. It uses ultrasonic mist, high-speed airflow, and a removable water tank to create a colder personal breeze, turning pocket cooling into something closer to a tiny evaporative air conditioner. Read more →
Charger Pretends to Be Decor

What is it: ORNA is a 35W USB-C charger wrapped in a magnetic flower-like cover so it can sit on display instead of hiding behind furniture. The design treats a wall charger as a home object visible for most of the day, turning idle electronics into something closer to tabletop decor. Read more →
Drones Learn Bee Memory

What is it: Delft researchers built a drone navigation system inspired by honeybees, using tiny memory demands instead of heavy maps or computation. The approach lets drones return home by combining visual snapshots and simple routing cues, reportedly needing only 42KB of memory, which could make small autonomous flyers cheaper, lighter, and more efficient. Read more →
Monitor Has Two Faces

What is it: Philips' 24B2D5300 is a dual-sided monitor with one screen facing the worker and another facing the customer. Built for banks, hospitals, reception desks, and service counters, the display lets both sides see information without rotating hardware or sharing awkward angles, turning one monitor into a transparent communication tool without being transparent. Read more →
Smart Glasses Skip the Phone

What is it: INMO GO3 smart glasses work without a smartphone and pack translation, teleprompter text, navigation, meeting summaries, calls, photos, and video into a $450 wearable. The glasses support 78 languages and swappable batteries, aiming to make everyday AR feel less like a phone accessory and more like standalone eyewear. Read more →
Wrench Hides a Toolkit

What is it: OmniPro Wrench 3.0 is a titanium EDC tool that hides a caliper, ratchet, pen, scalpel, pry bar, bottle opener, and glass breaker in a palm-sized body. The compact object turns a wrench into a pocket toolkit, mixing workshop utility with the overbuilt ritual of everyday carry gear. Read more →
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