Music and photography appear to big big jobs for this powerful Mac Pro setup. Note the iMac G4 as well as Wall-E and Eve above the cheese grater. Photo: [email protected]
It’s somewhat rare that we come across a Mac Pro setup on social media for the obvious reason that Apple’s top desktop computer costs a fortune. And the ones we see are often older than 2019’s cheese grater design. But today’s Mac Pro and smart TV setup is a welcome exception to that rule.
It sports a powerful cheese-grater Mac Pro driving a gargantuan smart TV as an external display.
And what’s more, a classic iMac G4 that still works and Wall-E and Eve toys from the Pixar movie look on from a shelf!
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iMac G4 looks on in Mac Pro and smart TV setup
Photographer and Redditor johnnyphotog showcased the impressive setup in a post entitled, “Mac Pro Creation Station.” John’s Mac Pro (96GB memory, 2TB plus 16GB fast internal storage, dual 6900XT graphics with afterburner) drives a massive 42-inch LG C2 Series OLED smart TV.
We don’t know the year of John’s Mac Pro. But we included a new one in the gear list below that will set you back a mere $12,199. So go ahead and crack open that wallet if it hasn’t run off and hidden somewhere out of sheer terror.
Here’s what you get for that immodest price:
Apple M2 Ultra 24-Core CPU
192GB of Unified RAM | 8TB SSD
76-Core GPU | 32-Core Neural Engine
2 x PCIe 4 x16 | 4 x PCIe 4 x8 Slots
8 x Thunderbolt 4 Ports
2 x 10 Gigabit Ethernet Ports
Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax) | Bluetooth 5.3
Magic Keyboard with Touch ID and Keypad
Magic Mouse
Full-sized MIDI keyboard controller
Some commenters showed more interest in the Arturia KeyLab 88 MIDI keyboard controller in front of the big display than in the Mac Pro.
“How do you find the Arturia 88?” asked another person about the MIDI keyboard controller. “Does it work well with Logic Pro?”
“Works great with Logic Pro!” John replied.
You can find all the gear in our list, below, under this helpful graphic.
Apple helps you decide how many hundreds or thousands you want to spend on a desktop computer. Photo: Apple
Shop these items now:
Computers:
Display:
Input devices:
Camera:
Audio:
Toys:
If you would like to see your setup featured on Cult of Mac, send some high-res pictures to [email protected]. Please provide a detailed list of your equipment. Tell us what you like or dislike about your setup, and fill us in on any special touches, challenges and plans for new additions.
Smart Swim is a pair of fancy swim goggles with a chunky box (the “tech pack”) attached to one eye cup and a crystal in the corresponding lens. With it, you can see your statistics like your heart rate, distance, split times and more on a waveguide display without ever having to break your cadence.
Plenty about Swim 2 is carried over from the first model, including the two-button user interface, display resolution (72 x 40) and many of the internals. The addition of the heart rate sensor (which the company says has been tweaked to work well in water) has shaved down the battery life down to 12 hours from 16. But I’m not sure that’s a real issue unless you’re planning on swimming the English Channel.
Instead, Form has nipped and tucked at the existing model, with the tech pack being 15 percent smaller than its predecessor. Comfort and fit have also been worked on, with longer, more adjustable straps and a broader range of swappable nose bridges. Oh, and there were a couple of features that Form built into the first-generation hardware that have, until now, remained dormant. More on that later.
History
Form founder Dan Eisenhardt was in on the ground floor of the wearables craze of the 2010s. His last company, Recon Instruments, was building head-mounted displays long before Google pushed Glass out of the door. After initially considering, and then abandoning plans to make a swimming-focused wearable, it launched a pair of smart goggles for skiing in partnership with Oakley before making Jet, a cycling-focused unit under its own name.
These early successes attracted the attention of Intel while it was looking for the next big thing in computing. It bought Recon, among other wearables companies, with the smart business strategy of… running them all into the ground before cutting its losses a few years later. Once Recon had been scuttled, Eisenhardt and his colleagues went back to the product they had originally founded Recon to pursue, a head-worn swimming display.
Photo by Daniel Cooper / Engadget
In use
It’s not a complicated process to get started once you’ve downloaded the app and paired it with your goggles. Turn it on with a long press of the power button and cycle through the options menu with the other button. You can opt for a pool, open water or a swim spa — the latter available for specific partner gyms. If you’re in the pool, you can then select its length from a list of standard options and press start, with the headwear tracking your motion automatically.
If I’m honest, not a huge amount has changed from the first version in terms of operation and use. If you’d like more details, then you can head back and read my original review which will hold you in pretty good stead. The only differences, really, are that you get your heart rate on the display. And, if memory serves, the markers showing you when the headgear thinks you’re swimming and when you’re at rest are clearer and more regularly updated. But that’s it, really.
Now, remember when I referenced that the first-generation Form had some extra gear on board that was left dormant? SwimStraight is making its debut on the Swim 2 but will also come to the first-generation hardware — so long as you sign up for the premium app subscription. You see, there’s a magnetometer in the tech pack that can act as a compass, and will give you a live directional bearing as you swim. When activated, the bottom half of the display transforms into the compass view, showing you a relatively precise heading.
SwimStraight is designed for open water swimmers who would otherwise rely upon landmarks to chart their course. For instance, if you’re doing a lap in a lake or out at sea, you might be breaking your stroke once every few minutes to make sure you’re lined up with a buoy. But the company showed me GPS telemetry data showing that these intermittent corrections cause swimmers to veer off course a lot. Whereas, if there’s a live compass bearing in your eye at all times, you’ll be able to keep more or less to your intended path.
I’m not going to lie, this feature impressed me far more than it had any business doing, given the low-ish tech nature of the hardware. Thrash your head around and you might force a slight delay as the compass catches up to your orientation but otherwise it’s very quick.
HeadCoach, meanwhile, launched last fall on the first-generation goggles and is similarly held behind the Premium paywall. The system looks at various elements of your form, like the pitch and roll of your head, and how quickly you turn your head to the side to breathe. It then scores you out of 99 for each of these facets, with video lessons and suggestions to get better. You can then set these suggestions onto your goggles for the next time you go into the pool, so you can get a real sense of what you’re doing and how to improve matters.
Form’s Smart Swim 2 is available today across the world, priced at $249 in the US and $339 in Canada. Its predecessor now has a 1 appended to its name and will remain on sale for $179, offering a more affordable entry-point for wary would-be swimmers. Here’s the thing, I actually think that the Smart Swim 1 with Premium is probably a more compelling option for many people. That’s not a diss against the 2 so much as praise for how good the existing model already was. Look, if you’re a Serious Triathlete who cares about your split times and owns a Garmin the size of the Cullinan Diamond, get the 2. But if you’re a better swimmer than I am (and it wouldn’t be hard) but would like some real-time data in the water, get the 1.
As businesses across Europe look to stay ahead of the competition and drive success, leaders at these organizations are continuously on the lookout for new solutions. Especially those that tap into the potential of their data to generate valuable insights. A key innovation in this space growing in adoption is enhanced smart video that can lean on the power of artificial intelligence (AI).
AI-powered smart video solutions have far more capabilities than the traditional surveillance associated with their basic counterparts, making these tools the new must have for businesses across numerous diverse sectors. They apply advanced analytics that deliver insights almost instantly to better operations, limit costs and boost revenue.
A study from Western Digital was recently launched to understand the impact of AI on smart video, especially its capabilities for European businesses. The results found that AI is already integral in delivering advantages including improved scalability, efficiency, customization of surveillance and analytics. As smart video technology becomes more agile and AI grows in proliferation, its use cases will only increase further. While the full use cases of smart video are emerging, numerous examples can already be observed across diverse sectors including:
Smart manufacturing: AI analytics in the factory
In manufacturing, smart video is already critically important. When implemented in factories, these solutions carry various advantages. After filming the production process, leaders can collect data for analysis. Consequently, they can understand which stages of production are inefficient and then work to prevent bottlenecks. Data collected may also predict upcoming machinery issues, ensuring systems are upgraded as necessary.
On a mass scale, improving production efficiency drives much greater outputs and profits. Beyond analytics generation, smart video technologies in factories can monitor employee health and safety, reporting on incidents automatically where appropriate. This can give factories access to better insurance policies and help to improve their reputation for staff welfare. In project management and planning, analytics from video recordings can also be referenced to align with global safety standards.
Peter Hayles
Product Marketing Manager HDD, Western Digital.
Smart video in healthcare
Hospitals, doctors’ surgeries and other healthcare facilities now increasingly rely on smart video systems to improve security and the efficiency of care. On entering a building, a patient’s data from smart video can trigger an alert, ensuring they patient receives care as quickly as possible. In some cases, this may come in the form of a staff member assisting them, or even a full team with specialist equipment during a medical emergency.
Over weeks and months, data analytics can better facilities management and staffing levels, guaranteeing required resources are allocated to the peak times. This, therefore, limits unnecessary expenditure and staff burnout, especially prevalent if medical staff are in short supply. For example, if a GP surgery has too many staff in relation to patient appointments, smart video analytics can help identify busier facilities where staffing ought to be allocated.
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Keeping transport moving
Smart video is also being used in public transport systems to improve service delivery. For companies managing trains, tubes, trams and buses, tracking journey times is a major operation. In London, the bus system alone is made up of 9,300 vehicles operating 675 routes. To boost efficiency, smart video insights can be used to assign staff and vehicles especially peak times when there is the greatest volume of human traffic. These insights can also be used to flag and counter issues.
In some of the world’s largest cities, smart video insights can help a passenger in need of assistance, or a fault on a line. Where problems cause delays, analytics can help to reroute other trains where needed and alert control rooms to plan accordingly. This helps the world’s biggest cities to keep moving.
Besides public transport, smart video is also being implemented for traffic management of roads in cities. When crossing a road, traffic lights will automatically change when necessary without the need to push a button. This ensures that these lights are being used most effectively. Insights from AI smart video can also be used to warn for upcoming traffic through signage changes, allowing drivers to re-route their journey to less congested routes.
Data produced through smart video
Research has highlighted the benefits of smart video, as well as an increasing willingness to install new or upgrade old smart video systems. However, rapid deployment will further increase demands to store valuable data. Most AI-equipped smart video solutions use 4K recording for real-time insights. Therefore, even more data must be stored and accessed on demand. As a quarter of businesses plan to implement this technology by the end of the year, data storage requirements will only increase.
Depending on the scale of the smart video operations and specific user requirements, different storage solutions may be required. For the heavy workloads required to deal with video footage and analytics, many business leaders opt for HDDs as a cost-effective, high-capacity option. With the high performance required for these use cases, many business leaders opt for storage solutions specifically designed with smart video in mind. This helps organizations to work smarter.
This article was produced as part of TechRadarPro’s Expert Insights channel where we feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today. The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/submit-your-story-to-techradar-pro
I’ve been increasingly driven to distraction by YouTube’s ever-more-aggressive delivery of adverts before, during and after videos, which is making it a challenge to even get to the bits of a video that I want to see without having some earnest voice encourage me to trade stocks or go to Dubai. Until now I’ve been too cheap to subscribe to YouTube Premium – but that may soon change.
That’s because YouTube is apparently testing an AI-powered recommendation system that will analyze patterns in viewer behavior to cleverly skip to the most popular parts of a video with just a double tap on a touchscreen.
“The way it works is, if a viewer is double tapping to skip ahead on an eligible segment, we’ll show a jump ahead button that will take them to the next point in the video that we think they’re aiming for,” YouTube creator-centric channel Creator Insider explained. “This feature will also be available to creators while watching their own videos.”
Currently, such a double-tap action skips a YouTube video forward by a few seconds, which I don’t find hugely useful. And while YouTube introduces a form of wave pattern on the video timeline to show what the most popular parts of the video are, it’s not the easiest thing to use, and can sometimes feel rather lacking in intuitiveness.
So being able to easily tap to get to the most popular part of a video, at least according to an AI, could be a boon for impatient people like me. The only wrinkle is this feature is only being tested for YouTube Premium users and is currently limited to the US.
But such handy features do tend to get a larger global rollout once they come out of the testing phase, meaning there’s scope for Brits like myself to have access to some smart double-tap video skipping. That’s if I do finally decide to bite the bullet and pay for YouTube Premium.
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The Amazon Big Spring Sale might be over, but there are still plenty of deals worth shopping across the site. Anyone looking to upgrade their meals will want to check out the 20 percent discounts on Breville’s Smart Ovens, including the Air Fryer Pro. Our pick for 2024’s best air fryer toaster oven is down to $320 from $400 — its Black Friday low.
Breville
Breville’s Smart Oven Air Fryer Pro allows you to cook almost anything you want. It has 13 cooking settings, ranging from typical ones like broil, bake and warm to more specific options like cookies, proof and dehydrate. Taking up one cubic foot of space, the Smart Oven Air Fryer Pro is basically a second oven that can make perfectly crispy fries. In fact, it’s so big you could fit a 14-pound turkey, 9×13 sheets or a Dutch Oven inside it.
Worth noting: Despite having the title “Smart Oven,” Breville’s Air Fryer Pro, it’s not smart in the way most things these days are. Breville’s Joule Smart Oven Air Fryer Pro is the one to go with if you want an actual “smart” device — as in one that can talk to Alexa. It will notify you when your food is done and offer guided recipes in an app, among other perks. Plus, it’s also 20 percent off right now, down to $440 from $550.
Today marks the end of the Amazon Big Spring Sale and there are still a few tech deals still worth checking out, including this bundle of an Echo Show 8 paired with an Amazon Basics smart bulb. If you bought them at full price and separately, you’d pay $163, but now the set is down to $100. That amounts to a 38 percent discount. If you want the smart display on its own, it’s the same $100. That’s about $10 more than its record low price and a 33 percent savings.
Amazon
The Amazon Big Spring Sale is taking 38 percent off the latest Echo Show 8 smart display and throwing in a free Amazon smart bulb.
If you’re just starting on the path towards smart home grandeur, you can think of the set as a starter kit, as the Echo Show gives you voice and routine control over your new bulb. We named the previous generation of the Echo Show 8 the best Amazon display in our guide. It strikes a good balance between not taking up too much space and offering a sizable enough viewing area with its 8-inch screen. We also liked how adept it is at handling video calls.
We were able to get a look at this latest version of the display at a demo during Amazon’s hardware event last fall. It has a new edge-to-edge glass front and a more refined design overall. But perhaps the most interesting update is the introduction of the adaptive content feature. Depending on where you are in the room, the display will show different content: large-font time and weather info when you’re far away, and more personalized calendar and news articles when you get closer.
The bulb lets you change its brightness and color just by talking to your smart display. You can also use the Alexa app to set up routines that will, for example, turn off the light when you say “goodnight” or turn it on an hour before sunset.
Smart rings are connected devices with sensors designed to collect lots of data about you, like your steps, sleep and heart rate. They’ve been around for a while; Finnish health tech company Oura released the first version of its smart ring back in 2015. Since then, several other brands have come and gone because creating a smart ring isn’t easy – a lot of tech needs to fit into a small space while still feeling and looking good.
They can also be hard to market. Companies need to convince people to take a risk on an unknown design rather than opt for a more affordable smartwatch or fitness tracker that can (for the most part) do all of the same things. But 2024 could be the year more companies get it right – Samsung is set to release its Galaxy Ring in late 2024, and there are rumors that even Apple is working on one, too.
However, as more brands enter the space and compete for our hands and our money, there’s been an influx of lower-quality, cheap smart rings that don’t clarify how their wearable tech works or who made it.
I’ve encountered several of these myself while reviewing them for TechRadar’s best smart ring guide, and I’ve been approached by brands that won’t divulge what their tech really does or where it’s from. Let’s take a closer look at what to watch out for and how to ensure you find the best smart ring.
Carbon copies: One ring, many brands
(Image credit: Gloring)
I first became suspicious of several smart ring brands when I was researching new devices and discovered a few looked eerily similar despite being sold by different brands. I wanted to know why, and my research led me to Art Parnell, an Enterprise Systems Architect based in Northern Virginia, US. He created the SmartRings community on Reddit, which is dedicated to sharing news and holding brands accountable.
“I push for the resolution of current smart ring issues and seek improvements with app UI and connectivity,” Art tells me. “This was initially to improve my personal experience with these devices, but now I use those connections to elevate broader community concerns.”
One of the big problems with smart rings is licensees, or clones. Generally speaking, this is when a company buys a wholesale product from a third-party manufacturer – in this case, a big batch of smart rings – and then brands them as their own. This happens much more commonly than you might think across various industries, including consumer technology. If you go to Amazon and look up fitness trackers, you’ll see many cheap devices from brands you may not have heard of, and there’s a chance several of these are from the same manufacturer.
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Of course, many tech companies, including big players like Apple and Samsung, don’t create every component of their new devices themselves. However, there’s a difference between outsourcing the screen or processor of a TV, and buying the whole TV from someone else and sticking your logo on top of it.
Art calls these licensees ‘clones’ and tells me he’s dedicated to weeding them out. “I ended up creating a ‘cheat sheet’ image so that someone could recognize the most prevalent examples at a glance,” he says. “This has had mixed reactions from people loyal to one of these devices. But, most of the time, they have not even compared the device they own to another.”
It might be easier to spot clones if you’re buying a fitness tracker for your wrist, but because the smart ring market is so new, it seems that buyers aren’t doing their due diligence. They’ve just taken a new brand’s word for it.
Why would a company sell a clone? “I believe many of the licensees are just trying to take a shortcut into the smart ring space,” Art says. “Why invest in R&D when you can just buy a commercial device at wholesale and just start raking in the money?” He tells us that some companies may buy these smart ring clones for legitimate reasons, but they do it without realizing how many other companies have also licensed that same device.
The result? A whole load of rings that look the same with slightly different branding. Maybe some people won’t care; they like their new ring, the app looks nice, and everything works. But when I started reviewing one and asked the company whether it was licensed or not, they wouldn’t give me an honest answer.
Health data concerns
(Image credit: Shutterstock)
Art says there are also other reasons why the company not actually ”owning” the ring and its app can be a problem. “Licensees do not always have access to the data in their companion apps,” he explains. “Instead, some are only granted the perception of ownership with a space for their branding, perhaps a registration page, and sometimes control over the color palette.”
This is a concern for users who may think their data isn’t being stored on-device or on company servers. Health data is extremely valuable, and should remain confidential. Most legitimate companies take data privacy very seriously. However, if the ring is a clone, it could be sending the health data it collects to an unknown company for unknown purposes. You’d have to read the fine print to know it, and even then it’s not clear.,
The prevalence of smart ring clones isn’t the only problem Art has noticed over his years running the SmartRings Reddit community. He says the more rings that are being rushed to market, the more companies seem to be cutting corners.
“So many of the rings that are emerging highlight their overall features and analysis, without really seeming to care about accuracy,” Art explains. “ But, accuracy should be the foundation.” He uses the example of stress, saying that several smart rings market their stress-tracking capabilities, but that’s not something they can measure directly yet. Instead, it’s algorithms paired with heart rate data. Yet that may not account for other non-stressful situations that might increase heart rate, leading to misleading results.
He also has an issue with how smart rings are sold as providing personalized insights and recommendations, but the baselines used to make recommendations are often too general. Not considering things like non-traditional sleep schedules, shift workers or mothers tending to babies. “It’s a reasonable expectation that when people buy these rings to help them monitor their own health, that it should be exactly that. Not how your personal baselines contrast with arbitrary baselines that don’t factor in these variances,” he explains.
Some of these concerns are problems we’ve faced when assessing the accuracy of fitness and health tracking tech more generally, not just smart rings. But this doesn’t always come across in the big, bold ways they’re marketed. “Smart rings are not medical devices,” Art says. “But that doesn’t mean they should get a free pass on accuracy.”
Why honesty is the best policy for smart ring manufacturers…
(Image credit: Circular)
Art says another problem concerns customer expectation, especially given that many smart rings are crowdfunded or have faced technical difficulties. Delivery dates slip and devices don’t always look the same as early press photos. “Those who are the most vocal critics just don’t understand how crowdfunding works. Or they only have limited experience with it,” Art says “Crowdfunding platforms are not stores!”
But this problem, and most others, can be addressed by more transparency from smart ring brands every step of the way. “If [a company is] licensing a ring, be honest about its capabilities, and don’t imply or directly say that the device is made by (company country) and it is their own invention,” Art says.
The same goes for marketing claims. “Sometimes, through no fault of their own, the internal or outsourced marketing teams that companies use are often deceptive,” Art says. For example, if you say a ring is the thinnest in the world and cite specific numbers, those numbers better be right.
“Many of these products are being developed by people who don’t have experience with communications… But the better they’re able to communicate honestly on a regular basis, the more people trust them.”
…And why patience is a virtue for smart ring buyers
(Image credit: Becca Caddy)
The research firm Exactitude Consultancy predicts the smart ring market may balloon from $314.52 billion in 2023 to $2,570.30 billion by 2030, a 718 percent increase. This means more and more new devices will be hitting the market, and anyone who wants one will need to be wary.
Art’s Reddit community is a good place to start, but finding the best smart ring still requires you to do your research, which isn’t easy for everyone. “You need to verify that the company is legitimate and that the device they’re pushing is not only something unique that they’ve developed on their own, but also that their claims are realistic,” he tells us. It’ll be no surprise if people default to the big brands that have already had a lot of press interest, which means smaller brands that are genuinely creating innovative new devices could miss out.
He also tells us that people need to be wary of reviews that aren’t honest, even on Reddit communities and tech sites. “It’s a disturbing reality and part of the reason that I created the SmartRings community,” Art says. He tells us that many companies have dedicated communities, which he says have become “echo chambers of praise”. In contrast, he tries to make his community as honest as possible. “I allow company representatives to interact with posters, and I flag them as company reps so there is full transparency,” Art says.
As with all new tech developments, taking it slow and doing your best to scrutinize bold claims is the best – albeit not the easiest – advice. “Don’t take marketing hype at face value. Dig deeper, and you might find your way to your ideal device.”
Art says he’d advise most people to wait until a device is out on the market and has been tested by multiple people, even though it can be hard to wait. “Early adopters like myself know to take everything with a bit of scepticism and know that much of the time, the promises will not match reality,” Art tells us. “But everyone isn’t wired to accept this, and most don’t want to ‘invest’ time and money into something that may not pan out.”
AI firm VTouch has unveiled the Wizpr Ring: a rare smart ring that isn’t focused on fitness and health tracking. Instead, it’s packing a microphone designed to be used to ask questions and prompt conversational AI services.
This AI-powered smart ring, which earned a CES 2024 Innovation Award, is said to be ideal for dictation and conversational computing since it offers a microphone with “advanced AI capabilities” to cut out background noise, to the point where it can understand a whisper – hence the name. It’s certainly one of the more unique rings out there – all the entries in our best smart rings list are focused on fitness or NFC payments.
It offers call functionality through the proximity-sensing mic when paired with earphones, and will close the call when moving the mic away from the user’s mouth. Speaking out loud in general conversation allegedly won’t trigger the AI: the act of bringing the ring to your mouth is essentially the equivalent of saying a voice assistant’s wake word.
The Wizpr Ring pairs with a smartphone app, and works with the usual conversational AI suspects such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and more. It can interact with your smart home, too.
Although it earned an award at CES 2024, it’s not actually on shelves yet: VTouch has launched a Kickstarter for the product, which is fully funded.
Analysis: Do we really need an AI ring?
(Image credit: VTouch Inc)
While the idea of a secure way to have a conversation with AI may appeal to some, it feels like a surprising place to take the still-burgeoning smart rings category. It feels a lot like the Humane AI Pin, which uses conversational AI in a similar way and won one of our Best of MWC awards. Still, with AI and machine learning creeping into our daily lives over the last year or so, it could be a forward-thinking choice – and there’s more that it can do, too.
“AI-based conversational computing is expected to be the next big thing that goes beyond the limitations of ‘graphical user interfaces’ such as PCs and smartphones,” SJ Kim, Founder & Co-CEO of VTouch said in a press release.
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“With Wizpr Ring, we aim to realize a conversational computing environment where you can interact with AI by talking to it with your voice anytime, anywhere, without having to look at a screen.”
There’s also an SOS system to notify emergency contacts, and the WHSP RING can nudge you for task reminders, too.
Users can expect 90 hours of battery life, and it charges via USB-C. The Wizpr Ring is expected to go on sale in the US for $199, around £156 / AU$305.
The top smart air purifier in our guide is Levoit’s Core 400S Smart Air Purifier, which is currently down to $190 as part of Amazon’s Big Spring Sale. Just be sure to click the on-page coupon to take $30 off the list price. The discount is the largest we’ve seen this year, though the unit did dip to $179 in 2022’s Black Friday sale. In our tests, the unit performed better than some of its more expensive competitors and the filters are reasonably priced at $50 (other purifiers require replacements topping $100).
Photo by Amy Skorheim / Engadget
Our top pick for an air purifier is $30 off with an on-page coupon as part of Amazon’s Big Spring Sale.
Air purifiers can be a good option for days when the pollen count is high or there’s yet another wildfire burning in your region — in other words when opening a window to let in fresh air isn’t an option. The Core 400S Smart purifier can auto-detect when there’s high particulate matter in the air, adjusting the fan speed accordingly. And fortunately, the highest speed isn’t disturbingly loud, yet still circulates a good amount of air. The on-board controls are easy and the connected app is fairly easy to set schedules and the like — after you get past the superfluous forums, wellness and shopping tabs in the over-stuffed app.
It uses a three-stage system comprised of a pre filter to catch pet hair and larger dust particles, then a activated carbon layer for trapping odors and VOCs. Then there’s a HEPA filter to remove pollen, mold and even some bacteria from the air. The machine is also Energy Star and CARB certified. The design isn’t the most inspired, but the Core 400S does its job well.
The Bose Smart 600 soundbar is easily one of the best soundbars we’ve ever tested, giving you Dolby Atmos sound and plenty of wireless streaming options in a compact size, all for an affordable price.
With the arrival of the Amazon Big Spring Sale, the Bose Smart 600 soundbar just got more affordable as it’s on sale for a brilliant $449 (was $499) at Amazon. It’s not just the Bose Smart 600 soundbar either – Amazon is offering larger discounts across a range of Bose products.
In our review of the Bose Smart Soundbar 600, we said “it offers up consistently exciting sound when watching movies and TV”, praising its clear dialogue and wide soundstage that presents Dolby Atmos and surround sound effects well “extending above and beyond” the action on screen.
Movies and TV shows aren’t only where the Bose 600’s strength lies, it’s also an excellent performer with music. With plenty of wireless music streaming support from some of the best music streaming services such as Spotify, Amazon Music and more, we said the “imaging it manages with stereo music is surprisingly wide and precise”.
Overall, the Bose 600 is also a solidly-built, compact bar, measuring 27 x 2 x 4 (inches), that is ideal for those lacking in space but not wanting to lose out on sound.