Campinawe’s solo camping trailer hides its bed to create a mobile office

There is, for some reason, an increasing demand for rigs that satiate solo camper requirements. I am still catching up with the idea, but the demand is already evident. The camping industry is adapting to it. Just recently, the Daihatsu Wake arrived in a layout designed for campers who do not prefer humans along on their mobile adventures. Keeping up with the idea, Campinawe – recognized for its obscurely shaped camping trailers – is defining the concept with its streamlined layout for solo campers.

Solo camping is definitely the idea behind the new Crossover Solo layout released by Campinawe. It’s available for the existing Frontier and Adventure trailers from the company, starting at $39,995. The highlighting feature here is a foldable bed that opens up the space inside for an office, exercise, or simply living and dining.

Designer: Campinawe

Campinawe debuted its first trailer about five years back in 2021. Since then, there has been some strangeness about its camping trailers. The irregular shape and forms have looked odd and piqued curiosity, but the unconventional trailers have the most functional layouts in small 15-foot form factors. These functional layouts have been centered around queen beds, sufficing the sleeping, living requirements of at least two people conveniently.

The company is now adding more space to their trailer interiors with the new floor plan that centers around a single-person removable bed and frees up the floor space for a range of activities. The new Crossover Solo layout is, therefore, designed specifically for solo travelers. It is ideally provided for someone who likes to travel alone but prefers to carry their work along.

Since the layout is provided for two of the existing three trailers from the company, it is based on the usual multi-gauge steel tub chassis that is popularized by the Campinawe Trailers. The layout also carries the company’s step-in foyer signature design that has allowed Camoinawe to allow people to keep their living space organized, while the cooling off area bears the brunt of the mud, sweat, and negativity you bring along from the outdoors.

Beyond the walk-in foyer and the wardrobes in the rear side door lies the ultimate distinction of the Crossover Solo. It’s here that you have a single, stowaway bed, and open space next to it, which features a nightstand and a dropdown work desk that can double as a dining table can be used with the edge of the bed as a seat. The twin XL mattress is ideal for a single person, but I am not too sure if another person can be accommodated. I don’t take up much space to sleep but my wife is a star fish, so I’m sure, even if I wanted, I couldn’t take her along in this layout. You can do your own ideation.

While at it, you should know that even if the sleeping space is less, the floor space is massive in here. This is made possible by the interesting foldable design of the bed. The mattress, along with the bed platform, can fold in half and be stored on one side of the camper. This opens up the space for folding chairs to be installed for dining and working. The space can also be used for exercising, or just sitting around at daytime.

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This Floating Parliament Is Built From the Ocean’s Own Trash

Most architects look at ocean plastic and see a crisis. Yufeng Tu saw a building material. Ocean Vortex, the speculative floating parliament he conceived, does exactly that — and in doing so, reimagines what civic architecture can mean when the crisis it addresses becomes the material it’s built from.

Recognized as a finalist in the 2026 YAC Ocean Parliament competition, Ocean Vortex is a direct response to the staggering scale of marine plastic pollution, particularly the vast garbage patches accumulating across the Pacific Ocean. Rather than positioning architecture as a distant observer of environmental collapse, Tu places it at the center of the problem — literally afloat within it.

Designer: Yufeng Tu

The structural logic is as deliberate as it is striking. A steel frame is combined with recycled marine waste, with discarded plastic barrels and containers repurposed as buoyancy elements. The very materials responsible for choking ocean ecosystems are transformed into the system that keeps the building alive. It’s a circular gesture that gives the concept its moral weight — not greenwashing, but genuine reuse embedded into the architecture’s bones.

From a distance, Ocean Vortex reads as an open civic platform shaped by the forces of wind and water. Up close, the spiral geometry pulls visitors inward, coiling movement toward a central pool that becomes the spatial and symbolic heart of the structure. That pull isn’t incidental — it mirrors the vortex formation of ocean currents, the same force that concentrates plastic debris in the first place. Tu turns a destructive natural phenomenon into an organizing architectural principle.

The program is expansive without being scattered. Parliament chambers, a museum, offices, hydroponic cultivation bays, energy conversion infrastructure, and desalination systems are all woven into one continuous system. Rooftop solar panels handle daily energy needs, while the submerged levels work quietly below the waterline, processing, growing, and converting. The building doesn’t just sit on the ocean — it functions as part of it.

Tu, who holds an M.Arch from UC Berkeley and has worked with practices including MAD and UNStudio, brings a rigorous design sensibility to a project that could easily have remained purely symbolic. Ocean Vortex avoids the trap of spectacle for its own sake. The rendering quality is immersive, but the ideas underneath carry the real weight — governance, ecology, and material responsibility folded into a single form. What makes Ocean Vortex resonate isn’t just its ambition. It’s the clarity of its logic. The ocean made the problem. The ocean provides the site. And the ocean’s own discarded waste becomes the solution. That’s not a design concept. That’s a manifesto.

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Leaked iOS 27 Details Reveal Apple’s Massive Siri Overhaul

Leaked iOS 27 Details Reveal Apple’s Massive Siri Overhaul iOS 27

Apple is preparing to transform its virtual assistant, Siri, with the highly anticipated iOS 27 update. This redesign represents the most comprehensive evolution in Siri’s history, emphasizing deeper integration within the operating system, expanded functionality, and a more tailored user experience. By using advanced artificial intelligence (AI), Apple aims to address previous limitations and establish […]

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Automate Your Daily Workflows by Building an AIOS with Claude Opus 4.8

Automate Your Daily Workflows by Building an AIOS with Claude Opus 4.8 Claude Opus 4.8 interface managing business workflows and tool integrations.

Nate Herk explains how Claude Opus 4.8 can be configured into a functional AI Operating System (AIOS) to streamline workflows and manage diverse tasks. By applying the Four C’s framework, Context, Connections, Capabilities and Cadence, he demonstrates how to structure a system capable of handling responsibilities like project management, overview generation and email drafting. For […]

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Michigan Built a $4,000 Robot You Can Rebuild from Scratch

The Ship of Theseus is one of philosophy’s most enduring thought experiments: if you replace every plank of a ship, one by one, is it still the same ship? Researchers at the University of Michigan decided that rather than debating the question in a classroom, they’d build it. And then they’d unbolt it, swap the legs, and build it into something else entirely.

TROT (The Robot of Theseus) is a 10-kilogram, four-legged robot whose entire identity rests on impermanence. Its limbs unbolt. Its leg configurations swap between a two-link hopper, a three-link knee, and a three-link elbow orientation. You can rebuild the entire body plan over an afternoon and walk away with something that moves more like a gazelle than the dog-sized quadruped it started as. Same chassis. Same motors. About $4,000 in 3D-printed brackets and off-the-shelf parts. Its backdrivable motors even recover energy as they’re driven backward, mimicking the way tendons store and release force in a running animal.

Designer: University of Michigan

That $4,000 figure is worth sitting with. For context, Boston Dynamics’ Spot runs closer to $75,000. But TROT isn’t a budget Spot. It’s a different idea entirely. Where Spot is optimized for a fixed body plan and real-world deployment, TROT is optimized for being taken apart. It’s an experiment in the value of non-permanence, and that’s a much more interesting design brief than “make it do more things.”

The team, led by assistant professor Talia Moore, designed TROT to help biologists ask questions that physical animals can’t easily answer. What makes a cheetah fast isn’t just muscle. It’s also leg length, segment ratios, and joint geometry. Isolating those variables in a living animal is nearly impossible. But with TROT, you can swap out a femur extension, flip the knee orientation, and run the same locomotion test again the same afternoon, with consistent hardware and no ethical review board required. The robot has been used to compress roughly 60 million years of evolutionary locomotion variation into weeks of lab data. That’s the actual scientific utility, not a metaphor.

What tends to get under-reported in the science coverage is the design language itself. TROT’s visual aesthetic isn’t cleaned up or consumer-ready. You can see the 3D-print layer lines, the exposed wiring, the actuators bolted directly to the brackets. It looks like something built to be understood rather than admired, and I think that’s intentional. The exposed construction is a form of communication. It tells anyone looking at it: this is not precious. Change it. That’s a genuinely rare posture for a piece of research hardware.

The open-source dimension also runs deeper than posting a GitHub repo. The team released the CAD files, not just the control code. That’s a meaningful distinction. Code describes behavior; geometry describes intent. Sharing the brackets and print files means a biology lab at a smaller institution can reproduce TROT without needing a dedicated robotics engineering team. The knowledge transfer is embedded in the shape of the parts, and that changes who can participate in this kind of research.

TROT didn’t arrive alone. The first quarter of 2026 brought a quiet cluster of modular robotics research: Northwestern’s terrain-adapting writhers, a self-configuring quadruped paper in PNAS, and Nature’s SoftRafts, all landing within roughly eight weeks of each other. Robotin debuted a modular home robot ecosystem at CES 2026. Analysts have put the modular robotics market on track for $18.94 billion by 2029. None of this is coincidental. The field has been asking whether modularity in robotics could move past novelty. Q1 2026 looks like the answer arriving.

Most robots are designed to be finished. They ship in a fixed form, and any change is a cost: a repair, a retool, a failure. TROT is designed around the opposite logic. Its value increases each time a limb is swapped. Its usefulness is inseparable from its willingness to be reconfigured. Whether a robot that constantly changes its parts stays the same robot is still a philosophical question. Whether that approach produces better science, and better design thinking, is looking less and less like a question at all.

The post Michigan Built a $4,000 Robot You Can Rebuild from Scratch first appeared on Yanko Design.

Michigan Built a $4,000 Robot You Can Rebuild from Scratch

The Ship of Theseus is one of philosophy’s most enduring thought experiments: if you replace every plank of a ship, one by one, is it still the same ship? Researchers at the University of Michigan decided that rather than debating the question in a classroom, they’d build it. And then they’d unbolt it, swap the legs, and build it into something else entirely.

TROT (The Robot of Theseus) is a 10-kilogram, four-legged robot whose entire identity rests on impermanence. Its limbs unbolt. Its leg configurations swap between a two-link hopper, a three-link knee, and a three-link elbow orientation. You can rebuild the entire body plan over an afternoon and walk away with something that moves more like a gazelle than the dog-sized quadruped it started as. Same chassis. Same motors. About $4,000 in 3D-printed brackets and off-the-shelf parts. Its backdrivable motors even recover energy as they’re driven backward, mimicking the way tendons store and release force in a running animal.

Designer: University of Michigan

That $4,000 figure is worth sitting with. For context, Boston Dynamics’ Spot runs closer to $75,000. But TROT isn’t a budget Spot. It’s a different idea entirely. Where Spot is optimized for a fixed body plan and real-world deployment, TROT is optimized for being taken apart. It’s an experiment in the value of non-permanence, and that’s a much more interesting design brief than “make it do more things.”

The team, led by assistant professor Talia Moore, designed TROT to help biologists ask questions that physical animals can’t easily answer. What makes a cheetah fast isn’t just muscle. It’s also leg length, segment ratios, and joint geometry. Isolating those variables in a living animal is nearly impossible. But with TROT, you can swap out a femur extension, flip the knee orientation, and run the same locomotion test again the same afternoon, with consistent hardware and no ethical review board required. The robot has been used to compress roughly 60 million years of evolutionary locomotion variation into weeks of lab data. That’s the actual scientific utility, not a metaphor.

What tends to get under-reported in the science coverage is the design language itself. TROT’s visual aesthetic isn’t cleaned up or consumer-ready. You can see the 3D-print layer lines, the exposed wiring, the actuators bolted directly to the brackets. It looks like something built to be understood rather than admired, and I think that’s intentional. The exposed construction is a form of communication. It tells anyone looking at it: this is not precious. Change it. That’s a genuinely rare posture for a piece of research hardware.

The open-source dimension also runs deeper than posting a GitHub repo. The team released the CAD files, not just the control code. That’s a meaningful distinction. Code describes behavior; geometry describes intent. Sharing the brackets and print files means a biology lab at a smaller institution can reproduce TROT without needing a dedicated robotics engineering team. The knowledge transfer is embedded in the shape of the parts, and that changes who can participate in this kind of research.

TROT didn’t arrive alone. The first quarter of 2026 brought a quiet cluster of modular robotics research: Northwestern’s terrain-adapting writhers, a self-configuring quadruped paper in PNAS, and Nature’s SoftRafts, all landing within roughly eight weeks of each other. Robotin debuted a modular home robot ecosystem at CES 2026. Analysts have put the modular robotics market on track for $18.94 billion by 2029. None of this is coincidental. The field has been asking whether modularity in robotics could move past novelty. Q1 2026 looks like the answer arriving.

Most robots are designed to be finished. They ship in a fixed form, and any change is a cost: a repair, a retool, a failure. TROT is designed around the opposite logic. Its value increases each time a limb is swapped. Its usefulness is inseparable from its willingness to be reconfigured. Whether a robot that constantly changes its parts stays the same robot is still a philosophical question. Whether that approach produces better science, and better design thinking, is looking less and less like a question at all.

The post Michigan Built a $4,000 Robot You Can Rebuild from Scratch first appeared on Yanko Design.

Why the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Design is Finally Happening

Why the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide Design is Finally Happening Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide

Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide is poised to make a significant impact on the foldable phone market with its innovative design and focus on usability. Early leaks and testing suggest that this device prioritizes functionality by introducing wider displays and enhanced multitasking capabilities. While the camera specifications may not cater to every photography enthusiast, […]

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Microsoft Reveals More About Project Helix and the Future of Xbox

Microsoft Reveals More About Project Helix and the Future of Xbox Xbox Project Helix console hybrid concept design

Microsoft’s Project Helix and the upcoming Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 are at the forefront of this week’s gaming news, as highlighted by Colt Eastwood. Project Helix, a next-generation console-PC hybrid, aims to merge the accessibility of consoles with the flexibility of PC gaming, potentially reshaping how players interact with hardware. Meanwhile, Modern Warfare […]

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Why the iPhone 18 Pro Max Will Be Apple’s Biggest Leap in Years

Why the iPhone 18 Pro Max Will Be Apple’s Biggest Leap in Years Front view of the iPhone 18 Pro Max with a 7-inch display

The iPhone 18 Pro Max is set to become a defining moment in Apple’s history, introducing a suite of new advancements in display technology, battery performance and camera innovation. These enhancements aim to deliver a seamless blend of innovative features and practical improvements, catering to both tech enthusiasts and everyday users. By focusing on usability […]

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Meet Google’s New Screenless Gemini Smart Glasses

Meet Google’s New Screenless Gemini Smart Glasses A person wearing Google's new lightweight smart glasses for daily tasks.

Google has unveiled its latest smart glasses, emphasizing audio-based AI functionality over visual displays. This design choice allows for a lightweight device aimed at practical, everyday use. The glasses, created in collaboration with Gentle Monster and Warby Parker, are available in two frame styles: bold, fashion-forward designs and more understated, professional options. Cas and Chary […]

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