Connect with us

Technology

This wooden time machine on wheels is turning heads on the streets

Published

on

This wooden time machine on wheels is turning heads on the streets

Truong Van Dao, the mastermind behind ND Woodworking Art, has taken the world of wooden craftsmanship to new heights with his latest creation. This functional wooden car resembles a time machine. This extraordinary vehicle, designed with the help of artificial intelligence, turns heads as it whirs and rattles through the streets of Vietnam.

GET SECURITY ALERTS, EXPERT TIPS – SIGN UP FOR KURT’S NEWSLETTER – THE CYBERGUY REPORT HERE

Wooden time machine vehicle (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

The evolution of a woodworking genius

Van Dao’s journey in wooden vehicle craftsmanship began just three years ago with simple, shoebox-sized replicas of luxury cars and supercars.

Shoebox-sized replica of luxury car (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Advertisement

As his skills developed, his projects grew in size and complexity. His talent quickly gained worldwide attention when he created a small wooden Ferrari replica for his son.

Small wooden Ferrari replica (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

He also built a very detailed Bugatti Centodieci on a one-third to one-half scale, equipped with working steering and a small electric drivetrain. His woodworking skills expanded to include tanks, trains, scooters and even recreations of concept cars like the Lamborghini Vision GT, Audi Skysphere, Mercedes Vision AVTR and Cybertruck.

Bugatti Centodieci wooden car replica (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

BEST CAR ACCESSORIES

Advertisement

The time machine: A leap into fantasy

Van Dao’s latest creation, the wooden time machine car, is a departure from his traditional vehicle designs into pure mechanical fantasy. Using generative AI for inspiration, he built a metal frame with steering, suspension and an electric drivetrain before applying his woodworking magic.

Truong Van Dao constructing wooden time machine vehicle (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

The time machine car’s chunky wooden front wheels boast elaborate clockwork-esque hubs, while the back features enormous snail-shell hoops reminiscent of reverse ram horns. The vehicle is topped with a curved and slatted wooden roof, adding to its unique aesthetic.

Headlights and internal neons provide both functionality and ambiance. Perhaps the most impressive is the complex series of cog-driven lever mechanisms at the front, creating a mesmerizing undulating motion that captivates onlookers. Each element of this extraordinary vehicle showcases Van Dao’s exceptional attention to detail and ability to blend form with function in the most imaginative ways.

HOW TO REMOVE YOUR PRIVATE DATA FROM THE INTERNET

Advertisement

Wooden time machine vehicle being driven (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

While the time machine car may seem needlessly complicated and impractical, it possesses a strange beauty, and you can see why. Van Dao’s children also enjoy riding in this unique creation, which can accommodate a single driver or potentially a young co-pilot.

Truong Van Dao driving the wooden time machine vehicle with his children (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

THE TINY ELECTRIC CAR THAT COMES DISASSEMBLED AND DELIVERED IN BOXES

A labor of love

Van Dao’s dedication to his craft is evident in every detail of the time machine car. He meticulously sculpted each element from lightweight wood, from the rims and frame to the individual cogs and moving parts. Translating the AI-inspired design into a stunning, handcrafted wooden body took months of hard work.

Advertisement

Wooden time machine vehicle (ND Woodworking Art) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

BEST AMAZON PRIME DAY 2024 EARLY DEALS

Kurt’s key takeaways

Truong Van Dao’s wooden time machine car perfectly fuses traditional woodworking skills and modern technology. By incorporating AI-generated designs and complex mechanical elements, he has created a vehicle that transcends mere transportation to become a work of art. This project showcases Van Dao’s exceptional talent and highlights AI’s potential to inspire and enhance human creativity. As ND Woodworking Art continues to push the boundaries of wooden vehicle design, we can only imagine what fantastical creations will roll out of their workshop next.

What innovative designs or technological advancements would you like to see in the next generation of Van Dao’s vehicles? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.

For more of my tech tips and security alerts, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by heading to Cyberguy.com/Newsletter.

Advertisement

Ask Kurt a question or let us know what stories you’d like us to cover.

Follow Kurt on his social channels:

Answers to the most asked CyberGuy questions:

Copyright 2024 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

Advertisement

Technology

WWDC protesters want Apple to ban Elon Musk’s apps

Published

on

WWDC protesters want Apple to ban Elon Musk’s apps

Apple’s big developer conference is today, and protesters are using the occasion to call on the company to remove “nudify apps” from the App Store and pull “known” child sexual abuse material from iCloud.

Outside the visitors center at Apple’s Cupertino campus, protesters have put up a large sign saying “Apple is powered by child sexual abuse” and asking incoming CEO John Ternus, “What will you do?” The protesters come from UltraViolet, a women’s advocacy group, and Heat Initiative, a group that aims to “hold tech companies accountable for enabling and profiting from child sexual abuse.”

Apple and Google came under significant scrutiny earlier this year for continuing to keep apps like xAI’s Grok on their app stores even though users were able to make nonconsensual sexualized deepfakes. In pamphlets distributed at the protest, the organizations say that “at least 47 nudify apps have been found on Apple’s App Store” and that “Apple has made an estimated $117 million minimum from nudify apps,” including “an estimated $35+ million from Grok alone,” citing data from the Tech Transparency Project. UltraViolet also has a website dedicated to its protest today.

Apple previously scrapped plans to scan photos saved to iCloud for child sexual abuse imagery over privacy concerns.

Apple didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Technology

Why your VPN keeps getting blocked and the simple fix

Published

on

Why your VPN keeps getting blocked and the simple fix

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

You fire up your VPN, connect to a server and pull up the streaming service or website you were trying to reach. A few seconds later, you see the dreaded message: blocked. So you try again. Still blocked. Then you switch servers. Same result.

If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. VPN blocking has become much more aggressive over the past few years. The old VPN tricks that once worked reliably no longer always get the job done.

The good news is that there is usually one specific reason your VPN keeps failing. Even better, most people never think to address it.

Join CyberGuy Live: Lock Down Your Phone in 30 Minutes (Saturday, June 13, 10 am ET)

  • Your phone holds your email, passwords, photos, banking apps and personal data. In this free, live online class, Kurt the CyberGuy will walk you step by step through simple phone security fixes you can do in real time. You’ll learn how to improve your privacy settings, spot the latest phone scams, use trusted security tools and walk away with a simple checklist to stay protected. Register here: CyberGuyLive.com.

STUCK BEHIND A VPN WALL? LET’S FIND A WAY AROUND IT

A VPN with modern protocols, obfuscation and DNS leak protection can help users avoid blocked connections and protect privacy. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Advertisement

Why your VPN keeps getting blocked by websites

Platforms block VPNs in a couple of main ways. The most common method is IP address detection. VPN providers use large pools of IP addresses. However, over time, those addresses get flagged and added to blocklists.

That creates a cat-and-mouse game. Cheaper VPNs often lose that fight because they do not have the resources to rotate and refresh their IP pools often enough.

Beyond IP detection, some websites and networks use deep packet inspection, also known as DPI. This technology can identify VPN traffic even when the IP address itself has not been flagged yet.

Corporate networks, schools and countries with heavy internet restrictions often rely on this method. It can even catch some respected VPN services off guard.

Premium VPN providers avoid many of these issues because the service is built around a more advanced protocol that addresses the problem closer to the source.

Advertisement

Quick checks before you blame your VPN

Before you assume your VPN has failed, try a few simple checks. First, close and reopen the app or browser you are using. Then, make sure your VPN app is updated because older versions may not handle blocked networks as well.

THIS CHROME VPN EXTENSION SECRETLY SPIES ON YOU

Also, check whether your browser has location permissions turned on. If a website can access your device location, it may still figure out where you are, even while your VPN is connected.

The VPN fix most people miss

Here is where most people go wrong. When their VPN gets blocked, they do the obvious thing. They switch servers. Sometimes that works for a little while. However, if the real issue is DPI rather than IP blacklisting, changing servers will not solve the problem. That is because the traffic pattern itself gives you away.

The fix is obfuscation. In other words, your VPN needs to disguise its traffic so it looks like regular web browsing instead of VPN activity. Surprisingly, many VPN users have never heard of obfuscation. Even some VPN providers do not make it easy to use.

Advertisement

Obfuscated servers make your VPN traffic look like ordinary HTTPS web traffic. To a network monitoring tool or a streaming platform’s detection system, your connection looks like a regular browser session. There is no obvious VPN fingerprint to flag.

Obfuscation can help VPN traffic look like ordinary web browsing, reducing the chances that websites or networks will block the connection. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

A premium VPN handles this automatically. Its Lightway protocol is built with obfuscation in mind and adapts depending on the network you are using. You do not have to dig through settings or manually turn anything on.

If a network is aggressively blocking VPN traffic, Lightway adjusts to help get around it without making you do the hard work.

IS YOUR VPN ENOUGH WITHOUT ANTIVIRUS PROTECTION?

Advertisement

Why DNS leaks can expose your real location

There is one more thing worth checking: your Domain Name System (DNS) settings. Even when your VPN connection is active, DNS leaks can reveal your real location. A DNS leak happens when your device sends domain name requests outside the encrypted VPN tunnel. That means websites may see your actual internet provider and location, even though your IP address appears to be somewhere else.

In other words, your VPN may look connected, but part of your browsing activity may still be pointing back to your real internet provider.

Here is the simple way to check:

  • Connect to your VPN.
  • Open a browser and go to a trusted DNS leak test site.
  • Run the test.
  • Look at the results. If you see your regular internet provider, your VPN may be leaking DNS requests. If you see your VPN provider’s servers or a location tied to the VPN server, that is what you want.

You may also want to run a WebRTC leak test, especially if you use Chrome, Edge or Firefox. WebRTC is a browser feature that can sometimes reveal your real IP address. To check, stay connected to your VPN, open a WebRTC leak test page and look for your real public IP address. If your real IP appears, your browser may be leaking identifying information.

A premium VPN routes DNS queries through its own encrypted servers and includes built-in DNS leak protection. As a result, most users do not need to troubleshoot this manually. Still, running a quick leak test gives you peace of mind that your VPN is doing what it should.

Why choosing the right VPN makes a difference

Free VPNs and many budget options often share server infrastructure. That means their IP addresses can get flagged and blacklisted quickly.

Advertisement

Their servers may also be overcrowded. Their protocols may be outdated. Many also lack meaningful obfuscation, which leaves your VPN traffic easier to detect.

A premium VPN maintains thousands of servers across 110+ countries and works to keep those servers accessible, even on networks that try hard to block VPN traffic. It also offers a 30-day money-back guarantee, so you can try it and see whether it solves the blocking issues you keep running into.

ROUTER VPNS VS DEVICE VPNS: WHICH PRIVACY SOLUTION IS BEST FOR YOU?

Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson types on a laptop while explaining how shared VPN IPs can trigger blocks by banks, email providers and streaming sites, and how a dedicated IP can prevent this. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

What this means to you

If your VPN keeps getting blocked, the problem may go deeper than the server you picked. The website, streaming platform or network may be detecting the way your VPN traffic looks.

Advertisement

That is why obfuscation can make such a big difference. It helps your connection blend in with regular web traffic, which can reduce the chances of being flagged.

DNS leak protection also helps because your location can still slip through if your device sends requests outside the VPN tunnel.

In other words, a stronger VPN can help you stay connected, private and secure with far less frustration.

For the best VPN software, see my expert review of the best VPNs for browsing the web privately on your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at CyberGuy.com.

Kurt’s key takeaways

When your VPN keeps getting blocked, switching servers may feel like the easiest fix. Sometimes it works for a short time. However, it often acts more like a temporary patch than a real solution. The better answer is to use a VPN with modern protocols, obfuscation and strong DNS leak protection. That combination helps hide the telltale signs that make websites and networks block VPN traffic in the first place. With a premium VPN, that technology works behind the scenes. You connect through the app, and the VPN handles the harder technical work for you. The result is a simpler experience: a more private, secure and open internet without constantly fighting blocked connections.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Have blocked VPN connections made you rethink which VPN you use? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report

  • Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.
  • For simple, real-world ways to spot scams early and stay protected, visit CyberGuy.com trusted by millions who watch CyberGuy on TV daily.
  • Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide free when you join.

Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

Continue Reading

Technology

NASA will wear high-tech Prada long johns to the Moon

Published

on

NASA will wear high-tech Prada long johns to the Moon

We’ve seen Axiom Space and Prada’s collaboration on the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU) spacesuit. Now the company has revealed the Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment (LCVG) that astronauts will wear underneath it when Artemis IV returns humans to the Moon in 2028.

The LCVG is the all-important base layer that will keep the crew cool and comfortable while inside the AxEMU and on spacewalks. Cold water is circulated through tubes embedded in the suit to whisk heat away from astronauts’ bodies. And, should the primary system fail, there is a backup, unlike older cooling suits. The LCVG also houses the ventilation system that supplies fresh oxygen to the AxEMU helmet and directs exhaled CO2 to a scrubber for recirculation.

The collaboration between Axiom Space and Prada isn’t the first time NASA has gotten involved with a project that blended high-tech materials and manufacturing with high-fashion design. It also funded the BioSuit concept created by MIT professor Dava Newman with help from renowned architect Guillermo Trotti.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending