True portability often sits in the 13 to 14 inch laptop space, but the 16 inch Acer Swift 16 AI makes the case for big and portable. https://www.pickr.com.au/reviews/2025/acer-swift-16-ai #computers #microsoftwindows #reviews #16inch #acer #ai #aipc #intel #intelcore #milstd #oled #recommended #thunderbolt4 #typec #wifi7 #windows11
A minimalist Windows take on a slimline PC, the Dell Pro 14 Premium comes with a high price, but marries it to a MIL-STD rating, making it a survivor. https://www.pickr.com.au/reviews/2025/dell-pro-14-premium-pa14250 #computers #microsoftwindows #reviews #14inch #bluetooth5 #business #dell #intel #intelcore #magnesium #milstd #thunderbolt4 #typec #wifi7 #windows11
There's not much of an upgrade for older Ultra owners, but the Apple Watch Ultra 3 keeps what worked and improves the battery a little more. https://www.pickr.com.au/reviews/2025/apple-watch-ultra-3 #apple #reviews #wearables #apple #applewallet #ecg #heartrate #milstd #recommended #smartwatch #smartwatches #spo2 #titanium #watchos #waterresistance
Built for your health, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 isn't just the best example of Samsung's watches in ages, but offers a design that stands out. https://www.pickr.com.au/reviews/2025/samsung-galaxy-watch-8-sm-l335f #googleandroid #reviews #wearables #aluminium #antioxidants #ecg #galaxy #heartrate #milstd #rugged #samsung #smartwatch #smartwatches #spo2 #thermometers #waterresistance #wearos
The MacBook Air has some competition from Acer this year, as it readies not just a computer that's slim and light, but should survive a drop if it comes to that. #computers #microsoftwindows #news #acer #desktoppc #gaminglaptop #ifa #ifa2025 #intel #intelcore #milstd #nvidia #rugged #thunderbolt4 #typec #wifi7 #windows11
Foldable phones tend to come with a bit of a premium, but Motorola's Razr 60 looks to make a more cost-effective durable fold, while also offering a capable non-foldable for the same price. https://www.pickr.com.au/news/2025/motorola-makes-new-foldables-start-at-1199-with-razr-60 #googleandroid #news #phones #ai #artificialintelligence #dualcameras #foldablephone #milstd #motorola #titanium #triplecamera #triplecameras #waterresistance #wifi6e
Motorola makes new foldables start at $1199 with Razr 60 – Pickr

Foldable phones tend to come with a bit of a premium, but Motorola's Razr 60 looks to make a more cost-effective durable fold, while also offering a capable non-foldable for the same price.

Pickr
Motorola Edge 50 Neo review – Pickr

Somewhere in the mid-range, Motorola's Edge 50 Neo offers a taste of "just right" for folks who don't need to spend a lot.

Pickr
Lenovo shines a light on the future with a solar laptop – Pickr

Easily one of the most exciting announcements in ages, Lenovo's solar laptop concept is a laptop ready for tomorrow. And that's not all.

Pickr
When a Federal Defense agency investigating ways to improve efficiency and documentation asked us what we thought was the Thing To Do (VR? AR? What?)... We told them to improve the writing. It's not sexy but it's the biggest thing that needs doing in #milstd #documentation

Hackaday Links: March 20, 2022

Well, that de-escalated quickly! It was less than a week ago that the city of Shenzhen, China was put on lockdown due to a resurgence of COVID-19 in the world's electronics manufacturing epicenter. This obviously caused no small amount of alarm up and down the electronics supply chain, promising to once again upset manufacturers seeking everything from PCBs to components to complete electronic assemblies. But just a few days later, the Chinese government announced that the Shenzhen lockdown was over. At least partially, that is -- factories and public transportation have been reopened in five of the city's districts, with iPhone maker Foxconn, one of the bigger players in Shenzhen, given the green light to partially reopen. What does this mean for hobbyists' ability to get cheap PCBs made quickly? That's hard to say, at least at this point. Please feel free to share your experiences with any supply chain disruptions in the comments below.

Better news from a million miles away, as NASA announced that the James Webb Space Telescope finished the first part of its complex mirror alignment procedure. The process, which uses the complex actuators built into each of the 18 hexagonal mirror segments, slightly moves each mirror to align them all into one virtual optical surface. The result is not only the stunning "selfie" images we've been seeing, but also a beautiful picture of the star Webb has been focusing on as a target. The video below explains the process in some detail, along with sharing that the next step is to move the mirrors in and out, or "piston" them, so that the 18 separate wavefronts all align to send light to the instruments in perfect phase. Talk about precision!

Is a bog-standard Raspberry Pi just not tough enough for your application? Do you need to run DOOM on a platform that can take a few g of vibration and still keep working? Sick of your Pi-based weather station breaking own when it gets a little wet or too hot? Then you'll want to take a look at the DuraCOR Pi, a ruggedized chassis containing a Pi CM4 that's built for extreme environments. The machine is in a tiny IP67-rated case and built to MIL-STD specs with regard to vibration, temperature, humidity, and EMI conditions. This doesn't really seem like something aimed at the hobbyist market -- it's marketed by Curtiss-Wright Defense Solutions, a defense contractor that traces its roots all the way back to a couple of bicycle mechanics from Ohio that learned how to fly. So this Pi is probably more like something you'd spec if you were building a UAV or something like that. Still, it's cool to know such things are out there.

BrainLubeOnline has a fun collection of X-rays. With the exception of a mouse -- the other kind -- everything is either electronic or mechanical, which makes for really interesting pictures. Seeing the teeth on a gear or the threads on a screw, and seeing right through the object, shows the mechanical world in a whole new light -- literally.

And finally, would you buy a car that prevents you from opening the hood? Most of us probably wouldn't, but then again, most of us probably wouldn't buy a Mercedes EQS 580 electric sedan. Sarah from Sarah -n- Tuned on YouTube somehow got a hold of one of these babies, which she aptly describes as a "German spaceship," and took it for a test drive, including a "full beans" acceleration test. Just after that neck-snapping ride, at about the 7:20 mark in the video below, she asks the car's built-in assistant to open the hood, a request the car refused by saying, "The hood may only be opened by a specialist workshop." Sarah managed to get it open anyway, and it's not a frunk -- it's home to one of the two motors that power the car, along with all kinds of other goodies.

#hackadaycolumns #hackadaylinks #slider #electricvehicle #jameswebbspacetelescope #jwst #mercedes #milstd #nasa #raspberrypi #ruggedized #shenzhen #supplychain #xrays

Hackaday Links: March 20, 2022

Well, that de-escalated quickly! It was less than a week ago that the city of Shenzhen, China was put on lockdown due to a resurgence of COVID-19 in the world’s electronics manufacturing epic…

Hackaday