• The Best Hearing Aids of 2025, Tested and Reviewed
    www.wired.com
    These WIRED-tested and audiologist-approved devices will help you hear sounds more clearly. Never miss out on a dinner conversation again.
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  • Reencle Prime Review: A Sustainable Solution for Making Compost
    www.wired.com
    This electric home composter turns kitchen scraps into valuable compostif youre willing to put up with some fuss.
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  • Clicks for iPhone 16 review clever iPhone keyboard case (not) for everyone
    www.macworld.com
    MacworldAt a glanceExpert's RatingProsPleasant typing feelMany clever shortcutsBacklit keyboardMore space on the screenConsVery unwieldy on the iPhone 16 Pro MaxLengthy setupConsiderable battery ConsumptionOur Verdict The Clicks for iPhone is one of the most interesting accessory products for the iPhone in recent years. The combination of iPhone case and keyboard brings physical buttons to the Apple mobile phone and creates more space on the screen for content, as the on-screen keyboard is no longer needed, and being able to assign shortcuts to certain key combinations is an incredibly clever trick.Price When ReviewedThis value will show the geolocated pricing text for product undefinedBest Pricing TodayPrice When ReviewedFrom 129Best Prices Today: Clicks case for iPhone 16RetailerPriceClicks129,00 View DealPrice comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwideProductPricePrice comparison from BackmarketClicks is the only keyboard case for the iPhone on the market. It is one of those accessories that will inevitably divide opinion. The concept itself isnt stupid, its just a bit out of date, because the era of smartphones with keyboards came to an end with the demise of Blackberry at the latest.Maybe Im just susceptible to such concepts, after all I belong to the (probably relatively small) group of people who spent quite a while with keyboard smartphones and look back longingly in moments of weakness.The small company has launched a revised version of the keyboard case that works with the iPhone 16. Not only was the fit adapted to the two new devices, but changes were also made to both the keyboard and the workmanship.Eugen WegmannDesign & finishThree colorsGood workmanshipApart from the keyboard at the bottom, Clicks is a standard iPhone case that comes in three colours: Surf, Spice and Onyx (aka blue, ochre and black). Clicks is not explicitly marketed as a protective case, but its design offers a certain degree of protection for your iPhone.The frame is made of a relatively rigid silicone, and the back is made of a piece of hard plastic in which magnets for MagSafe are embedded in a circle. On the inside, they are covered with a microfiber fabric, similar to the original Apple covers. The buttons are made of aluminum and therefore have a very high-quality feel, while the designers have opted for a simple cut-out for the camera control. So far, so normal.But then theres the USB-C port on the lower edge of the inside, which you use to connect the Clicks to your iPhone and which is extended through the keyboard to the lower end so that you can also charge your iPhone and connect it to Carplay.Eugen WegmannThe eye-catcher and main function is of course the keyboard with its 37 black, optionally illuminated keys. In the interests of ergonomics, these are slightly dented and tilted slightly to the left on the left-hand side and slightly to the right on the right-hand side. All main keys are double and sometimes triple-keyed, with the most important special characters printed on the respective key.There are also three additional buttons in the bottom line: one for voice input (or for the backlight), one to switch the virtual iPhone keyboard on and off as required and a third click button for special shortcuts such as shortcuts.This cover conceals all the technology, but also weights.Eugen WegmannOn the back of the keyboard is a cover covered with a piece of artificial leather, behind which the technology is housed. If you want to know what it looks like inside, you can take a look at the last quarter of the video on the Jerryrigeverything YouTube channel, where the device is taken apart.See more options in our roundup of the best case for iPhone 16.The recommended handling: two-handed.Eugen WegmannErgonomics & hapticsGreat haptic feedbackPro-Max version unwieldyRequires two-handed operationKey fetishists get their moneys worth with Clicks. The pressure point is pleasant, as is the clicking noise. The key size and spacing are large enough, unless you have really big fingers.Even with the best will in the world, your thumb will not reach the opposite side, and if you want to press a button and still hold the iPhone securely in your hand, it will be very tight.Eugen WegmannDue to its size, however, it brings with it two not insignificant problems. The lesser of these is that it makes one-handed operation of your iPhone practically impossible and forces you to hold the iPhone in two hands.This is actually very necessary, because the much bigger problem, at least with the Clicks variant for the iPhone Pro Max (and probably also for the Plus), is the weight distribution. With the Clicks, the already long iPhone models become even longer and their leverage increases when you hold them at a typical angle of 20 to 70 degrees to the ground. Even the best typing feel cant change the fact that your wrists start to hurt after a while.Size comparison: Clicks for iPhone 16 Pro Max next to an iPhone 16 Pro Max.Eugen WegmannThe developers of the Clicks have already done a lot to bring the center of gravity as close as possible to the hands: In addition to the buttons and all the technology, there are also a few weights behind the artificial leather flap on the back. It is possible that the Clicks is more comfortable for the normal iPhone or the Pro iPhone without Max, but I can only speculate due to my lack of such a variant to test.Functions & softwareKeyboard shortcuts for shortcutsClicks app for customizations and updatesUSB-C passthroughIn addition to the actual physical keyboard, the secret superpower of Clicks is the ability to assign shortcuts to every single key. However, this requires a relatively high level of effort, as everything has to be set up. Clicks uses a function in the accessibility options to assign shortcuts, which makes it possible to control the iPhone with an external keyboard. The setup is not complicated, but lengthy. There is also a video (in English) that explains everything step by step (step by step).Fortunately, Clicks has now expanded the associated app so that some basic shortcuts can be set up easily. Beyond that, however, you will have to search for the corresponding shortcuts elsewhere or create them yourself. Unfortunately, this is not entirely trivial, because although the shortcut app is versatile, it is also confusing and for non-experts. One shortcut that I had to set up myself opens the Control Center, which has only been possible on the system side since iOS 18.1.The shortcuts that Clicks suggests in the app include starting Instagram, calling a specific contact, activating a focus mode, calculating a tip in the calculator and many more.In the app, you can also configure the behavior of some other buttonssuch as whether the Enter key sends a message or inserts a line breakwhether and when the Clicks goes into standby mode and whether and how strong the button illumination is.If you use your iPhone via cable in the car for Carplay, you have to switch from keyboard mode to data mode either in the app or via a key combination (123 space bar), as USB-C on the iPhone cannot do both at the same time. Nevertheless, the iPhone can also be charged with a case.Battery lifeAs the Clicks connects to the iPhone via USB-C, it does not need its own battery but is powered by the iPhone. This has consequences for the iPhones battery life, although the manufacturer assures us that the effects are negligible.In my tests, Clicks consumed between 20 and 25 per cent of the battery throughout the day according to the iOS battery consumption. On one of my test days, only Slay the Spire came close to this consumption, but in a much shorter time.There are two settings in the Clicks app to reduce the cases power consumption: the key illumination and the power-saving mode.It makes the most sense to switch the keyboard backlight off completely and only switch it on when needed, as it is usually the biggest power guzzler. Even in the dark, the screen glows brightly enough for the white letters on the keyboard to still be recognizable.Power-saving mode, on the other hand, is a double-edged sword. The clicks are simply switched off after a certain period of time, which initially seems to make perfect sense. However, this has the disadvantage that it always takes a really strangely long moment for Clicks to switch on again and connect to the iPhone. This is particularly annoying if you pick up the iPhone after a while, want to quickly execute a short command and press the button combination three or four times before anything happens at all.So youre trading a slightly longer battery life for an annoying inconvenience. Which one you choose is up to you. (I recommend switching off the power-saving mode)Price & availabilityThe Clicks for iPhone is only available for the entire iPhone 15 series and iPhone 16 series. For the iPhone 14, Clicks only supports the 14 Pro and 14 Pro Max. The price depends on the size of your iPhone: $139/109 if you have a standard or iPhone Pro, $159/129 if Plus or Pro Max.Buy Clicks for iPhoneEugen WegmannWho should buy the Clicks keyboard case?Ill be completely honest: For the average persons everyday use, the Clicks keyboard case wont appeal. The keyboard case is an absolute niche product and is aimed at productivity junkies who write a lot of long texts on their iPhone, execute a handful of shortcuts at the touch of a button and, ideally, also want to attract a little attention with their accessories in public. Clicks is also aimed at people who have never really got over the fact that smartphones with keyboards no longer exist. If you belong to either group, the Clicks is the perfect accessory for you.Clicks is one of the more interesting accessories to hit the market for the iPhone in recent years, and the ability to assign shortcuts to all the buttons has incredible potential if you have the leisure to spend a few hours with it and set it up.
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  • The Download: following DeepSeeks lead, and OpenAIs new research agent
    www.technologyreview.com
    This is todays edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of whats going on in the world of technology.How DeepSeek ripped up the AI playbookand why everyones going to follow its leadWhen the Chinese firm DeepSeek dropped a large language model called R1 two weeks ago, it sent shock waves through the US tech industry. Not only did R1 match the best of the homegrown competition, it was built for a fraction of the costand given away for free.DeepSeek has now suddenly become the company to beat. What exactly did it do to rattle the tech world so fully? Is the hype justified? And what can we learn from the buzz about whats coming next? Heres what you need to know.Will Douglas HeavenOpenAIs new agent can compile detailed reports on practically any topicWhats new: OpenAI has launched a new agent capable of conducting complex, multi-step online research into everything from scientific questions to personalized bike recommendations at what it claims is the same level as a human analyst.How it works: In response to a single query, such as draw me up a competitive analysis between streaming platforms, the tool, called Deep Research, will search the web, analyze the information it encounters, and compile a detailed report which cites its sources.Why it matters: OpenAI says that what takes the tool tens of minutes would take a human many hours. And it claims it represents a significant step towards its overarching goal of developing artificial general intelligence that matches (or surpasses) humans. Read the full story.Rhiannon WilliamsDeepSeek might not be such good news for energy after allIn the week or so since DeepSeek became a household name, a dizzying number of narratives have gained steam, including that DeepSeeks new, more efficient approach means AI might not need to guzzle the massive amounts of energy that it currently does.The latter notion is misleading, and new numbers shared with MIT Technology Review help show why. These early figuresbased on the performance of one of DeepSeeks smaller models on a small number of promptssuggest it could be more energy intensive when generating responses than the equivalent-size model from Meta.The issue might be that the energy it saves in training is offset by its more intensive techniques for answering questions, and by the long answers they produce. Add the fact that other tech firms, inspired by DeepSeeks approach, may now start building their own similar low-cost reasoning models, and the outlook for energy consumption is already looking a lot less rosy. Read the full story.James ODonnellWhat DeepSeeks breakout success means for AIIf youre interested in hearing more about DeepSeek, join our news editor Charlotte Jee, senior AI editor Will Douglas Heaven, and China reporter Caiwei Chen for an exclusive subscriber-only Roundtable conversation today at 12pm ET. Theyll be discussing what DeepSeeks breakout success means for AI and the broader tech industry. Register here.The must-readsIve combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.1 Elon Musk donated at least $288 million to help elect Donald TrumpMaking him by far the USs largest political donor. (WP $)+ Some of the engineers carrying out Musks efficiency orders are still teenagers. (Wired $)+ Theres a chance Musks team has access to your social security number. (NY Mag $)2 LGBT and HIV references have been scrubbed from the CDC websiteIn response to Trumps executive orders to remove all DEI references. (404 Media)+ Some vaccine data has also been taken down. (BBC)+ Its just the latest step in the Trump administrations plans to purge the government. (The Atlantic $)3 Trumps tariffs are bad news for carmakersThe new rules affect every company that ships goods across the US borders with Canada and Mexico, or uses parts from China. (NYT $)+ Shares in carmakers dropped drastically following the announcement. (Reuters)+ The three countries have very different trade war playbooks. (Economist $)4 OpenAI has released its new o3-mini reasoning model for freeIts the first time its reasoning models have come out from behind a paywall. (MIT Technology Review)+ Meanwhile, ChatGPT subscribers have hit 15.5 million. (The Information $)5 The Pentagon is kicking mainstream media outlets from their officesMostly in favor of smaller conservative outlets. (NBC News)6 AI data center landlords are starting to worryPerhaps a little prematurely, given the uncertainties over DeepSeeks implications for energy use. (Bloomberg $)7 The FDA has approved a new non-opioid pain medicineFor the first time in more than two decades. (Ars Technica)+ Why is it so hard to create new types of pain relievers? (MIT Technology Review)8 This AI tool allows you to speak to your future selfJust make sure you take what it tells you with a pinch of salt. (WSJ $)+ Please stop using ChatGPT to write obituaries. (Vox)+ Technology that lets us speak to our dead relatives has arrived. Are we ready? (MIT Technology Review)9 Climate change means more rats in our cities And with them, a higher risk of rat-borne disease. (New Scientist $)10 AI could point us to how the universe will endThats according to Mark Thomson, the next director general of Cern. (The Guardian)Quote of the dayOligarchy is bad enough. But oligarchy with a competitor doing the enforcement is double, triple as bad.Richard Aboulafia, managing director at aerospace consultancy AeroDynamic Advisory, wonders about the ethics of Elon Musk leading efficiency drives at companies that rival his own, the Financial Times reports.The big storyHow tracking animal movement may save the planetFebruary 2024Animals have long been able to offer unique insights about the natural world around us, acting as organic sensors picking up phenomena invisible to humans. Canaries warned of looming catastrophe in coal mines until the 1980s, for example.These days, we have more insight into animal behavior than ever before thanks to technologies like sensor tags. But the data we gather from these animals still adds up to only a relatively narrow slice of the whole picture.This is beginning to change. Researchers are asking: What will we find if we follow even the smallest animals? What if we could see how different species lives intersect? What could we learn from a system of animal movement, continuously monitoring how creatures big and small adapt to the world around us? It may be, some researchers believe, a vital tool in the effort to save our increasingly crisis-plagued planet. Read the full story.Matthew PonsfordWe can still have nice thingsA place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet em at me.)+ Why we all stand to benefit from a bit of quiet time.+ Why New York City bagels are the best in the world.+ The fascinating science behind getting the ick, and why its worth trying to push through it.+ Forget the giant squidits all about the colossal squid now.
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  • New Orleans students showcase their creativity with iPad and Mac
    www.apple.com
    Apple community partners Ellis Marsalis Center for Music and Arts New Orleans put the citys aspiring young artists in the spotlight.
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  • Apple Music kicks off Kendrick Lamars Road to Halftime ahead of Super Bowl LIX
    www.apple.com
    Apple Music is bringing Kendrick Lamar fans a rich collection of exclusive content ahead of his highly anticipated Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show.
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  • 25 years of Apple's innovation with iPod
    appleinsider.com
    To celebrate 2025, I compiled Apple's top ten major areas of innovation over the past 25 years. Let's look at the decisions that led to this blockbuster success of the iPod and implications for new products today.The first segment discussed Apple's 2000 release of Mac OS X Public Beta, its most important innovation in the last 25 years. The second segment focused on Apple's reinvented retail operations. The third segment looks at iPod.If the "Apple Computer" of the new millennium had only focused on retrofitting the Macintosh to sell as its principal money maker, it is unlikely it would have survived a decade. At the time, Apple was selling about 3 million Macs annually. Apple was beleaguered. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • The Institute of Illegal Architects: Reconsidering Architectural Professionalism
    architizer.com
    Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work throughArchitizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.The illegal architect questions and subverts the established codes and conventions of architectural practice and acknowledges that architecture is made by use and by design. The creative user can be an illegal architect, and the illegal architect can be a creative user.Jonathan Hill, Actions of Architecture: Architects and Creative Users, 2003.For almost three decades, Jonathan Hill has been challenging the relationship between architecture and practice. In 1998, he wrote about two project-metaphors: The Institute of Illegal Architects (IIA) and Weather Architecture, both critiquing the popular idea that architects alone make buildings. Specifically, he questions the binary connection between the architect and the user, proposing a third figure the illegal architect, who is both a producer and a user of space.Before exploring Hills ideas and process, it is worth examining the current relationship between architects and users. To what extent do architects prioritize freedom of use in their designs? What kinds of spaces are idealized in contemporary practice? How do architects conceptualize the user of a space? Does this term apply exclusively to those who occupy and interact with a specific environment, or does it also encompass a passerby who merely experiences the space in transit? How significant is the users role in architectural decision-making today? And, perhaps most intriguingly, why does the perception or characterization of the user hold such importance in architectural practice?In between by Anastasia Fedotova, 4th Annual One Drawing ChallengeJonathan Hill starts with a quiet albeit obvious truth: Architects build drawings, models and texts. They do not build buildings. However, to claim authority over building, architects often discuss architectural drawings as if they are a truthful representation of a building. Frankly, all forms of representation are partial, open to interpretation and often presenting contradictory experiences. This, according to Hill is a privilege for users, who are now able to construct as well as experience each project. Suddenly the Passive User, the one who blindly follows the architects vision, is transformed into the Creative User, the one who shapes it.Still, how is this shift in user related to architectural practice? Hill returns back to the idea that only architects make buildings. Putting it bluntly, architects have become too protective of their title. Through a series of legislative acts and the foundation of professional institutes, the title of the architect has become itself institutionalized. Codes and conventions provide stability and security along with narrowness and self-entitlement.The Creative User, therefore, threatens the prominence as well as the operating field of the architect, by being able to intervene in the architectural creation. In response, the Illegal Architect, becomes a hybrid producer-user who designs, makes and consumes work, freed of all preconceived constraints. Hills concept seeks to revoke the formal, legal authority tied to the architects title, instead bestowing it upon anyone who deserves it hence the illegal act.Pocket Size City: The Atlas by Stefan Maier, 4th Annual One Drawing ChallengeThe Institute of Illegal Architects project is situated opposite the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), inhabiting the streets public domain. It is comprised of five production spaces, each one associated with a specific experience: time, sight, sound, smell or touch, without however pre-establishing specific uses but rather discouraging them. The project responds to RIBAs building, challenging the legal face of architecture through witty and mischievous design gestures.The Institute of Illegal Architects is both a text and a project. Ultimately though, it presents a mechanism at the threshold of the 21st century, in an attempt to reevaluate the direction of the architectural profession. Now, almost thirty years later, I argue that this issue is more pressing than ever. The relationship between the architect and the user is no longer binary but rather forgotten; let alone synergetic. Instead, other parameters more pressing issues have invaded the architectural field such as the need to impress, the excuse of environmental sustainability as the sole design intent and, finally the never-ending pressure of a highly capitalist economy.Consequently, the architectural profession has become even more stifled and narrow, having to deal not only with the architects egocentric claims but also with an additional layer of societal rules that further regulate the lives of architects and, by extent, the (passive) users directed by them. Frankly, the word illegal is meant to shake the profession back to a more democratic world, where the innate inter-disciplinarity of architecture is celebrated, and where architects begin to cross the lines of the discipline.Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work throughArchitizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.Featured Image: Chamber of Memories: Hidden Odyssey by Ghassan Alserayhi, 4th Annual One Drawing ChallengeThe post The Institute of Illegal Architects: Reconsidering Architectural Professionalism appeared first on Journal.
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  • Black Lodge and Blue Velvet: 7 Architectural Spaces That Blur Reality Like a David Lynch Film
    architizer.com
    Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work throughArchitizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.Architecture shapes how we perceive space how we move through it, how we feel within it, and ultimately, what we take away from the experience. A grand hotel lobby, all polished marble and towering ceilings, signals power and prestige. A dimly lit corridor, with its end just out of sight, stretches time, making every step more hesitant and uncertain. A cafe, with neat rows of booths and the heavy hum of fluorescent bulbs, should feel familiar and welcoming. That is, until the lighting is just a little too harsh, the symmetry is a little too perfect, or the exuberance is too over the top. Thats when things change. Architects understand this, and so did David Lynch.As a filmmaker, Lynch didnt just use locations as backdrops for scenes. He built experiences with the same precision any good architect would, carefully selecting materials, adjusting light levels, or forcing sightlines to evoke particular reactions. His sets, whether its the warm wood panelling of the Double R Diner or the eerie theatricality of Club Silencio, show his unmatched understanding of how space influences emotion. He knew that red velvet curtains dont just frame a scenethey absorb sound, close a space in, create an uncanny sense of isolation. A chevron-patterned floor isnt just a bold graphic choice. Its a pattern that tricks depth perception, making a room feel infinite and claustrophobic at once.With his passing, we reflect on the extraordinary depth of David Lynchs creative legacy not just in film, but in the way he shaped atmosphere, manipulated perception and turned everyday spaces into something layered with meaning. The following projects werent designed to mimic Lynchs films, but they tap into the same principles and mastery of place. These spaces, through contrast, repetition and material choices, guide interpretation just as Lynch so cleverly did, designing emotion as much as function. If his films teach us anything about architecture, its that a space is never just a space. Its an experience defined as much by what it suggests as by what it shows.The Double R Diner (Twin Peaks 1990)JULIETTES DINERBy: Andrea Langhi Design, Italy Its impossible to begin anywhere else. A roadside diner is an American institution. It promises comfort, routine and continuous coffee. In Twin Peaks The Double R Diner was never a typical diner. It was a controlled atmosphere where lighting, materiality and repetition combined into something that felt hyperreal. With its pastel booths, warm wood panelling and glowing pendant lights, it certainly did have the comfort, ritual and routine you would expect, but Lynch understood that when a space is too perfect, when every surface gleams, when every booth is neat as a pin, it stops feeling incidental and becomes unsettling.Juliettes Diner is a perfect example of this kind of heightened nostalgia. The colour palette is textbook mid-century Americana: mint-green and cream vinyl, pink leather chairs and checkerboard floors. The materials, chrome, laminate and glossy tile, reflect just enough light to make the space feel pristine and untouched by time. The lighting is carefully controlled, casting an even glow that flattens shadows, making everything feel crisp and defined. The effect isnt so much eerie, but it is certainly cinematic. A space so precisely composed that it almost feels lifted from a set.Club Silencio (Mulholland Drive, 2001)Bar LotusBy: Office AIO, Shanghai, ChinaMost of Lynchs sets exist only in film, but Club Silencio became real. Opened in 2011 beneath the streets of Paris as its first private members club, the venue was designed by Lynch himself down to the very last peanut on the bar, not as a replica of the films dreamlike cabaret but as an extension of the same idea.The design, if you can see it past the heavy crowds, is precise. Wooden block archways absorb sound, gold leaf tunnels catch the light just enough to shift focus, and the sharp neons create the ambient unease, so typically Lynch. The layout reinforces its purpose: the seating makes visitors passive spectators rather than active participants like those in the movies original theatre. The lighting changes subtly, ensuring that no moment feels entirely fixed. Even silence is deliberately engineered through soundproofing so that the absence of noise feels just as intentional as the thrumming music in the evenings when the general public are allowed to descend.Bar Lotus is designed with a similar sense of distorted reality. Its green archways creating a tunnel-like procession, framing the space while guiding movement and punctuating the atmosphere with pools of light. The rippled reflective ceiling skews the light and movement in the space, producing an atmosphere that feels in constant flux.The Red Room (Twin Peaks, 1990)Le StudioBy: Agence Spatiale, Quebec City, CanadaFew spaces in television history are as instantly recognizable as the Red Room. A dream world where reality is distorted. The relentless red curtains, the disorienting chevron pattern and the way the light pools in strange, uneven glows create a space that feels like its watching you.Le Studio taps into this same sense of theatricality. The deep red drapery stretches across the bar, swallowing sound, absorbing light and enclosing the space like a stage set waiting for something to begin. The lighting here is deliberate and feels performative. The round globes are suspended in looping formations that are both decorative and directional. The bar itself, clad in red vertical ridges, doubles the sense of enclosure, drawing the eye inward, while the raw concrete and black seating areas create a bold contrast and just enough darkness to make you aware of how the light is affecting the space.However, where the Red Room in Twin Peaks is designed to disorient, Le Studio is designed to immerse. It uses the same cinematic tools: repetition, contrast and materiality, but in this case, it channels them into an atmosphere thats immersive rather than unnerving.The Madisons Home (Lost Highway, 1997)BETON BRUTBy: tHE gRID Architects, Ahmedabad, India From the opening scene of Lost Highway, David Lynchs portrayal of Fred Madisons (Bill Pullman) home is unsettling because of its restraint. Its a space stripped down to its purest architectural elements walls, shadows, voids offering nothing unnecessary and certainly nothing personal. The small windows are intentionally limiting perspective, forcing the viewer to question whats hidden beyond them. It is architecture that holds power not by what it reveals but by what it withholds, much like the films main antagonist who resides there.Beton Brut operates with a similar sense of controlled minimalism, thankfully without the terrifying homeowner. Its sharp angles and raw concrete surfaces give it a monolithic presence, while the narrow, deeply set windows dictate precise slivers of light and visibility. There is no excess here, only structure, form and material. The architecture creates atmosphere through mass and proportion alone. Both the houses in Lost Highway and Beton Brut show architecture in its most stripped back yet commanding form.The Pink Room (Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me, 1992)MASSminorsBy: One Fine Day Studio & Partners, Guangzhou, China When people romanticize neon lighting, they usually reference some Blade Runnerstyle futurism. Lynch took neon and made it seedy. A magenta haze mixed with a swirl of smoke and sticky floors to boot. Even the camera seemed drunk in those scenes, spinning in the neon wash of red and pink. The Pink Room is a complete sensory onslaught of bright light and distorted sound, making everything feel slightly off-kilter. Its chaotic but deliberate, designed to pull people into its atmosphere.MASSminors is designed with that same heightened intensity. The deep red glow above the bar saturates the space. While the neon tubing, text projections and light washing are in contrast to the ornate detailing and modern art pieces. Its a dream-like space, where nothing sits comfortably together as every individual element is designed to consume attention, leaving no neutral ground. Like The Pink Room, it doesnt just set the sceneit is the scene.The Slow Club (Blue Velvet, 1986)The HookBy: NOOD, Atlantic City, New JerseyIn Blue Velvet, The Slow Club isnt what you would call extravagant but it is deliberate in its design. The main space is dark and full of atmosphere, while the stage, the central focal point, is backed by rich red velvet, as is Lynchs signature, with neon blue light forcing all attention on Dorothy Vallenss (Isabella Rossellinis) performance. Its overly saturated and hyperreal. Its a space designed entirely for mood and tension. Nothing distracts from the singer, yet the setting itself is not secondary. Its distinctively intense.The Hook, by NOOD, has this same hyperreality. Taking an even more elaborate approach than Lynch but with the same architectural intent, that is, to frame and heighten the act of performance using layering of embellishment and light. The proscenium is in sharp, geometric contrast to the heavy stage curtain, edged in blue neon, that acts to reinforce the separation between audience and performer. The seating layout is designed for immersion, while the rich colors, both material and light and the excessive objet dart create a heavily layered ambience that veers into oppressive. The elaborate patterns and intense lighting add to the surreal atmosphere that is a combination of theatrical glamour and grungy reality. The inclusion of an antler motif references Blue Velvets own club signage as a nod to the dramatic and strange.The Roadhouse (Twin Peaks, 1990)Best Friends: RoadHouse and MercantileBy: WOW atelier, Kanab, Utah The Roadhouse in Twin Peaks is quintessentially American. Its the kind of place that doesnt need reinvention. Wood, neon, a stage in the corner and a long history soaked into the floorboards are quite enough. Lynch understood this and he didnt distort the roadhouse archetype, he just turned up the contrast, sharpening its familiar edges until they felt mythic.Best Friends Roadhouse & Mercantile comes from that same architectural tradition but modernizes it. The extended overhang and exposed steel supports recall the classic roadside pitstop, while the mix of timber, metal and corrugated textures gives it a toughness suited to its desert landscape. The stacked firewood, the open-air seating, and the glow from within are all reminiscent of the historical roadhouse designed to be stopped at and gathered in across America.Both spaces lean into their setting one in the damp, pine-lined world of Twin Peaks, the other in the wide-open sprawl of the Utah desert. But they share the same core principle: a roadhouse is a waypoint, a landmark, a place where stories are told and retold.Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work throughArchitizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.Top image: Blue Lounge Agli Amici 1887 by Visual Display Interior Architecture and Design, Udine, ItalyThe post Black Lodge and Blue Velvet: 7 Architectural Spaces That Blur Reality Like a David Lynch Film appeared first on Journal.
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  • FStorm Tile Bump
    fstormrender.com
    Tile geometry has to be selected at tile object slot.FStorm Tile Bump texture is used to generate bump or displacement mapping for tiles.Tiles height set tiles depth/thickness.Tiles slope sets tiles chamfer/slope.Tiles slopes can be controlled with a map and map power.Edge softness control how smooth tiles edges are.Random tilt rotates tiles surfaces in random directions.Concavity producesconcavity/convexity effect on tiles surfaces.Seams height sets how high seams(grout) are relative tiles level.Seams slopesets transition between tiles and seams levels.Height map allows to control seams levels with a map.
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