Introducing a revolutionary new way to monitor your health: the Withings U-Scan! This innovative sensor attaches to the toilet bowl and analyzes your urine every time you go to the bathroom.
Monohm has brought some fresh pizzazz to the smartphone- and wristwatch-saturated WMC 2015 mobile conference with the Runcible smartphone as a pocket watch. You probably still remember pocket watches, which used to be pulled out of our pockets almost as often as we do with smartphones today. Well, Runcibl's mission is to discourage us from excessive phone use, and in the battle with all the wearable technology like smartwatches and bracelets that hope to do the same, it faces an uphill battle to survive.
Women Interrupted is another in a line of slightly bizarre apps that can do a lot of good. Namely, it measures how many times a man interrupts a woman during a conversation. If Hillary Clinton had this app during her TV showdowns with Donald Trump, her phone would probably burn out.
WonderCube is a cube-shaped device that has all the mobile gadgets that smartphone users need. Which may not be anything shocking until we find out it's a device the size of a keychain. Indeed, the WonderCube is a "Swiss Army Knife" that answers the challenges of time, which are no longer related to the challenges of bare survival, but to challenges such as charging the phone's battery, synchronizing data between devices, as well as how to collect funds on Indiegogo .
Even the most beautiful personal computers act as a piece of technology that gives them coolness. Wood Kubb is the complete opposite of computers as we know them. It is a wooden cube that you will gladly plant in a visible place, which is hard to say for personal computers. Most of them therefore hide under the table. Despite its small size, it can do everything the big ones can do. The 12.5 x 12.5 centimeter wooden shell hides an Intel Core i3 or i5 processor. You can pre-order the Wood Kubb on Kickstarter for (calculated) 400 euros.
"Eco friendly" and modern design are just two of the many features of the nature-friendly Woodbuds wooden headphones.
Forget about photo paper, Woodsnap prints your digital photos on wood. And considering that thanks to smart devices that are with us 24 hours a day, we also have a camera at hand all the time, we accumulate enormous amounts of photos. But even though we immortalize almost every moment, most of the photos are rarely visited, let alone printed. Printing is thus reserved only for the "chosen ones", for whom wood works even better than paper. Photos printed on wood are simply marriage.
Woojer, a silent and portable matchbox-sized amplifier speaker system, allows users to feel the sound of their favorite songs, games or movies.
Offices used to be an uninspiring place where we went to work. For many people today, the office is the place where they have an Internet connection. Work Hard Anywhere is a simple application that allows you to find such a workspace. It knows more than 2,500 locations in 57 countries, so there is a high probability that such a public place is also near you. Each of them is evaluated by the users, and the evaluation criteria are the speed and reliability of the Wi-Fi connection, access to the electrical connection, the volume of the surroundings, the possibility of parking, price, food, etc.
Forget smartwatches that are still searching for their identity and stand out with the Wove, Polyera Corporation's first bendable display smart bracelet. It is a prototype that will arrive as a final product in 2016 and opens up completely new possibilities in the world of wearable technology.
Samsung Electronics is at a virtual event Unpack and discover 2023 introduced its latest line of televisions. It also showcased new on-screen experiences that showcase Samsung's "Screens Everywhere, Screens for All" vision.
QWERTZ is an arrangement of keys on the keyboard, which has been considered a standard in the world for 140 years. But this type of layout was designed and optimized for typewriters. And while everything around it was changing drastically (screens, computers, phones), the keyboard stuck to its arrangement like a drunkard. At Swiss icoaching, they were convinced that there was a better solution, a keyboard that would answer the challenges of the time, that is, above all, easier typing on the touch screen on smartphones. They wanted to make a keyboard for fast, error-free typing. And Wrio was born, an on-screen keyboard with a honeycomb letter layout.