
One of the little known mysterious features of the new iPhone 3G are two clearly visible screws positioned at the bottom of the handset. Two screws may not mean much, but they are fueling a discussion why these two screws are necessary when virtually all of Apple's gadgets have no visible screws. The leading opinion appears to be that Apple may be offering iPhone owners a way to replace the batter by themselves.

Darryl Linington from Notebookheck writes: "Keebmon is a crowdfunded foldable workstation concept that combines a Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 PC, a 13-inch ultrawide touchscreen, and a low-profile mechanical keyboard in a single aluminum device."

Revenue rose by only 0.2% year-on-year, while downloads increased by 4.6%

Standard controllers aren’t comfortable for everyone…
As an accessibility option for those that need it im all for it. As the standard control for ps6 helllll noo, touch controller would be the absolute worst.
This is interesting not only for accessibility reasons, but as a way to give players more control over their in game characters for core gamers.
I remember seeing the Tactus pop up buttons at CES 13 years ago and I was excited for the technology but I am not aware of any devices that used it.
The way gaming controllers are presented today is great, but I will always advocate for innovation in giving players more control and increased immersion.
Terrible idea. For most games, you need to feel the physical buttons because you're not looking at the controller. I hope they aren't serious.
More accessibility options is never a bad thing, but man I hate that all electronics seem to be pushing touchscreen controls on everything.
They are just garbage
Too much speculation, not enough action!
When i get it friday i wont open it lol, i had bad luck doing that with my older one, but if it is true then thats a + in my book if you can repleace the battery yourself.