Vue lecture

Il y a de nouveaux articles disponibles, cliquez pour rafraîchir la page.

No Balcony Space? This Table Hooks On as a Planter, Bar, or Desk

A small city balcony has a way of making every square meter feel personal, just barely. There’s room for a folding chair, maybe a potted plant, and the occasional optimistic thought about al fresco breakfast. What there usually isn’t, though, is any real surface. Designer Michael Hilgers noticed this particular gap, and the balKonzept is his answer: a railing-mounted table that hooks onto the balcony railing with no tools, no hardware, and no permanent commitment.

The form is immediately legible. A wedge-shaped body in recyclable polyethylene curves at the rear into a smooth hook, looping over the railing and gripping it via an adjusting screw underneath. That single mechanical gesture is the entire installation. The raised trough at the back sits above the railing line and acts as a windbreak for objects resting on the work surface below. The unit comes in at 60 cm wide and roughly 40 cm deep on the interior side.

Designer: Michael Hilgers (rephorm)

The material choice is worth pausing on. Polyethylene, produced in a Brandenburg plastics factory through rotational molding, is not a glamorous option. It won’t feel precious the way powder-coated steel does. What it does do is survive outdoor life without complaint: frost-resistant, UV-stable, and recyclable at its end of life. Rotational molding also produces hollow, seamless shells with consistent wall thickness, which matters for something exposed to seasonal temperature extremes.

The table height is a fixed function of whatever railing it’s hanging on; subtract 21 cm from the railing height, and that’s the surface level. That means the balKonzept works very differently on a low French-style balcony versus a taller contemporary glass railing, with no way to adjust it beyond moving the piece. For anyone wanting to sit and work at a comfortable height, the railing geometry will decide the experience before any other consideration does.

Where the design earns its keep is in the planter box. Filling it with soil and roots is one option, but the trough is deep enough to function as an improvised cooler, and Rephorm’s own description cheekily acknowledges this, noting it works just as well with ice cubes and sparkling wine as it does with geraniums. That kind of built-in flexibility is the whole point; the balKonzept doesn’t commit to being one thing, which is probably what a small balcony needs most.

The post No Balcony Space? This Table Hooks On as a Planter, Bar, or Desk first appeared on Yanko Design.

Ex-Microsoft gaming VP and Xbox 360 lead creator calls the infamous Red Ring of Death a "Tylenol moment" — what does that mean? Here's what he said

In a new interview, former Xbox VP Peter Moore has reflected on the Xbox 360's notorious "Red Ring of Death" and how Microsoft ended up dealing with it.

The Xbox 360's infamous Red Ring of Death.

An official Red Ring of Death poster Microsoft sold in reference to the infamous console-bricking Xbox 360 hardware issue.

Former Xbox VP talks building Microsoft's brand, distancing it from Windows, and "throwing punches" for Bill Gates — "this is how the console wars started"

Peter Moore, former Xbox VP and one of the visionaries responsible for the Xbox 360 and the brand as a whole, has discussed his time at Microsoft.

Photograph of Peter Moore, Microsoft's former entertainment VP that oversaw the creation of the Xbox 360.

Photograph of Peter Moore, Microsoft's former entertainment and gaming VP that oversaw the creation of the Xbox 360.

"It's hard to make sense of such a huge number" — Valve delivered 100 exabytes of data through Steam in 2025, and it's not showing any signs of slowing down

Valve's Year in Review breakdown for Steam shows off some mind-boggling numbers to do with data delivery. Can any other PC gaming platform ever hope to be as popular?

BELLEVUE, UNITED STATES - FEBRUARY 26: Portrait of American video game developer Gabe Newell, photographed at Valve Corporations offices in Bellevue, Washington, on February 26, 2020. (Photo by Olly Curtis/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

Valve founder and CEO Gabe Newell sitting down at Valve's Washington headquarters.

Fans helped save Cyberpunk 2077 — now the fully‑fixed version joins Xbox Game Pass Premium

Cyberpunk 2077 has arrived on Xbox Game Pass Premium and Ultimate nearly six years after its troubled launch. CD Projekt Red’s sci-fi RPG is now widely regarded as one of the best in the genre, giving new players the chance to experience Night City in a far more polished state.

V, Cyberpunk 2077's protagonist, customized to look like David Martinez from the Cyberpunk: Edgerunners anime set in the same universe.

Cyberpunk 2077

This bargain 16-inch Windows 11 laptop gives you a 2K display for under $550 with 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage — and AMD's AI processor makes it a Copilot+ PC

Walmart has spotlighted the HP Omnibook 5 16-inch laptop as one of its top "Tech Editors' Picks" for its reliable specs with a lavish MSRP to match. In fact, its price is so affordable that it doesn't need a discount to justify a recommendation.

Ai-Generated image of the HP Omnibook 5 16-inch laptop visuallized.

HP's AMD-based Omnibook 5 16-inch laptop is a steal.

Bungie's Marathon won't copy Destiny 2 and its terrible content vaulting, so we can all breathe a sigh of relief — "it doesn't matter when you join"

Content vaulting is widely hated in Destiny 2, so with Marathon, Bungie wants to make sure its content is "evergreen" and won't go away in the future.

An official screenshot of a squad in Marathon.

Compared to Destiny, Marathon is a much tighter and more focused game, which hopefully means we'll never see content vaulting come to it.

Oh snap, Marathon dev Bungie isn't playing around, threatens takedowns against datamining leaks — "our goal is first and foremost to preserve the experience"

Bungie, the developer of Marathon, has warned players it will issue takedowns to anyone who datamines and leaks upcoming content for the game.

An official screenshot taken from Marathon's launch cinematic.

Bungie is taking datamine leaks in Marathon very, <em>very </em>seriously.

Battlefield 6 devs laid off as the best-selling shooter's player count continues to slump — EA says the cuts are a "realignment," and good for the game

Battlefield 6 was 2025's best-selling game, but it's still facing layoffs as EA attempts to "better align our teams around what matters most."

Battlefield 6 gameplay screenshot showing infantry and vehicles, including a tank and helicopter.

Battlefield 6's combined arms warfare shines best on large, spacious maps — but much to the community's disappointment, only a few exist in the game.

Move over “This is an Xbox” — “Build for what’s next” tells fans the “future of Xbox starts now” at GDC

Xbox is showcasing new slogans at its GDC booth including “Build for what’s next” and “The future of Xbox starts now,” hinting at the company’s messaging for the next era of Xbox.

Recreation of build what's next for Xbox slogan

Recreation of build what's next for Xbox slogan

This wired gaming controller makes you feel like a god in Overwatch for under $70 — an unfair 8,000Hz advantage worth taking

Various retailers have started selling 42% discounts for the Razer Wolverine V3 Pro Tournament Edition 8K PC controller. With this discount, players will be able to enjoy the thrills of TMR analog sticks, 8000 polling rates, and more gameplay-enhancing features for a ludicrously low price.

Razer Wolverine V3 Pro 8K being used wirelessly

Wired controllers don't get any more powerful than this.

Xbox CEO Asha Sharma hosted Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in an internal Q&A, amplifying that Microsoft will "always" invest in gaming. "We're long on gaming. We'll continue to invest, and we'll always do so."

At a big internal Q&A session, Xbox CEO Asha Sharma hosted Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, discussing the "long" vision for Xbox's future.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella with Xbox CEO Asha Sharma

Rocking an Xbox hoodie, Satya Nadella revealed that he's "long" on gaming.

3 remarkable PC concepts and pioneers that still influence today's hardware — including Lenovo's wacky new Legion Go Fold gaming handheld

Lenovo's unique new Legion Go Fold concept gaming handheld, revealed earlier this week, led me down a rabbit hole of concepts and pioneers in the PC and PC gaming space that directly influenced the device.

Lenovo's Legion Go Fold edited to show concept devices on its screen

Lenovo's Legion Go Fold, pictured here being held in one hand, with some concept devices on its display.

Early benchmarks say it: Qualcomm's Snapdragon Extreme chip is cooking Intel’s top-tier Panther Lake

Early Geekbench benchmarks suggest Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme could outperform Intel’s Core Ultra X9 388H from the Panther Lake lineup. The results highlight ARM’s growing role in Windows laptops.

Images of Qualcomm's new Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme processor, benchmarks from reference design laptops, and pictures from the announcement at the Snapdragon Summit (2025).

Images of Qualcomm's new Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme processor, benchmarks from reference design laptops, and pictures from the announcement at the Snapdragon Summit (2025).

I'm still here with Xbox for now — but it has some serious identity work ahead if it wants to reassure long-time fans

After nearly two decades with Xbox, I am reflecting on how its shifting brand messaging has shaped how I feel about the platform, alongside Phil Spencer’s retirement and Asha Sharma’s arrival as CEO, and why I'm not dooming about the whole ordeal.

Xbox logo cracking

After nearly two decades with Xbox, I'm reflecting on how its shifting brand messaging has shaped.

Twitch FPS legend Shroud "can't believe" Marathon is so hard — "you play ARC Raiders and it's like you're playing Hello Kitty Adventures"

Marathon and ARC Raiders are both extraction shooters, but Bungie's FPS is a far harder game — so much so that the Twitch star Shroud "can't believe" it.

An official screenshot of Marathon gameplay.

Compared to ARC Raiders, Bungie's Marathon is a far more intense and challenging extraction shooter — so much so that it surprised legendary Twitch FPS streamer Shroud.

sudo-rs - 40 ans de silence cassés par des astérisques

Si vous utilisez Ubuntu 26.04, vous avez peut-être remarqué un truc bizarre dernièrement en tapant votre mot de passe sudo... Ouiiiiii, y'a des petites étoiles qui apparaissent !! Pas de panique, c'est "normal". Enfin, c'est nouveau...

En effet, sudo-rs, la réécriture en Rust de la bonne vieille commande sudo, a décidé d'activer pwfeedback par défaut. En gros, quand vous faites un sudo apt install bidule, au lieu du trou noir habituel, vous voyez maintenant des ***** défiler pendant la saisie du mot de passe. C'est un changement qui casse une convention vieille de 40 ans... et ça, forcément, ça fait du bruit !

Pour rappel, Ubuntu a basculé sur sudo-rs (le remplaçant en Rust du bon vieux sudo en C) depuis la version 25.10. Ça fait partie du même mouvement de réécriture des outils système en Rust, comme les coreutils dont je vous avais parlé. Et la 26.04 vient de "cherry-picker" comme on dit, un patch upstream qui active le feedback visuel par défaut.

Un bug report sur Launchpad ( #2142721 ) est bien sûr arrivé direct, en mode vénère genre "*ÇA FAIT DES DÉCENNIES qu'on n'affiche pas la longueur du mot de passe pour empêcher le shoulder surfing ! C'est quoi ce bordel !!?? *"

Et la réponse des devs : Won't Fix. Circulez les relous !

En fait, leur argument c'est que le bénéfice sécurité est "infinitésimal". Parce que bon, votre mot de passe sudo c'est le même que celui de votre session (celui que vous tapez à l'écran de login, devant tout le monde). Et le bruit des touches trahit déjà la longueur de toute façon. Du coup, ils ont préféré régler le problème UX qui paume les débutants depuis le début des années 80.

D'ailleurs, en 2013 je vous expliquais comment activer ces étoiles manuellement avec sudo visudo (ça date de fou !!) et maintenant c'est l'inverse, faut expliquer comment les virer ! Linux Mint avait d'ailleurs déjà sauté le pas de son côté depuis un moment.

Perso, le truc qui me gonfle c'est pour les tutos vidéo. Quand vous faites un screencast, les astérisques révèlent la longueur de votre mot de passe à tous vos spectateurs. Du coup faut aller reparamétrer chaque machine avant de filmer ou faire du masquage en post prod. C'est pas la fin du monde, mais bon, la flemme...

Alors pour désactiver ces jolies zétoiles :

sudo visudo

Et ajoutez cette ligne à la fin de /etc/sudoers :

Defaults !pwfeedback

Sauvegardez (Ctrl+X sous nano), et c'est réglé. Attention, ne touchez à rien d'autre dans ce fichier, une erreur de typo et sudo ne marchera plus. Grâce à cette manip, ce sera retour au trou noir ! Youpi !

Source

Firefox 148 - Un seul bouton pour virer toute l'IA

Vous voulez désactiver l'IA dans votre navigateur ? Bonne chance pour les couillons qui utilisent Chrome... faut passer par 5 réglages planqués dans chrome://settings et chrome://flags, tripatouiller des flags expérimentaux, bref, c'est un vrai parcours du combattant. Firefox 148, de son côté, a eu une idée folle : Mettre UN bouton. Hop, terminé.

Mozilla vient en effet de sortir la version 148 de Firefox et le gros morceau, c'est la section "Contrôles de l'IA" dans les paramètres (about:preferences#ai). Un seul toggle " Bloquer les améliorations IA " et paf, toutes les fonctions IA du navigateur sont coupées d'un coup. Traductions automatiques, regroupement d'onglets, previews de liens, texte alternatif des PDF, et même les chatbots de la barre latérale (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, Le Chat). Tout dégage !

C'est le top pour les fragilous qui refusent le progrès ^^... Roohh ça va je blague ! Et le vrai intérêt du truc, c'est que ça verrouille les futures fonctions IA aussi. Du coup, si Mozilla ajoute de nouvelles features IA plus tard, elles seront automatiquement bloquées. Pas besoin de revenir fouiller dans les paramètres à chaque update. D'ailleurs, toutes les fonctions IA sont déjà désactivées par défaut... faut donc les activer manuellement si vous en voulez.

Et attention, ça ne bloque pas les extensions tierces qui intègrent leur propre IA, genre les "résumeurs" de page ou les assistants de rédaction. Le toggle, lui, garantit uniquement que les fonctions NATIVES restent coupées quoi qu'il arrive.

Et maintenant comparons avec la concurrence, parce que c'est là que ça pique les yeux.

Comme je vous le disais dans mon intro trollesque, chez Google, désactiver l'IA dans Chrome (et ses dérivés) relève carrément du sport extrême. Faut couper Gemini (chrome://settings/ai), désactiver le mode IA et Help Me Write (chrome://flags), bloquer la recherche IA dans l'historique, et pour les AI Overviews... ben y'a pas vraiment de bouton.

Brave fait un peu mieux heureusement ! Leur assistant Leo est opt-in par défaut, tourne dans un profil isolé qui ne peut pas accéder à vos données de navigation, et applique une politique zéro log. Même leur mode "agentic AI" en Nightly est désactivé de base. C'est propre, mais y'a pas de kill switch global comme Firefox. Du coup, si vous voulez la solution radicale plutôt que du cas par cas, Firefox gagne.

Et pour ceux qui se demandent pourquoi Firefox investit dans l'IA tout en permettant de la couper... en fait, Mozilla joue la carte de la transparence. Les modèles locaux utilisés par Firefox sont supprimés du disque quand vous désactivez les fonctions et tout est vérifiable dans about:processes si vous êtes du genre parano.

Au passage, cette version corrige également une quarantaine de failles de sécurité et embarque la Sanitizer API , ce qui est une première parmi les navigateurs. Et si vous êtes encore sur Firefox ESR, ça ne marchera pas... faudra donc attendre la prochaine ESR pour en profiter.

Voilà, si l'IA dans votre navigateur vous gave, vous savez où aller -> Firefox, tout simplement.

Source

As Season 2 launches, Battlefield 6 devs say they've "heard the message very clear" about the desire for big maps — but "it takes a really long time" to make them

As Season 2 starts, Battlefield 6 devs say they've "heard the message very clear" regarding players wanting bigger maps, but they're not coming quickly.

An official screenshot of the Contaminated map in Battlefield 6 Season 2.

An official screenshot of infantry action on Battlefield 6's new Season 2 map, Contaminated.

❌