All posts tagged: rants and raves

Gik Acoustics SoundBlocks Review: Good-Looking Acoustic Treatment

Gik Acoustics SoundBlocks Review: Good-Looking Acoustic Treatment

For audiophiles like me, achieving the highest possible sound quality is the top priority—but I still care about how my space looks. This aesthetic component is the failure point of many acoustic panels, which are wall attachments or modular blocks designed to absorb background noise, reduce echo, and improve the general sound of a given room. At worst, they look like burlap-sack tapestries. At best, though—as I recently learned when I tested Gik Acoustics’ Soundblocks system—they look like high-design conversation pieces that marry function and visual sophistication. Gik Acoustics makes acoustic panels that don’t look like weird hunks of insulation. Its SoundBlocks system that I tried out in my home studio and office allows three panels to stack together to form little walls that look legitimately cool, more like wooden sculptures than professional music gear. My most stylish friends have complimented the panels and guessed they were either a high-end guitar amp cabinet or an actual sculpture. Nobody identified them as acoustic panels. Importantly, the panels have also improved my listening and recording experience. Why …

Robot Mowers Are Actually Good Now

Robot Mowers Are Actually Good Now

Photograph: Simon Hill Light Detection and Ranging (Lidar): This system, also used by self-driving cars, fires out rapid laser pulses to map the terrain in 3D. It enables mowers to cut grass under thick tree canopies or near tall buildings where GPS signals usually fail. AI Vision: Some mowers now employ cameras to recognize lawn areas, borders, and obstacles. Robot mowers with AI vision can potentially avoid stray footballs, cats, other critters, and maybe even pet mess. But they can also be too sensitive, stopping for fallen branches, leaves, or overhanging plants. Some of the top mowers, like the Mammotion I’m currently testing, employ a combination of the last three technologies to map and cut areas accurately, navigate reliably to and from the charging base, and avoid unexpected obstacles. None of them is foolproof. My top pick chewed up a deflated paddling pool, but if you set the sensitivity too high, they leave areas uncut. In addition to finding their way, many of the latest robot mowers are built to handle rough terrain. Not too …

Firewire Surfboard Review (2026): Neutrino, Revo Max, Machadocado

Firewire Surfboard Review (2026): Neutrino, Revo Max, Machadocado

For decades, the process of making a surfboard has more or less been the same: Cut a piece of foam. Put a wooden stringer down the middle to provide structure and strength. Shape it, then wrap it in fiberglass, sand it, and leave holes for the leash and fins. That was until Firewire Surfboards came along. Now the company uses a 21-step construction process and a dizzying assortment of aerospace-grade foams, carbon fiber, and bio-resins to produce a board that looks straight out of science fiction. The surf world tends to favor the tried and true, but in Firewire’s case, every new material and design serves a purpose. Much to every Luddite wave-rider’s chagrin, the boards work really damn well. I spent most of the fall and winter testing out three new boards from Firewire—the Neutrino, the Machado, and the Revo Max. Each uses different materials and different designs made for different wave types (and surfers). Here’s what I found. A Bit of Backstory Firewire Surfboards Machadocado (2026) In December 2005, Clark Foam abruptly closed …

Eighty Years Later, the Chemex Still Makes Better Coffee

Eighty Years Later, the Chemex Still Makes Better Coffee

Coffee is the original biohack and the nation’s most popular productivity tool. As we’ve battled the changeover to daylight saving time, the caffeine-addicted WIRED Reviews team has spent the past week writing about our favorite coffee brewing routines and devices that’ll keep us alert and maybe even happy in the morning. Today, we finally write about the mighty Chemex. You can also check out other Java.Base stories where WIRED writers sharing their favorite brewing methods. It is a profound disappointment to me that, despite reviewing consumer goods while working for the world’s finest publisher of periodicals, I spend very little of my time interacting with objects that would be at home in the lives of Don Draper or James Bond. Writing and editing for WIRED means testing some very nice things, but so few of those things are truly elegant, let alone arguably perfect. The exception is any morning that I make my coffee with a Chemex. The hourglass-shaped Chemex coffee maker is perhaps the most beautiful everyday object I regularly lay my hands on, …

AeroPress Coffee Is Superb When I’m Traveling, but I Use Mine Even When I Stay Home

AeroPress Coffee Is Superb When I’m Traveling, but I Use Mine Even When I Stay Home

One of my favorite features of my preferred coffee brewer is how you can chuck it in a suitcase or a backpack and take it on a trip. When you get where you’re going, be that a Chicago hotel room, a mountaintop campsite, or your mother-in-law’s house, as long as you’ve brought beans and have access to hot water, you’ll have what you need for an excellent cup of Joe. Coffee lovers might already recognize this as the AeroPress, a brewer invented by Alan Adler, the same guy who came up with—of all things—the Aerobie flying disc. The AeroPress, which debuted in 2005, looks like a giant, needle-less syringe, in which you combine grounds and hot water, stir, wait a bit, then depress the plunger to push brewed coffee through a 2.5-inch circular paper filter and directly into your mug. There’s a bit of ritual to it, but it’s quick and efficient compared to the relatively fussy demands of pour-over coffee. If your beans are good, you can make café-quality coffee at home. Unsurprising for …

Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System Hits the Mark

Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System Hits the Mark

I never liked playing darts, but I did a complete 180 with this auto-scoring system. This gadget has ignited my newfound love of the old pub favorite. It’s a light ring with four hi-def cameras that slots onto your board. Connect with the DartCounter app via Wi-Fi and you get effortless automatic scoring with an announcer calling your points and telling you what you need to check out. I’ve been testing the Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System for the last few weeks, playing locally on my own and with family, and playing the odd match online. It’s a pricey system, but for darts fans and players looking to improve their game, it could be worth the investment. As a casual fan, I’ve found that a wee game of darts is a great way to unwind at the end of your day. Stepping Up to the Oche Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System The Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System pairs with the DartCounter app (Android or iOS). It’s quick and easy to put together, …

Why a Dehumidifier Is One of My Favorite Gadgets

Why a Dehumidifier Is One of My Favorite Gadgets

You should buy a dehumidifier. It will almost certainly improve your home environment. Pulling moisture from the air helps banish condensation and mold, making it cheaper and easier to regulate the temperature in your house or apartment. There’s a reason the chatter about dehumidifiers has grown so loud and sales are soaring; it’s because they work. Whether you’ve seen a persuasive Reddit thread, a life hack on TikTok, or an expert guide to the best dehumidifiers, the hype is real. I live in Scotland, where it’s dark and damp for months every year. We even have a word for the weather: dreich (which means dreary and bleak). We also have a mix of poorly ventilated and poorly insulated homes that we heat twice a day. The result is windows soaked with condensation and black mold galore. I’ve been using a dehumidifier for the last year, across two quite different homes, and it’s one of my favorite appliances. I’m never going back to the damp life. My Meaco dehumidifier might be the hardest-working device in my …

I Didn’t Care for Dildos Until I Tried This One From Lelo

I Didn’t Care for Dildos Until I Tried This One From Lelo

My first sex toy was a bright blue dildo. I was about 19, and as a college student in New Hampshire, I did what anyone in my position would do: hotfooted it to the closest city to find a sex shop. With my best friend in tow, I jetted in and out of the Condom World on Newbury Street so fast that I only had time to grab the first sex toy I saw and pay for it, keeping my head down the whole time. To say the early 2000s were different when it came to sex toy acceptance would be a gross understatement. In my small-town mind, they were something that shouldn’t be discussed and the very definition of the word taboo. But they weren’t taboo enough to keep me from buying that battery-operated blue monstrosity with its exaggerated veins and head. I was embarrassed by it from day one, even more so after I used it, with zero understanding of what I was supposed to get out of it. With Age Came Wisdom …

Winter Olympics 2026: Why I Love Watching Curling

Winter Olympics 2026: Why I Love Watching Curling

The first time I watched an Olympic curling match on television, I entertained a thought that is surely shared by everyone who sees the sport for the first time: What the hell am I looking at? It was during the 2002 Games in Salt Lake City, Utah, and I tuned in to the live feed at the very beginning of a women’s medal match. I was intrigued by the grace of the players and how they could effortlessly slide those huge, bulb-like stones down the ice. Everything else about it was confusing. It looked sort of like shuffleboard, but with more yelling. And lots of weird stuff. The rules, the lingo, they way they used brooms—brooms!—to make the stones slide around. It just seemed so boring. How could anyone endure watching a sport with such a lack of obvious athleticism, such inscrutable gameplay, and such a lethargic pace? By the two hour mark, I was riveted. I still didn’t understand what the brooms were for, but I was beginning to figure out the rules. The …