Would you pay over $10K for Caviar’s Valentine-special iPhone 17 Pro with 24K Gold and Mother of Pearl?

What’s the ultimate declaration of love? Sometimes it’s breakfast in bed, other times it’s a $10,000 splurge on a gold-plated iPhone with inlay work. Each to their own, I guess. Me, I’ll stick to avocado toast and OJ served in bed, along with a poem co-authored by ChatGPT.

The Dubai-based luxury customization house, famous for slapping Rolex movements and 24K gold onto iPhones and calling it a Tuesday, has just unveiled the Wings of Love, the latest piece from their Garden of Eden collection. The price? Upwards of three Vision Pros. (And that’s just for the base 256GB variant)

Designer: Caviar

Where most Caviar creations lean into black or stark white as a base, Wings of Love goes with a soft slate blue-grey leather that sits somewhere between storm cloud and morning mist. It’s an unusual, almost painterly choice, and it works brilliantly as a canvas for what’s layered on top: a full scene of swallows in flight, rendered in raised 24K rose gold with mother-of-pearl inlays catching the light at every angle. The birds weave through branching vines and leaves, each leaf tipped with its own iridescent shell inlay. Up close, the craftsmanship looks less like phone customization and more like a miniature Art Nouveau panel that belongs behind museum glass.

The symbolism isn’t arbitrary either. The swallow has carried meaning across cultures for centuries, representing loyalty, return, and love that survives distance. Sailors tattooed them as talismans for safe passage home. In folklore, spotting a swallow was a sign that someone who loved you was thinking of you. Caviar leans into all of that intentionally, positioning Wings of Love as a phone designed specifically for women who, as they put it, treat love as a direction.

The camera plateau, normally the awkward protruding bump that makes every modern iPhone beg for a case, has been fully absorbed and integrated into the decorative overlay. The upper portion of the back is completely redesigned, with the camera module sitting flush within an ornate gold and mother-of-pearl composition featuring a blooming rose motif. The result is a phone that’s slightly thicker overall, yes, but dramatically more coherent as an object. You’re not staring at a camera bump that disrupts the design. The camera IS the design, framed and intentional, like a window in an illuminated manuscript. And because the whole back is already a sculpted, protective structure, you’d be committing a small crime putting a case over it anyway.

The side profile is engraved with “Garden of Eden” and an individual edition number on each unit, and hallmark stamps on the bottom edge certify the 24K gold content, treating the phone with the same seriousness as fine jewelry. Which is exactly what it is.

The whole thing is built for exactly 14 people on Earth. That’s the edition size, 14 pieces, full stop. Which means this isn’t really a phone. It’s a wearable heirloom that happens to run iOS. Pricing starts at $10,340 for the iPhone 17 Pro in 256GB, climbing up to $12,270 for the Pro Max in 2TB. And yes, you can commission just the customization on a device you already own, which is a small mercy for anyone who doesn’t want to explain to their accountant why they bought two iPhones at once. The packaging, naturally, is interactive and comes with a Caviar key finished in 24K gold. Because when your phone costs ten grand, the box has to keep up.

Is it excessive? Absolutely. Is it for everyone? With 14 units in existence, mathematically, it’s for almost no one. But that’s kind of the point. The Wings of Love isn’t trying to be practical. It’s trying to be meaningful, a declaration that sometimes, love deserves to be made in gold. Oh, while you’re at it, close this tab once you’re done just in case your partner happens to glance over your shoulder and ask you for this phone.

The post Would you pay over $10K for Caviar’s Valentine-special iPhone 17 Pro with 24K Gold and Mother of Pearl? first appeared on Yanko Design.

Google I/O 2026 is set for May 19 and 20

We’ll soon get a closer look at a bunch of features and updates Google has planned for Android and its other services. The company has confirmed that Google I/O 2026 will take place on May 19 and 20. As always, Google will stream some of the keynotes and sessions for free, including the opening keynote (during which the company makes the bulk of its major I/O announcements).

Although I/O is primarily a conference for developers, it’s typically where we first learn about major upcoming Android changes, which of course affect tens of millions of people. Expect a lot of news about Google’s AI efforts as well, such as what’s next for Gemini.

As has been the case for several years, Google revealed the conference’s dates for 2026 after enough folks completed a puzzle on the I/O website. This year’s puzzle has multiple “builds” to play through, all of which use Gemini.

They start with a mini-golf game in which a virtual caddy that’s powered by Gemini offers some of the most anodyne advice imaginable. The second build is a nonogram. If you’ve ever played a Picross game, you’ll know what to do here. It’s about using logic to place tiles on a grid in order to create an image. Here, Google is using Gemini to generate “endless game boards.”

The other three minigames are Word Wheel (which “leverages Gemini 3 to automate level design”), Super Sonicbot (which “uses Gemini to introduce microphone mechanics where noise controls the Android Bot’s altitude”) and Stretchy Cat. The latter “uses Gemini 3 as a stage designer balancing game mechanics and difficulty to create endless play.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/google-io-2026-is-set-for-may-19-and-20-200805024.html?src=rss

Texas AG sues TP-Link over purported connection to China

Texas is suing Wi-Fi router maker TP-Link for deceptively marketing the security of its products and allowing Chinese hacking groups to access Americans' devices, Attorney General Ken Paxton has announced. Paxton originally started looking into TP-Link in October 2025. Texas Governor Greg Abbott later prohibited state employees from using TP-Link products in January of this year.

TP-Link is no longer owned by a Chinese company and its products are assembled in Vietnam, but Paxton's lawsuit claims that because the company's "ownership and supply-chain are tied to China" it's subject to the country's data laws, which require companies to comply with requests from Chinese intelligence agencies. The lawsuit also says that firmware vulnerabilities in TP-Link's hardware have already "exposed millions of consumers to severe cybersecurity risks."

Engadget has asked TP-Link to comment on the Texas lawsuit and Paxton's claims. We'll update this article if we hear back.

TP-Link was reportedly being investigated at the federal level in 2024 after its devices were connected to the massive "Salt Typhoon" hack that accessed data from multiple US telecom companies. Despite all signs pointing to the federal government getting ready to ban TP-Link in 2025, Reuters reports that the Trump administration paused plans to ban the company’s routers in early February, ahead of a meeting between President Donald Trump and President Xi Jinping.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/texas-ag-sues-tp-link-over-purported-connection-to-china-193802258.html?src=rss

This House-Sized Clock Glows and Chimes Every 15 Minutes

There’s something quietly magical about watching a building come alive on schedule. Clock House No. 2, a public art installation by Drawing Architecture Studio, does exactly that. Every fifteen minutes, it chimes and glows, turning timekeeping into something you can walk around, peer into, and experience with your whole body.

The Beijing-based practice created this piece for the 7th Shenzhen Bay Public Art Season in China, where it’s on view until April 19th, 2026. At first glance, it looks like someone took a mantel clock from a fancy living room and scaled it up to the size of a small house. Which is kind of the point. The project collapses the distance between furniture and architecture, asking what happens when an everyday object becomes a building you can step inside.

Designer: Drawing Architecture Studio

Drawing Architecture Studio looked back to a specific historical moment for inspiration. During the late Ming and early Qing dynasties, Western missionaries brought automaton clocks to China as diplomatic gifts. These weren’t just timepieces. They were theatrical objects, intricate mechanical wonders that moved and chimed with precision. The Chinese called them Zì Míng Zhōng, which translates to “the clock that rings automatically”. These devices started in the imperial court but eventually found their way into domestic life, becoming both functional tools and symbols of cultural exchange.

Clock House No. 2 revisits that exchange, but through a contemporary lens. Instead of brass gears and delicate springs, the studio used low-cost industrial components. The structure references the layered facades and tiled roofs typical of everyday dwellings in Guangdong Province, blending local vernacular architecture with the ornamental logic of those historical automaton clocks. The result is something that feels familiar and foreign at the same time.

The installation doesn’t contain intricate mechanical movements like its historical predecessors. Instead, it marks time through light and sound. LED strips are embedded within the structure, glowing through openings in the facade. Every quarter hour, an automated musical chime triggers while the lights shift in color, creating a gentle spectacle that feels ceremonial without being overly dramatic.

The project draws on ideas from Italian architect Aldo Rossi, who wrote about the relationship between architecture and ordinary utensils. Rossi believed that everyday objects accumulate what he called “forms of memory” through repeated use and cultural continuity. For him, the line between a domestic object and an architectural artifact wasn’t fixed or absolute. Clock House No. 2 extends this thinking by turning the clock into a building and the building into a clock, playing with scale in a way that makes you reconsider what architecture can be.

What makes this installation compelling is how it situates itself at the intersection of mechanical timekeeping, architecture, and trade. It’s not just about recreating a historical object. It’s about exploring how objects move between cultures, how they change meaning as they cross borders, and how architecture can embody those shifts.

The choice to use industrial components rather than precious materials also says something about accessibility and contemporary making. These aren’t rare or expensive parts. They’re the kind of materials you’d find in construction supply stores, which makes the project feel grounded even as it reaches for something conceptual.

Standing near Clock House No. 2 during one of its fifteen-minute performances must be a peculiar experience. You’re not just observing a sculpture. You’re witnessing a building perform timekeeping as a ritual, something that happens whether anyone is watching or not. It’s architecture that insists on marking the passage of time audibly and visibly, refusing to be background scenery.

The installation also speaks to how we experience time in public space today. We’re used to checking our phones for the hour, but Clock House No. 2 offers something more communal. It announces time to everyone in earshot, creating a shared moment of awareness. That’s rare now.

By April, the installation will come down, but the questions it raises will linger. What happens when we scale up the objects we live with? How does architecture remember cultural encounters? And what does it mean for a building to keep time like a grandfather clock in the corner of a room, ticking and chiming through the hours?

The post This House-Sized Clock Glows and Chimes Every 15 Minutes first appeared on Yanko Design.

Netflix is adapting the board game Ticket to Ride

Netflix has been in the game adaptation business for a while now, but until recently most of its attention had been on adapting video games. That’s still very much happening, but the streaming giant is also now buying up rights for board game IP too, with the latest being Asmodee’s Ticket to Ride.

Netflix will look to greenlight a number of projects spanning TV, film and "additional formats," it wrote in a press release. The first of these will be a feature film written by Ben Mekler and Chris Amick. Ticket to Ride creator Alan R. Moon will serve as an executive producer on the project, which will be the game’s first on-screen adaptation. Exactly what it will look like is not yet clear, but the internet already has plenty of theories.

Ticket to Ride is a train-themed turn-based strategy and route-building game first released over 20 years ago. Since then it has gone on to ship more than 20 million copies and has been translated into over 30 languages. It’s also been given the video game adaptation treatment before.

This is actually the second of Asmodee’s IP that Netflix has acquired the rights to, after announcing last year that Catan will also be making its way to screens in various forms. And it isn’t just interested in scripted TV and movie opportunities. In early 2025, the company also signed a deal with Hasbro to adapt Monopoly into a TV game show.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/netflix-is-adapting-the-board-game-ticket-to-ride-180505164.html?src=rss

WordPress adds an AI assistant

Web designers of the world: The Automattic-owned WordPress.com is further embracing AI on its platform. On Tuesday, it expanded its one-off AI site builder into a persistent AI assistant for editing and media creation.

In the site editor, the AI assistant can help with site-wide structure and design choices. For example, you can ask the chatbot to "give me more font options that feel clean and professional or “change my site colors to be brighter and bolder." It also includes image generation and writing assistance, such as "rewrite this to sound more confident." (Who needs learning when you have automation!)

The assistant can also now be integrated into your site's media library. It can generate new images or make prompted edits to your existing ones. Examples include "update this image to be black and white" or "replace this stack of pancakes with waffles." (Just don't fake that if your business sells breakfast food, okay?) WordPress says the assistant understands your website's look and brand and can tailor the media accordingly.

WordPress also added the AI assistant to the platform's team chat, Block Notes. You can summon the chatbot from within your team chat threads.

The tool is available for WordPress.com's Business or Commerce plans. (Or, if you made your site using the AI builder, it's enabled by default, no matter which plan you use.) The feature works best with the platform's block themes; it's much more limited with classic ones. You'll find the toggle to activate the AI assistant in your site settings under the "AI tools" section.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/wordpress-adds-an-ai-assistant-174719676.html?src=rss

This Wi-Fi Router Looks Like an Incense Burner and Scents Your Room

Most home routers live behind books or plants, blinking away in corners, only noticed when the connection drops. There’s so much quiet faith placed in that invisible box every time we ask it for directions, answers, or late-night comfort while scrolling. If we already treat Wi-Fi like a kind of everyday oracle, maybe the hardware could look and behave more like an object we actually care about instead of just tolerating it.

innrou is a Wi-Fi router concept that resembles an incense burner and incorporates fragrance. It’s designed to go beyond spec sheets and become a small storytelling object, imagining the future form of electronic products. The name and form hint at traditional incense rituals, but the function is pure 21st century, keeping your devices online while quietly scenting the room with swappable essential-oil sticks.

Designer: Yuan Chen

The designer’s starting point is a neat cultural parallel. In traditional Chinese society, people would ask gods for guidance and answers, often by lighting incense at a burner. Today, many of us scroll the internet for the same things, from practical fixes to something closer to spiritual reassurance. innrou deliberately combines those two behaviors, using a router as the carrier for a story about how we now seek help.

The essential oil system reinterprets incense as modern fragrance sticks. You replace a spent stick by sliding in a new one, the same simple vertical gesture used at a temple. That motion deepens the narrative and adds a bit of playfulness, turning maintenance into a small ritual instead of an annoying chore, while the router quietly keeps doing its job underneath without asking for attention.

innrou is a small, rounded block that can sit openly on a desk, bedside table, or shelf without screaming “network gear.” The antennas are hidden, the front shows only a few status dots and a subtle logo, and the body comes in soft colors that match interiors. Instead of being something you hide, it becomes part of the atmosphere, both visually and through scent, which is a surprisingly big shift for a product category that usually defaults to black plastic.

Under the incense metaphor, this is still a proper router. There’s a row of Ethernet ports at the back, a power connection, and internal antennas doing the heavy lifting. The essential oil sticks are designed as replaceable cartridges with their own packaging, so the ecosystem feels thought through. It isn’t about chasing the highest throughput number but about making the necessary hardware less of an eyesore and maybe a bit nicer to live with.

A concept like innrou suggests that if a router can borrow the form and gestures of an incense burner, other invisible boxes could also become objects we actually want in the room, not just tolerate. Blending connectivity with scent and story reframes a forgettable device as a small daily ritual, which feels oddly appropriate when you already treat it like a modern oracle that knows where everything is and when everyone is awake.

The post This Wi-Fi Router Looks Like an Incense Burner and Scents Your Room first appeared on Yanko Design.

Netflix is streaming its first MMA fight on May 16

Netflix is streaming its very first live MMA fight on May 16. The combatants are one-time phenom Ronda Rousey and one-time actor Gina Carano. Both women have retired from the sport. Rousey left in 2016 and Carano left all the way back in 2009. In any event, they are both back for one night only.

The featherweight bout will take place inside a hexagon cage and will stream globally. It's likely Netflix had to choose two retired fighters because current stars are under contracts with various promotional entities. This fight is co-hosted by Most Valuable Productions, a promotional company started by Jake Paul.

Netflix has already been streaming boxing matches, so MMA seems like a natural next step. The platform has also aired live talk shows, golf events and awards ceremonies.

If you're unfamiliar with the aforementioned fighters, Rousey is a UFC champion and Olympic medalist who has a fantastic 12-2 record in MMA. Carano is a pioneer in the sport, starting her career all the way back in 2006.

She also played Cara Dune in The Mandalorian before getting into hot water after social media posts that mocked mask wearing during the pandemic, alleged voter fraud during the 2020 election and denigrated transgender people. However, it really came to a head when she doubled down on her comments, likening the social media blowback conservatives receive to what Jewish people experienced during the holocaust. That's when she was fired from the hit Star Wars show.

Carano has since teamed up with Elon Musk to sue Disney over the firing. In related news, there's a fresh trailer for The Mandalorian and Grogu movie and it's pretty darned fun.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/netflix-is-streaming-its-first-mma-fight-on-may-16-165702479.html?src=rss

The first full trailer for The Mandalorian and Grogu is here

Fans of The Mandalorian and his tiny green apprentice Grogu are getting their best look yet at the duo's upcoming theatrical adventure, set for release this spring. It’s hard to believe that it's been just over six years since the last Star Wars movie was released in theaters, followed by wall-to-wall coverage of so-called Star Wars Fatigue.

The newest trailer, released today, clocks in at just over two minutes long and offers some new footage and details to sink our teeth into. Picking up after the events of the Disney+ series The Mandalorian, the Empire has collapsed and Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal) and Grogu are tasked with taking out a bevy of baddies from gangsters to war criminals for the New Republic. Colonel Ward, new to the Star Wars universe and played by Sigourney Weaver, tells Djarin, "This isn't about revenge, it's about preventing another war."

Jeremy Allen White will also star in the film, as Rotta the Hutt, Jabba's son, who we briefly see battling Din Djarin in a colosseum of sorts. Notably, at one point we see Djarin on his knees before Jabba sans helmet, so we'll definitely be getting some moments of Pedro Pascal unfiltered by Beskar. Like any Star Wars adventure, we see flashes of some new creatures that our heroes will face. Most importantly, we see Grogu being downright adorable, playing with buttons on the ship, commandeering a flying bassinet, and snacking on a cookie.

The Mandalorian and Grogu hits theaters on May 22 and, according to the trailer, was shot at least in part for IMAX.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/the-first-full-trailer-for-the-mandalorian-and-grogu-is-here-164244117.html?src=rss

Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 and The Witcher 3 are coming to Game Pass

Xbox has revealed the second batch of Game Pass additions for February. There are quite a few heavyweights in the mix this time, including Kingdom Come: Deliverance II and The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. Let’s start with what’s available today, though. Xbox previously said Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora (Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass on Cloud, Xbox Series X/S, handheld and PC) would arrive today, while Avowed joins the Game Pass Premium library on Cloud, Xbox Series X/S and PC on the same day it hits PS5

There’s another Game Pass addition today in the form of Aerial_Knight’s DropShot (Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass on Cloud, Xbox Series X/S, handheld and PC). I’ve been looking forward to this after digging solo developer Aerial_Knight’s previous games as well as the demo

This is a single-player skydiving FPS in which you’ll have to fend off enemies to grab the only parachute. You’ll use finger guns to take out the competition. Oh, and there are dragons to deal with. 

Another trio of games joins the lineup on Friday, including The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt – Complete Edition (Game Pass Ultimate and Premium on Cloud and consoles). This version of the classic action RPG includes all the DLC, so it could keep you busy for quite some time. EA Sports College Football 26 (Game Pass Ultimate on Cloud and Xbox Series X/S) arrives on the same day along with the eye-catching Soulslike deckbuilder Death Howl (Game Pass Ultimate and Premium on Cloud, Xbox Series X/S, handheld and PC). That was already on PC Game Pass. 

On February 24 TCG Card Shop Simulator hits Cloud, Xbox Series X/S, handheld and PC in Game Preview on Game Pass Ultimate, Premium and PC Game Pass. As the title suggests, here you'll be managing a trading card game store. Dice A Million — a day-one addition to Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass on PC on February 25 — is an intriguing numbers-go-up game. It's a roguelike deckbuilder in which you'll combine dice with different abilities as well as rings with passive effects as you attempt to roll a million points.

February 26 sees the full release of Towerborne, which had been in game preview (and in early access on Steam). Xbox Game Studios is publishing this co-op action RPG from Stoic. Offline play and online co-op will be added along with more story, areas, enemies, progression features and difficulty settings. The full version of Towerborne will be available on Game Pass Ultimate, Premium and PC Game Pass across consoles, handheld and PC.

Looking a bit further ahead, two high-profile titles are coming to Game Pass Ultimate, Premium and PC Game Pass on Cloud, Xbox Series X/S and PC on March 3: Final Fantasy III and Kingdom Come: Deliverance II. The latter received several nominations at The Game Awards, including Game of the Year, and it was one of our favorite games of 2025. It follows Kingdom Come Deliverance hitting Game Pass just last week.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox/kingdom-come-deliverance-2-and-the-witcher-3-are-coming-to-game-pass-163624685.html?src=rss