Not only does Llano’s cooling pad work, but its 14 cm fan and unique seal reduce laptop temperatures by up to a staggering 111ºF. Check out Salem Techsperts’ review for proof. It’s bulky and gets loud at max speed, but those are acceptable trade-offs for its performance. The V10 is for 13″ to 17″ laptops, while the V12 and V13 (no RGB) are for 15″ to 19″ laptops.
The Galaxy Z Fold6 has a wider aspect ratio than its predecessors, inching ever closer to a true 2-in-1 form factor. It weighs just 239 g and is only 5.6 mm thick, making it the most portable Z Fold yet. Powered by a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 processor, it has a barrage of trendy AI features, but the live translation and note summaries are practical and impressive.
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If brand identity is as essential (it is), then something as seemingly simple as keeping your colors consistent is as important as the voice in your copy or the tone of your social posts. To make sure you or your team never miss out on a moment of inspiration again, take advantage of this price drop that has this Nix Mini 2 Color-Matching Sensor on sale for only $49.97 (reg. $99) through 11:59 p.m. PT on July 21.
Use the Nix 2 color-matching sensor to scan any product or surface and match the color to any of over 100,000 paint colors. Your pocket color scanner can pull all of the necessary codes and information that might be needed for a professional at the hardware store to find a matching shade or for you to find the right color in design apps like Photoshop.
To help you keep track of the colors you’ve matched and found, the sensor works in compatibility with the Nix Paints and Nix Digital apps for iOS and Android devices.
For pulling colors from the real world into your digital projects, there’s no better solution. That’s why CNET wrote that “Nix comes pre-calibrated and doesn’t require any work on your end.” No need for an artist’s eye or a designer’s patience. Skip straight to the right color every time.
The Beelink SER8 costs as much as a mid-range GPU but is actually a capable PC in a tiny package. It has the 2023 AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS all-in-one laptop processor along with 32GB of upgradeable DDR5 RAM and a 1TB NVME SSD. Video ports include HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 1.4, and Thunderbolt. Check out Gear Seekers’ hands-on review for more.
The garage responds as quickly to the app as it does to a regular button clicker, with one caveat: Choosing to close the garage with the app causes it to flash its lights and beep several times before the garage will begin to close, and will still beep and flash until closing is complete. It’s for safety reasons, since the garage doesn’t know whether anyone else is in the garage while you’re closing it or whether you’re nearby to make sure the garage path is clear of anyone walking in or out.
The only way around this, sadly, is to not use the app. You can install the MyQ Smart Garage Video Keypad ($99) outside of your garage to close it without getting any beeping and to get a similar experience to a video doorbell and smart lock but for your garage. I tested one and it works fine—the key codes are easy to set up and you can close your garage beep-free, plus you’ll get alerts like a security camera for outside of your garage, but I had a mixed experience using the call button. You also have to drill it into your garage or home exterior (MyQ says it’s too heavy to use adhesive strips), which my home’s HOA sadly forbids me from doing. Still, it’s a good price for a combination lock and exterior video feed for your garage, if you’re allowed to install it.
Photograph: Nena Farrell
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The default owner of the MyQ (that is, whoever set it up first in your home) also gets an onslaught of notifications every time the garage is opened and closed, whether via app or with your standard garage door buttons. In comparison, when you’re an added user, you won’t get any notifications by default. Both parties can go into the app, select the gear icon on the garage door (or other MyQ product in question), and edit the notifications they’re getting for the specific product.
I set up both my and my husband’s phones to get notifications about our garage being open for more than 10 minutes, and another for myself if it was open for an hour. You can add a lot more notifications, and you can also set it up to work with Amazon Key to get deliveries right into your garage (and get notified about that too). I haven’t been able to talk my husband into using it, but the included camera in my model makes me feel comfortable giving it a try.
Speaking of video, MyQ does have storage subscription plans for its video products (the brand also has video garage door openers, a video keypad, and a stand-alone camera). The first tier starts at $20 a year and goes up to $100 a year, and depending on which tier you pick you get additional features like face, person, and motion detection, detection zones, and either seven or 30 days of storage.
As one of its farcical efforts to prove their government’s awesomeness, North Korea has its “own” smartphones and cellular network. Half as Interesting takes a look at the Monty Python levels of inadequacy and surveillance in these devices and infrastructure. The upbeat music over all this brazen display of oppression makes the whole thing even more hilarious.
The FlipAction Pro is a 16″ monitor that justifies its $499 price with its quality and versatility. It comes with a foldable mount and stand that provide a wide range of heights and angles. It has a 2560×1600 display that covers 99% of the DCI P3 color gamut, a full-size SD card slot, and gets power and video via a single USB-C cable. It’s only 0.5″ thick and weighs just 2lb.
Anker wisely set out to make the most out of the overpowered USB-C chargers we have today. The 2-in-1 USB-C to USB-C Cable 140W (yep, that’s its name) can charge two devices using a single charging port. It also stops juicing fully charged gadgets and provides up to 140W PD charging for one device. It has a durable braided cable and comes in 1ft and 3ft lengths.
I regret to inform you that i can’t tyoe on thjdi thing yet.
The Clicks keyboard case has arrived, and it’s delightful, if not entirely practical for everyday use — at least, not without weeks of practice.
The new device, which adds a keyboard with physical buttons to the bottom of your iPhone, evokes a sense of nostalgia for the BlackBerry era, but in its current form, it’s awkward to use, particularly with heavier, taller devices like the iPhone 15 Pro Max.
The main issue with Clicks is that iPhones aren’t shaped like BlackBerry devices, which were short, squat and wide. Instead, the weight of the iPhone pulls the case downward, so you’re always fighting against the force of gravity as you try to type. This leads the case to wobble slightly in your hands, making it harder to hit the right key.
To be fair, Clicks admits the case may be difficult to use at first.
On its help pages, the company suggests a proper holding technique to make Clicks more stable. It advises that users cradle the phone, with the bottom edge of the device resting on your pinky fingers while the back is supported by your middle and ring fingers. Your index fingers, meanwhile, can rest on the back or the sides of the case.
If you grip the phone with both hands at the very bottom of the keyboard, you may find it feeling top-heavy, the website warns.
Image Credits: Clicks
However, your phone will feel top-heavy either way, though to what extent you’re able to properly balance the keyboard will depend on a number of factors, including your iPhone model and weight as well as the length and strength of your fingers. People with shorter, stubbier fingers may have more difficulty cradling the device than others with longer fingers, for example.
Clicks says it has added ballast to the bottom of the case to help it achieve the right balance, but early adopters say they’re considering upgrading to a smaller iPhone model to make Clicks easier to use — and that’s telling.
An iPhone 13 mini would probably be great to use with Clicks, but alas, it’s not supported.
Instead, the Clicks keyboard works with iPhone 14 and iPhone 15 models, the former only in the Pro and Pro Max models, while supporting the full range of models for the iPhone 15. For comparison, the weight of the iPhone can vary between devices, ranging from 6.02 ounces for the iPhone 15 to 7.09 ounces for the 15 Plus and 6.60 ounces for the 15 Pro model. The 15 Pro Max is the heaviest at 7.81 ounces. Though these are slight differences when using an iPhone with a traditional case, even the smallest bit of extra weight matters when it comes to using Clicks. The heavier the iPhone, the harder to hold, it seems.
Image Credits: Clicks
Clicks tries to account for the difficulty in balancing the phone in several ways. In addition to instructing users on the proper holding technique, the case also features a vegan leather grip pad on the lower back, making it less likely for your fingers to slip and reminding you of where to place them.
In addition, the case has a slightly textured surface, which aids in holding your iPhone upright.
Despite these accommodations, there’s another issue with using Clicks, and it’s a surprising one.
If Clicks appeals to you, then you may be of the age to remember what it felt like to be dashing off quick emails and texts on a BlackBerry, its physical keyboard’s buttons being a significant upgrade from T9 texting. But in the years since, you’ve likely adjusted to typing on a touchscreen. Returning to buttons, as it turns out, is not like riding a bike. There’s a bit of a learning curve here, especially with your now extra-long smartphone.
You may not immediately find Clicks as easy to use as you remember your old BlackBerry being, in other words. You will have to relearn how to type like this, and it may take some time to adjust. According to Clicks’ website, it will take you 20 minutes to learn Clicks, two hours to be comfortable with it, two days to master it, and two weeks to build up the muscle memory needed to really be comfortable with Clicks. (I suspect some people may end up needing longer. I have not spent weeks with Clicks yet so cannot weigh in there.)
The Clicks keyboard makes a satisfying “clickety” sound when you press the keys, hence the device’s name. But there is a reason many of us ultimately turn off the iPhone’s keyboard sounds: The tick tick tick of the keyboard’s clicks can get annoying after a while, and it could bother other people, too. The Clicks keyboard has a more muted, natural clicking sound, but it’s always going to make an audible noise that attracts attention.
Image Credits: Clicks
Of course, those buying the Clicks keyboard may like the attention — especially if you’re whipping out the bright banana yellow case or the new “Miami Heat” hot-pink case with the blue keys. These cases could make for a great icebreaker. I guarantee you that if you pull out the Clicks at a bar, someone will talk to you. (That alone could make it worth the price, for some!)
That said, the company says the more corporate-looking “London Sky” gray color has been the more popular option at launch, and it sold out of its first “Founders Edition” devices in under two weeks. At the Consumer Electronics Show this year, the company said if one out of every 1,000 iPhone customers were interested in Clicks, it could build a successful business. Based on the demand Clicks has seen so far, the company says the interest is “far stronger than that.”
Clicks, started by MrMobile (Michael Fisher) and CrackBerry Kevin (Kevin Michaluk), won’t disclose the number of sales to date, but it has already added the hot pink and “Royal Ink” blue cases to its lineup. The company is now in the process of raising a seed round to further expand the Clicks product portfolio.
Image Credits: TechCrunch
For those who plan to switch back and forth between Clicks and a traditional case (or no case), be warned: Be delicate with the Clicks’ USB-C or lightning port. The case includes a sticker that advises you to be careful when inserting or removing your phone. This is easier advice to follow upon insertion. But if you’re used to yanking off your iPhone case at any angle without much thought, be very careful; your $159 will go up in smoke just like that. Clicks’ warning says do not bend the phone upward from the port until it’s fullydisconnected and they’re not kidding. Even at a slight angle, you could easily damage the port. (Clicks says it hasn’t seen an issue with breakage yet. I say give it more time.)
For that reason, I wouldn’t recommend that, say, a company’s IT department buy Clicks for their older end users still lamenting the loss of their BlackBerrys. More than likely, a small portion of them will break the device or bend the port the first time they take the case off. Make it a holiday gift, not a corporate handout, if you must.
As for the keyboard, the buttons are well-spaced and appropriately clicky, if slightly small. There are also few clever touches. There’s a built-in microphone, Shift, CMD and “123” key you can press once for numbers and symbols or twice to lock. The “%+-” button can also be pressed to show and hide the iOS keyboard, where you can also easily access emoji. (Alternatively, you can add the emoji keyboard as an option that appears when you press the globe key on Clicks.)
Once you’ve mastered typing on the keyboard, there are several keyboard shortcuts you can learn to make it even easier to use. CMD + H will take you back to your Home Screen, for example, while CMD + spacebar will launch Search. When in the Safari or Chrome web browser, you can also use the spacebar to scroll through web pages. Many other popular iOS keyboard shortcuts are also supported, Clicks notes.
Image Credits: TechCrunch
But the size of the Clicks case cannot be overlooked as a deciding factor on whether to purchase.
Its odd, extra-long shape makes it more difficult to carry around in a pocket, where it will inevitably stick out of the top, stretching the fabric. The Clicks case won’t fit into small handbags where your iPhone previously fit comfortably. The Clicks was also too big for the top pocket on my SwissGear backpack used for travel, which is where I’ll often stash my phone in a hurry, like when readying my bags for a TSA screening. Your phone will also be heavier with the case, either by 62 or 65 grams, depending on your phone model.
The case also doesn’t support MagSafe accessories, so there’s no hope of using some sort of PopSocket to steady it. (It would also be placed too high to really help.)
Despite the challenges that come with Clicks, it’s hard to knock its sense of whimsy and cheerfulness. You certainly don’t need Clicks, but at $139 to $159, you can convince yourself you need to try it. It’s like the Chumby or the Rabbit: quirky, fun and designed for a niche market of enthusiasts. It’s not a product you buy for its functionality; it’s the type of art you support because you’re into technology.
This versatile kitchen accessory combines a food chopper, a spice and coffee grinder with a kitchen timer, a digital scale, an ambient light, and a clock. It does all that, and it gets out of your way when not in use thanks to a magnetic strip you can mount on your wall that holds the KitchyHub and your knives.
Crowdfunded projects pose a degree of risk for buyers, so be sure to do your research before paying your hard-earned money.
This compact projector from Philips can project a 100″ diagonal image just 20″ away from your wall. It weighs 1 kg. (appx. 2.2 lb.) and uses triple RGB laser tech to produce vibrant colors and bright Full HD images at up to 550 lumens. In addition to USB, USB-C, and HDMI connections, it has a full suite of built-in streaming apps.
Crowdfunded projects pose a degree of risk for buyers, so be sure to do your research before paying your hard-earned money.
The third generation of IKEA’s VAPPEBY Bluetooth speaker is its largest yet, measuring 8″x 8″. In classic IKEA fashion, the speaker’s minimalist design makes it blend in nearly any setting despite its size. It has a removable handle, a volume knob, and a 3.5mm input. Add the ENEBY battery and you have a portable speaker that lasts up to 25 hours per charge.
Nomad one-upped other tracking device makers with a sorely needed feature: a rechargeable battery. The Tracking Card can be charged using any Qi or MagSafe wireless charger and lasts up to 5 months per charge. It’s as small as a credit card and is only twice as thick. You do need to have an iOS device to use it, as it works only with Apple’s Find My app.
The special edition of Keybay’s W70 mechanical keyboard kit may have gearheads justifying its price. Inspired by the Toyota AE86 Trueno, it has LED bars at the back that look like car taillights. The special edition also comes with two light baffles: one is semi-transparent acrylic, and the other is perforated aluminum.
The latest version of Framework’s modular 13″ laptop can now be bought with Intel’s new Core Ultra Series 1 CPU, which offers significant improvements in battery life, particularly when playing videos. There’s also a new 2880 x 1920 display option with a 120Hz refresh rate. Existing Framework 13 owners can swap their display with this new one as well.
Like the Dwarf II, this automated astrophotography camera tracks and follows celestial objects and stacks photos for incredible detail. The new model has an upgraded Sony sensor, wider lenses that capture more of the sky, improved filters, and a longer-lasting battery. It can also shoot the sun and moon, huge panoramas, and even identify birds it photographs.
Chilkey is going after Keychron’s throne with the ND75. The polish and features that you get for its price are unbelievable. It’s a fully assembled 75% mechanical keyboard with a well-made screw-less aluminum case. It connects via USB-C, Bluetooth, and 2.4 GHz wireless. It has three mount options, pre-lubed stabilizers, and even a tiny screen for settings.
If it can keep your gaming rig cool, it can definitely do the same for you. The NV-FS1 is a modular desk fan that uses Noctua’s legendary NF-A12x25 PC fan. Its unorthodox airflow amplifier focuses the output from the fan while keeping noise to a minimum. Its stand allows you to pivot the fan to any angle, and has screw mounts and zip-tie slits for mounting.
The Aulumu M01 looks like a cyberpunk gadget, but it’s not all style. It has a MagSafe wireless charger at the top, a 5W Qi wireless charger, plus a 10W USB-C charging port on its base. It also has a slick LED nightlight with three brightness levels. The M01 folds flat, and its MagSafe charger rotates 148° so you can prop your phone at different angles.