Jawbone's freshly roasted Up Coffee app is a must-have piece of equipment on any coffeephile's smartphone, as it carefully keeps track of the amount of caffeine in the body and, like a coffee bean grinder, grinds those rough numbers into fine data that tells how it affects sleep.
Have you already forgotten what it was like to use a computer back in the day? Let's say in 1991? A Mac OS 7.0.1 emulator has appeared on archive.org that allows you to use it with the help of an antediluvian Apple operating system.
Google's Google Chrome browser has many built-in functionalities that users are often not even aware of. So that Chrome is not like our brain, which we probably use only partially, we have prepared a set of Chrome add-ons for you, with which you will make the most of the browser.
Do you know basic Facebook tricks? Like it or not, Facebook has hooked the younger and older generations. It seems as if there is no escape from him. Despite various protests and outcry at changes to the website's appearance or privacy rules, people like sheep are returning to Facebook. And if we really have to, it's good to know some "secrets" that will help preserve a little more privacy and solve our mental state with one click. Here are useful Facebook tricks that we must know.
And we mean that literally. If you've ever seen someone with an iPhone in their hand tilt their head as if to stretch their neck while looking at the screen, it's not necessarily because they've been staring at the screen for too long or "tearing" it. Since the appearance of the iOS 7 operating system, the iPhone allows you to control it with head gestures.
Stooping posture, modern man's grave. As a result of sitting at the desk for several hours every day, the back muscles weaken and our posture at the desk becomes more and more closed. It gives the impression of tiredness, weariness and overload. Nevertheless, we do not do enough to keep ourselves 'nice'. Fortunately, there are tools that can help us with this. So is the Upright Go, a wearable vibrating back device.
Some computer games are indeed becoming more and more realistic, but what has so far separated them from real life is that we could always start over. But the infinity of lives is over. At least in Robot Loves Kitty's online fantasy game Upsilon Circuit, which gives the player a single, single digital life. When he loses it, it's game over. Forever! Only eight toys can play it online at the same time (two in a team of four).
The clock ticks, he says nothing. What if I told you something? Such a clock is the handmade Durr bracelet from Oslo, which does not tick, but vibrates. And shakes every 5 minutes.
Mike Eleta created the first kinetic wristwatch, the Timeburner, which strongly resembles an internal combustion engine or its mechanism, and it does not lack the noise that the engine once made. Instead of clock hands, we have an aluminum cylinder, and it is driven by a mechanical movement that the user initiates when winding the spark plug.
The Urwerk UR-100V LightSpeed is more than just a watch; is a narrative of the time it takes for light to reach the planets of our solar system. This model combines the love of science fiction and astronomy that co-creators Felix Baumgartner and Martin Frei put into every part of their creation.
In anticipation of the football championship, the products are also sport-colored. So the giants B&O PLAY and Pepsi joined forces and presented a special collection of headphones.
We rarely meet a person with headphones on the street or on a city bus. Now the music flows more or less through "in-ear" headphones. Namely, headphones are significantly less convenient, they take up much more space, and the appearance sometimes does them no favors. But the sound experience is usually better. Well, there are also those that also meet aesthetic criteria.