With all the amazing things a bike-friendly city has to offer, sometimes the hardest part is finding your bike, drowning somewhere in the sea of other bikes. FROLIC Studio wants to solve this problem, so they created the Pingbell bike bell that helps us find our bike. A completely normal bell at first glance, it hides some smart technology that helps in locating the bike. Pingbell is currently raising funds on Kickstarter.
Apple's big 2015 event held in California on September 9 revealed their latest batch of hardware updates, including new versions of the iPhone 6 — the iPhone 6s and the larger iPhone 6s Plus — as well as the Apple Watch, the watch that spawned in collaboration with luxury fashion brand Hermès and reinforces Apple's desire to position its smartwatch as a luxury product rather than a utility. They also unveiled a larger version of their tablet called the iPad Pro, which they described as "the most capable and powerful iPad they've ever created." The only completely new product that will not be found among Apple's technological toys since the early 1990s is the digital pen Apple Pencil. This is made for use with the larger iPad and aimed at professional artists and designers. It will enable new precision in drawing and writing on the iPad, which will respond to different forms of pressure as well as different angles.
Having trouble making decisions? Can't decide which dress suits you better? Hesitating between running and cycling? The Dvel application will help you in a fun and fast way to make decisions easier with the help of your friends.
Apple and Hermès have prepared a real technological and fashion treat for all technology lovers who also follow the latest fashion trends. Technological geniuses and designers of luxury clothing and fashion accessories have combined their creative powers and given the Apple Watch a refreshed and especially fashionable look for the new season.
We probably won't see teleportation or radiation, but there's no room for lamentation, because GoPro has prepared a toy that is the next best thing to the romantic idea instilled in us by science fiction. In real life, the drone is called the GoPro Odyssey, and it takes you on a journey-worthy Odyssey. And while GoPro action cameras are relatively affordable, the Odyssey, an attachment for 16 action cameras and recording 360-degree footage in 3D technology, will only be for the select few with a big wallet.
When we put headphones on our ears, we usually turn off the outside world, but with the revolutionary Batband headphones, it's a completely different song. First of all, we don't put them in or over our ears, but we wear the device on our head like Gaius Julius Caesar's laurel wreath, and secondly, we don't listen with our ears, but through vibrations on the skull bone. They use "bone conduction" technology, which allows listening to music and sounds from the environment at the same time.
In recent years, the use of pictorial smileys and other pictorial expressions in communication has grown to such an extent that the phenomenon has even been subjected to scientific studies (smiley is a rather misleading term, as only a part of these pictures are represented by faces that express emotions). They grow like mushrooms after the rain, but why use generic smiley faces when you can replace their faces with your own. Thanks to the Emojiface application, it is now possible to create a personalized smiley, a smiley in your own image.
It's amazing how we go to foreign places, see tourist locations, natural and cultural attractions, happily take photos, and return home with the same shots as thousands of other tourists, with the same photos that we find tons of on Google. We all photograph the same scenes, from the same place (herd instinct?), which is precisely why they lose their originality, because someone else could easily have taken it and you wouldn't even notice it. Philip Schmitt's Camera Restrict therefore prevents you from taking the same shots as everyone else.
Apple unveiled two new phones at its recent gala event. iPhone 6S and 6S Plus. And while both look practically identical to their 2014 predecessors, they do hide some new features under the surface. However, many of the novelties are new only to Apple users, as they have been circulating in the microcosm of Android for some time. Let's check what Apple has borrowed from Android mobile phones this year.
In the world of blogging, numbers matter a lot. In particular, as far as the number of likes and followers on all social networks related to the blog/blogger is concerned. If you blog or just want more followers on Instagram, Twitter or Snapchat, read on…
Back to the roots. That's the message the To-Do watch, which isn't it, is sending to the world through a Kickstarter campaign. Although its shape completely imitates a wristwatch, its "dial" is actually just a surface where you can write down important things with the help of a liquid chalk marker. Things you have to do, but you can just satisfy your creativity and draw something on it. In the age of smart watches and phones, writing things down seems easier than ever, but technology cannot always be relied on, and a sheet of paper is not always at hand. That's why To-Do is an ideal tool even in the 21st century.
Did you know that the lines on the phone that indicate the signal are like shoe numbers from different shoe manufacturers, and that two lines on a Samsung are not necessarily two lines on an iPhone. Anyway. Poor cell signal is a reality for all cell phone brands, and YouTuber Grant Thompson has put together tips for us to improve it. First of all, we need to find out what the actual strength of our signal is, which the lines in the right corner of the screen do not tell us. What about him? More on that below.