In the brief instructional video a faceless man with blue latex gloves carefully uses a small screwdriver to dissemble and open up a smartphone.
Spread the love“`html It’s a frustrating moment when you’re typing away, and suddenly the spacebar on your keyboard stops functioning. Whether you’re drafting an important email, writing a report, or ...
Tom Bowen is a senior editor who loves adventure games and RPGs. He's been playing video games for several decades now and writing about them professionally since 2020. Although he dabbles in news and ...
SINGAPORE - James (not his real name) has for years been reselling used laptops locally and overseas. That was the nature of his business until late 2025, when clients asked if he could just sell them ...
Abstract: Disassembly is a critical step in the recycling and reusing of end-of-life products. As Industry 5.0 emerges, manufacturing is shifting from a system-oriented approach to a human-centered ...
Most plastic forks, bottles, and shopping bags ever made still exist somewhere. Most are buried in a landfill or drifting in the oceans. Petrochemical plastics have been perhaps humanity’s greatest ...
A rare look at an original owner 1983 BMW E30 320i with a 5-speed manual — a true survivor from the golden era of BMW engineering. This video captures the car’s originality, from its timeless lines to ...
xform serves as a foundation for building custom instruction set architectures and their corresponding development tools. The toolkit provides a complete pipeline from ISA specification to code ...
The problem of electronic waste has been growing in the recent years, and with constant upgrades in technology it is going to grow further. Therefore, researchers have started work on a robot to ...
A new UN report finds that more and more electronic waste, or e-waste, is being produced worldwide—recycling efforts are not keeping pace, though. Valuable raw materials are not being recovered and ...
I spend an enourmous amount of time optimizing the Z80 assembler code of my games to make them fit within small 32KB or 48KB cartridges, and to make them run fast enough. So, I thought I'd try to ...