Before we talk about the glass itself, let’s take a moment to appreciate the audacity of the idea. Someone looked at a 4.6-billion-year-old space rock, pulled from the ground in northern Argentina, and thought: what if we put it inside a whiskey tumbler? The result is the Nytrus Reserve Meteorite Tumbler, and I have to say, it’s one of the more genuinely fascinating objects I’ve come across this year.
The Campo del Cielo meteorite has a story worth knowing. It broke apart over northern Argentina around 2500 BCE, scattering across a region now called Chaco. The name itself translates to “Field of Sky,” which feels almost too poetic for something so ancient. It was first mined in 1926, and fragments have since traveled everywhere from museum display cases to private collections. Now, a piece of it lives at the bottom of a crystal tumbler, and I think that’s a fitting next chapter.
Each Nytrus tumbler is 8.5 oz and hand-blown from high-clarity glass, with the meteorite fragment suspended in the thick base. The design stays clean and minimal so the eye goes straight to the artifact. You can see it from every angle: the rough-edged, ancient rock sitting there like a period at the end of a very long sentence. No two fragments are identical, which means no two tumblers are exactly the same. A Coin of Authenticity sits beneath the fragment as a finishing detail, and it’s the kind of small gesture that signals a brand takes provenance seriously rather than just treating it as a selling point.
The tumbler is available in two finishes: Antique Tin and Amber Gold. Both are understated enough to work across different aesthetics, which matters more than people admit. A beautifully made object still has to fit where you live. The Amber Gold leans warmer, the Antique Tin more cool and contemporary. I’d probably go Antique Tin just for the visual contrast against the darker meteorite fragment, but that’s entirely personal preference.
Nytrus has been releasing these in limited series, each capped at 300 editions. They’re currently on Series IV, and previous series have sold out. That doesn’t surprise me at all. For a product sitting so specifically at the intersection of science, craft, and ritual, that kind of traction makes sense. It’s not trying to be for everyone, and the people it’s for seem to know it immediately.
The weight and presence of the glass is something that comes up again and again in reviews. It feels solid in the hand, which matters when you’re drinking something worth savoring slowly. Luxury drinkware often gets the look right and then fails on feel, so it’s reassuring that the craftsmanship follows through on what the concept promises. Over 1,200 collectors have bought in, with the tumbler holding a 4.9-star rating, which for a product this specific is pretty telling.
I’ll be honest about something. Products pitched as “conversation starters” can sometimes feel like a lazy shortcut for things that don’t have much else going on. But the conversation a meteorite tumbler actually starts is a good one. How did this thing get here? What was happening on Earth when this rock was falling through space? When you can trace a drinking glass back to a fragment that traveled 204 million miles from the asteroid belt, that’s not a gimmick. That’s just a legitimately extraordinary object.
Whether or not you drink whiskey, the Nytrus Reserve Meteorite Tumbler earns its place in a rare category of design objects that justify their asking price through real rarity and genuine craft. The fragment is authentically ancient. The glass is authentically handmade. The scarcity is real. That combination doesn’t come together very often, and when it does, it’s worth paying attention. If you want to feel a little more connected to the universe the next time you sit down with a drink, this is a pretty direct route.
Google’s Gemini 3 Flash has emerged as a noteworthy addition to the AI landscape, offering a balance of enhanced performance and cost efficiency. Released for public testing on the “Arena” platform, this model bridges the gap between the base Gemini 3 and the higher-tier Gemini 3.1 Pro. According to World of AI, the Gemini 3 […]
The Samsung Galaxy S27 Ultra is set to make waves in the smartphone industry, blending innovative technology with refined design to deliver a premium user experience. Early leaks suggest that Samsung is focusing on significant upgrades, including a revamped camera system, enhanced hardware and next-generation charging capabilities. At the same time, the device retains hallmark […]
The new Steam Controller, built around the robust Steam Input system, emphasizes customization and adaptability for diverse gaming styles. Retro Game Corps examines how features like per-game configurations and gyro controls enhance gameplay across genres, from first-person shooters to strategy titles. For example, the controller’s trackpad can function as either a joystick or a mouse, […]
Apple is gearing up to redefine the iPhone experience with the highly anticipated iOS 27 update. This release is expected to bring a host of innovative features designed to enhance functionality, customization, and artificial intelligence (AI) integration. Among the most talked-about updates is the rumored “Siri Mode,” a feature embedded within the camera app, alongside […]
There’s a moment every RV owner knows: you’ve been hiking all day in 95-degree heat, you’re covered in dust and questionable decisions, and you open the door to your trailer expecting relief. Instead, you get a wall of stagnant air that somehow feels hotter than outside. Your rooftop AC has been running for three hours and achieved exactly nothing. The problem isn’t usually the BTU rating on paper. Most 13,500 or 15,000 BTU units can theoretically cool the space. The problem is airflow distribution, compressor efficiency under load, and the reality that your RV is essentially a greenhouse on wheels with minimal insulation and windows everywhere. By the time cooled air reaches the back bedroom, it’s already been defeated by physics.
FOGATTI’s InstaCool Ultra approaches this with 418 CFM of airflow pushed through dual synchronous motors that sweep 85 degrees, creating whole-RV coverage in roughly 4 minutes according to the company. The 16,000 BTU cooling capacity targets spaces up to 600 square feet, which translates to RVs up to 36 feet long. The unit doubles as a heat pump delivering 12,500 BTU of warmth, giving it legitimate four-season capability without installing separate heating hardware. Heat pumps move thermal energy rather than creating it, which makes them roughly 3-4 times more efficient than resistance heating. The 9.2cc high-displacement compressor achieves an 11.8 EER rating (the Department of Energy considers anything above 10.7 high efficiency), operates at 43 decibels, and fits standard 14.25-inch roof openings without modification. At $1,399 (down from $1,759), it undercuts premium units while outspeccing budget alternatives.
The heat pump architecture sits at the center of what makes this unit different from the Coleman-Mach and Dometic systems that dominate most RV roofs. Traditional RV climate control treats heating and cooling as separate problems requiring separate solutions. The InstaCool Ultra runs a reversible refrigerant cycle, which means the same compressor and heat exchanger hardware that cools in July also heats in October. The system operates across an ambient temperature range from 23°F to 115°F, covering most of the continental United States outside of genuine Arctic expeditions or desert extremes that would make you question your life choices anyway.
The airflow system uses dual synchronous motors driving three fans to push 418 CFM through the cabin. For context, most 15,000 BTU RV air conditioners move 325-350 CFM. The extra volume comes from the triple-fan configuration rather than just running the motors harder, which keeps noise down while increasing air circulation. The motors drive an 85-degree sweep mechanism that oscillates the airflow rather than blasting it straight down in a single column. You can also lock the vents in place for targeted cooling when you want maximum airflow in one zone.
The reversible heat pump system automatically switches between cooling and heating modes, using compressor-based thermal transfer rather than combustion-based heating. Five segments run during milder conditions or when you’re just maintaining temperature overnight. This variable output prevents the temperature swings you get with single-stage systems that either blast full power or shut off entirely. The heat pump delivers 12,500 BTU of heating capacity, which sounds less impressive than the 16,000 BTU cooling until you account for the efficiency difference. A heat pump operating at a 3.4 coefficient of performance moves 3.4 watts of thermal energy for every watt of electricity consumed. Resistance heaters convert electricity to heat at a 1:1 ratio.
The control ecosystem offers three entry points: a physical remote, a touchscreen ADB panel mounted inside the RV, and a WiFi-connected smartphone app. The app lets you pre-cool or pre-heat the RV before you return from a day hike, which sounds like a luxury feature until you experience stepping into a 72°F trailer after spending six hours in the sun at Arches National Park.
The physical installation targets the standard 14.25-inch by 14.25-inch roof cutout that Coleman, Dometic, and Furrion units use, which means most RVers can swap this in as a direct replacement without modifying the roof structure. The streamlined profile measures 12.2 inches tall, which keeps it in low-profile territory. For comparison, the Dometic Brisk II sits around 14 inches tall, and the Coleman-Mach 15 runs closer to 13.5 inches. Those couple of inches determine whether you clear that 13-foot bridge on the backroad to your favorite dispersed campsite.
The 43-decibel noise rating puts this in the quiet category for RV air conditioners. Coleman-Mach units typically run 65-72 decibels. Dometic’s quieter models hit 50-59 decibels. The InstaCool Ultra’s 43-decibel claim would make it one of the quietest rooftop units available, though that figure likely represents the lowest speed setting rather than full-power operation.
The InstaCool Ultra ships for $1,399, down from the original $1,759 price point. That positions it between budget-tier units from Advent or RecPro (which run $700-900) and premium models from Dometic’s FreshJet or GE’s Profile series (which approach $1,400-1,600). The unit currently ships in white, fitting standard non-ducted installations. What you’re really buying here is year-round climate control without installing two separate systems or draining your battery bank every time the temperature drops. Heat pump, real airflow, quiet operation, and an efficiency rating that lets you boondock longer. For RVers chasing fall colors in the Rockies or spring wildflowers in the desert, that combination finally exists at a price that doesn’t require financing.
Yanko Design’s Design Mindset, powered by KeyShot, continues to carve out a thoughtful space for conversations around creativity, process, and the way design is evolving in real time. Now at Episode 21, the weekly podcast has become a compelling extension of the publication’s larger design lens, moving beyond products and visuals to focus on the people, principles, and practices shaping the creative world today. Each episode opens up a deeper look at the mindset behind modern design, asking what it really means to create with relevance in a landscape that keeps changing.
This week’s guest is Ben Fryc of Framer, a creative voice whose work sits at the intersection of storytelling, digital product thinking, and workflow design. In conversation with Radhika Sood, Ben speaks about a shift many designers are already feeling, where the role is expanding from someone who visualizes ideas to someone who can actively bring them to life. The result is a timely discussion about momentum, confidence, tools, and the growing value of designers who know how to build.
Ben’s central argument lands quickly and stays with you through the rest of the episode: most creatives do not struggle with ideas, they struggle with execution. That distinction gives shape to a frustration many designers know well. The vision is there, the taste is there, and the instinct is often sharp, but the path from concept to finished outcome can still feel longer than expected. Ben attributes that gap to experience, or more specifically, the lack of enough repetition to turn instinct into capability. He speaks candidly about the misconception that strong execution should arrive early, especially for young designers stepping out of school and into the profession.
What makes his perspective resonate is the way he strips away the mythology around creative success and replaces it with something more useful. Good ideas matter, but the people who move forward are usually the ones who learn how to carry those ideas through constraints, revisions, and real-world expectations. Experience becomes the bridge between taste and output, and that bridge is built over time. In Ben’s framing, becoming a stronger designer is less about waiting for talent to click and more about putting in enough cycles of making to close the distance between what you imagine and what you can actually produce.
When Designers Start Becoming Builders
A major theme in the episode is the changing role of the designer, especially in a world where tools have made prototyping, publishing, and testing much more accessible. Ben talks about how the shift often begins the moment a designer starts thinking beyond the static mockup and becomes interested in how something actually works in motion. Once that curiosity enters the process, design starts to feel more active and more complete. The act of building no longer belongs exclusively to another team or another discipline. It becomes part of the designer’s own creative vocabulary.
Ben describes this transition almost like unlocking a new layer of ability, where confidence grows because the work can finally move out of presentation mode and into lived experience. That shift changes more than output. It changes the way a designer thinks about learning, problem-solving, and authorship. Coding, prototyping, 3D modeling, and other adjacent skills begin to feel less like optional extras and more like natural extensions of the design process. What emerges is a broader creative identity, one rooted in agency and in the satisfaction of making something real enough for others to use, experience, or respond to.
Workflow as a Creative Force
One of the most interesting parts of the conversation comes when Ben talks about workflow, not as a backstage concern but as a genuine creative advantage. He pushes back on the idea that workflow is simply a matter of optimization and instead frames it as something that shapes the quality of thinking itself. For him, a smooth workflow creates the conditions for ideas to evolve naturally, especially in projects where the final outcome only becomes clear through the act of making. That kind of process depends on iteration, room for discovery, and enough flexibility to let references, instincts, and experimentation inform the direction of the work.
He also makes an important point about communication, especially in collaborative environments where creative momentum can either build quickly or lose energy just as fast. Sharing work early, being clear about process, and inviting feedback before everything is fully polished all become part of a healthier workflow. Ben’s view is that better work often comes from showing progress sooner rather than later, because feedback strengthens the idea while it is still flexible. In that sense, workflow is not just about personal efficiency. It is also about preserving momentum, protecting creative energy, and giving ideas a better chance to grow into something stronger.
The Tools That Shape Ambition
Because Ben works at Framer, the discussion naturally moves into the role of tools, though what makes his take interesting is that he avoids reducing the conversation to features alone. He speaks instead about the feeling of a tool, how quickly it communicates its purpose, how naturally it invites experimentation, and how much friction it introduces between thought and action. In his view, the best creative tools are the ones that feel legible early on, even if they reveal more depth over time. Complexity can have value, but approachability matters because it determines whether someone begins with curiosity or hesitation.
That idea becomes especially relevant in the context of today’s no-code and low-friction creative platforms, which have changed what designers can realistically attempt on their own. Ben notes that when tools lower the barrier to making, people often become more ambitious because the path from idea to execution feels more direct. Instead of getting lost in abstraction, they can start building, testing, and refining with greater immediacy. The result is not just speed for its own sake, but a more intentional creative process where the tool amplifies possibility and supports the designer’s ability to act on instinct while learning along the way.
Why Shipping Changes the Designer
The episode closes on a note that feels especially relevant for creatives who spend too long refining, adjusting, and waiting for the right moment to release something. Ben speaks honestly about perfectionism and how easily it can interrupt momentum, especially when creators become so focused on improving the work that they never let it exist in the world. His answer is not careless speed, but a healthier relationship with progress. Making something real, even in an imperfect form, creates a kind of confidence that reflection alone cannot produce. The act of shipping becomes a turning point because it changes how the creator sees their own role.
That is ultimately what gives this conversation its energy. Ben is not presenting building as a trend layered on top of design, but as a deeper evolution in how designers participate in their own ideas. Once something moves from concept to reality, even on a small scale, it carries a different weight. It becomes proof of capability, proof of momentum, and proof that taste can be translated into action. For a weekly podcast like Design Mindset, that kind of conversation feels exactly on point, because it captures the creative shift defining this moment. Designers today are being asked to do more than imagine. They are being invited to make.
Design Mindset drops every week on Yanko Design. Catch Episode 19 in full wherever you listen to podcasts. For a free trial of KeyShot, visit keyshot.com/mindset.
Fifty years of keyboard design, and the basic contract never changed: switches under keycaps, keycaps under fingers, fingers making typos. The mechanical keyboard revival of the 2010s gave us better switches, heavier brass plates, and an entire hobbyist economy built around sound profiles and spring weights, but the object itself remained stubbornly analog in its ambitions. What’s shifted in 2025 and 2026 is the ambition. Boutique builders and hardware engineers are converging on a new idea: the keyboard as a control surface, a designed object with its own interface, its own visual language, its own intelligence. MelGeek, a Beijing-based custom keyboard brand with a decade of crowdfunded hardware behind it, just made that idea concrete with the Centauri80.
The Centauri80 is an 80% Hall Effect keyboard with a 1.78-inch OLED touchscreen embedded directly into the board, running at 325 PPI, which is the same pixel density as an Apple Watch face. A physical rotary encoder called the Super Dock sits beside it, letting you swap live wallpapers, toggle macros, and dial in lighting without alt-tabbing out of whatever you’re working in. Under the aluminum unibody, a distributed architecture of six microcontroller chips drives TTC Flip King magnetic switches to a 0.125ms latency at an 8000Hz polling rate. The whole thing retails at $299 from MelGeek’s own store, which puts it in a genuinely interesting position against the Wooting 60HE and the rest of the Hall Effect field.
Designer: MelGeek
MelGeek opted for a suspended aluminum alloy unibody, which means the internal structure floats within the outer frame rather than bolting directly to it, reducing vibration transfer and keeping the sound profile controlled and intentional. The five-layer gasket-mounted acoustic structure underneath reinforces that choice: every keystroke travels through dampening foam, a silicone layer, and a carefully tuned plate before it reaches your ears as that deep, focused thud that keyboard people spend years and hundreds of dollars chasing. The design language draws openly from cyberpunk aesthetics, with MelGeek describing the Centauri80 internally as “a reimagined starship,” which sounds like marketing until you see the raking lines and deconstructed geometry and realize they actually earn that description. Transparent keycaps ship as default, showing the per-key RGB illumination through the caps themselves rather than just around them, and the three-sided 16 million color lighting system wraps the board in a glow that reads more like a designed accent than a gaming peripheral throwing up on itself.
Traditional mechanical switches use metal contacts: two pieces of metal touch, the circuit closes, the keystroke registers. The problem is that metal contacts wear down, develop inconsistency over time, and can only register a keypress at one fixed point in the key’s travel. Hall Effect switches replace those metal contacts with magnets and sensors, reading the magnet’s position continuously as the key moves, which means the board can register a keypress at any point in the travel down to 0.1mm. That’s what rapid trigger means in practice: the keyboard resets and re-registers with every tiny movement rather than waiting for the key to physically return to a set reset point. For competitive gaming, where re-pressing a movement key a fraction of a second faster translates to a measurable advantage, this is the difference between winning and watching a killcam. MelGeek’s third-generation magnetic switch system adds a distributed architecture of one master chip and five processing chips, delivering what the company claims is 150% faster response than its previous generation, with an EMI shield engineered to cut cross-key interference by 60%.
Embedded into the upper right corner of the 80% layout, the 1.78-inch OLED runs at 325 PPI and 60Hz, handled entirely through the Super Dock rotary encoder beside it. Rotate to cycle through settings pages, press to confirm, keep typing. Live wallpapers, macro profiles, per-key lighting configurations, polling rate adjustments, all accessible on the keyboard itself without opening MelGeek’s Hive software. For someone running multiple macro profiles across different applications, having that switching surface physically on the board rather than buried in a system tray is a real quality-of-life improvement. For someone who sets their keyboard up once and forgets about it, the screen will display a wallpaper and nothing else, which is still a spectacular piece of hardware to stare at while pretending to work.
The Wooting 60HE, which more or less popularized Hall Effect keyboards for a mainstream gaming audience, sits at around $175 and offers rapid trigger without any display hardware. The Centauri80’s $299 asks for a $124 premium, and what you’re buying with that gap is the OLED screen, the rotary encoder, the unibody aluminum chassis, and the aesthetic ambition. The keyboard sits alongside the Wooting the way a beautifully machined mechanical watch sits alongside a Casio: both tell time accurately, one of them is also a statement about what objects are allowed to be. MelGeek has spent a decade building its reputation through crowdfunded custom boards and a community of gamers, coders, and creators who treat keyboards the way audiophiles treat headphones, and the Centauri80 is the clearest articulation yet of what that philosophy looks like at flagship scale.
I must admit there is a certain freedom in stripping things back to exactly what you need and nothing more. That’s the quiet confidence behind the Mantra, the newest micro cabin from Florida-based Simplify Further Tiny Homes — and at $17,000, it might just be the most straightforward shelter concept to come along in years.
The Mantra measures 12 x 8 feet as a living unit, sitting on a double-axle trailer that brings its full length, porch included, to 16 feet (4.8 meters). The usable interior clocks in at just 98 square feet (9.1 sq m), which sounds tight until you see how it’s been organized. Everything lives in a single open room: a bed that doubles as a daybed, a desk and dining table, seating, a wall-mounted TV, and a mini-split air-conditioning unit. The whole thing sleeps up to two people.
What Simplify Further didn’t include is just as deliberate as what they did. There’s no indoor kitchen, no bathroom — a choice that keeps the footprint honest and the price point realistic. The Mantra was designed for people who want a serious shelter without the serious overhead: a glamping cabin, a backyard guest suite, an accessory dwelling unit, a dedicated work-from-anywhere office. It earns its role by not pretending to be something it isn’t.
On the outside, the cabin wears engineered wood cladding with pine tongue and groove accenting and a metal roof, materials picked for durability and a cabin aesthetic that doesn’t look out of place whether it’s parked in the woods or in a suburban backyard. The double-axle trailer base means it can be moved between sites without a production, which opens up use cases most permanent structures simply can’t compete with.
The $17,000 starting price is the number that tends to stop people mid-scroll, and for good reason. Most tiny houses, marketed as simple and affordable alternatives, have quietly crept into the $80,000 to $150,000 range. The Mantra pushes back on that without sacrificing the things that actually matter: climate control, a comfortable sleeping setup, and a design sensibility that doesn’t feel like an afterthought.
Simplify Further built their name on the idea that design and craftsmanship don’t require excess. The Mantra is that philosophy distilled. It’s not trying to replicate a house in miniature; it’s building something that knows exactly what it is. And in a market cluttered with overbuilt, overpriced micro dwellings, that clarity is worth more than the square footage.