Someone asked me today if CES 2022 has offered “a fix for Covid,”yet. After all, it is the epicenter of future tech – chock full of all kinds of innovation, inventions, and wild ideas – that just might become one of the top gadgets of its time. Past shows brought us the first home VCR, Tetris, Oculus Rift, and who could ever forget the toilet-paper delivery robot?
Alas, there was no new magical device to cure COVID this year – or even help get rapid tests to areas overrun with omicron – which now includes Las Vegas, too.
But there was a cute little plushy robot that nibbles on your fingers to “comfort you and brighten up your day,” which once again reminds me you can’t make this stuff up. While that’s one you can’t forget because it’s just so… odd, yet awesome, there are several more that caught my eye.
Here are the most notable gadgets to come out of CES’s wellness category, which includes health, fitness, and yes, even a stuffed animal that chews on your fingers.
The digital fitness industry’s having its “on steroids” moment, metaphorically speaking of course, and an at-home rowing machine called Hydrow made quite a splash at CES.
It’s basically the Peloton of rowing, with perky, tough, and inspirational instructors leading you through more than 3,000 live and on-demand workouts atop a machine that feels more life-like than most other rowers on the market. It’s quiet, and you can customize the drag to cut through imagined water with meditative ease – or go all out in a full-fledged race. It also offers scenic rows in beautiful places like Walden Pond in Massachusetts and Lake Lucerne in Switzerland.
If done correctly, rowing engages 86% of the body's major muscle groups, yet it’s low-impact and easy to learn, whether you’re a beginner or seasoned athlete. I’ve been using it daily for the past two weeks – and wow, I’m sore in places I didn’t even know I had muscles.
At just a tad over 7 feet long, two feet wide, and almost 4 feet tall measuring to the top of the monitor, it takes up its fair share of space in your average living room. The company sells an $80 upright conversion storage kit that secures to a wall and provides a quick fix for tighter spaces. Just bear in mind that the machine weights 145 pounds so merely moving it from horizontal to vertical is a workout. The cost is $2,295 + $38/month subscription, but check the company’s website because as of the time I’m writing this, they have a big sale going on until Sunday.
Here’s one for the littles: The Picoo “outdoor game console” shows promise for getting kids ages 4 to 12, off their screens and outside to play and run around. The starter set ($281) comes with four “consoles” – which are screenless, flashlight-looking handheld controllers that light up and use a speaker, accelerometer, and vibration for play. The set also comes with five cards suggesting games like Whack-a-Mole, Zombie Run, or Lighting Bolt. To start, a child scans a card, then follows tasks either solo or as part of a team. What really stands out is that it’s social, encourages kids to go outside, is safe and quite inclusive for any special needs.
►A gaming console that gets kids outside? Meet Picoo
We’ve seen a slew of UV light sanitizing gadgets launch since the start of the pandemic, but we’ve never seen one that sticks to the back of your own smartphone before. The UVCeed ($129.95) is a just-slightly-larger-than-credit-card sized device that magnetically attaches to the back of your smartphone and promises to kill 99.9% of germs, bacteria and viruses, including COVID-19.
The company’s press release says it uses “powerful mercury-free LED UV light rays and multiple sensors,” to scan and sanitize most common surfaces in seconds, including keys, keyboards, remote controls, and doorknobs. It’s not safe to use on your own skin.
The way it works is simple; attach UVCeed to your phone, open its app, point your phone at a surface, press a button that appears in augmented reality on the app, and watch as it zaps nasties in real time. The lights turn themselves off if it senses a human or animal, so it’s built not to expose anything that shouldn’t be, to the UV-C type radiation. It retails for $130 and is available to buy now.
► Talking Tech newsletter: Sign up for our guide to the week's biggest tech news
My husband is fairly immune to the lures of a cute gadget. He sees many of the 1,000+ new devices I review every year and he’s pretty over it all. Then, Bob the Mini Dishwasher arrived at our doorstep, and he now has a tech-crush the likes I’ve never really seen before.
The WiFi-connected, microwave-sized mini dishwasher snuggles up next to your sink and can wash dinner dishes for two or a days’ worth of dishes for one using the one-gallon integrated water tank – so you don’t have to attach it to a water supply. The wash cycle is a super-fast twenty minutes, and the company says it uses five times less water than doing the dishes by hand.
Oh, and it’s another one of these just-in-time-for-COVID gadgets, with a UV-C sanitation option that kills 99% of bacteria and viruses with a waterless cycle. This one is available for pre-order now, retails for $400, comes in an array of snappy colors, and is as perfect as it gets for cramped apartments or escaping to a tiny home.
When I asked my husband why he’s so smitten with Bob, he said, “How can something this small, that takes up so little space, be this functional? It’s not needy: I don’t need any special plumbing or anything other than a place to drain it. It uses so little water. It’s just really cute. I want to tuck it under my arm and take it for a walk around the block. And it saves me from hand-washing all those dirty glasses I find at the end of the day that you’ve left lying around everywhere.”
► The weirdest stuff we saw at CES 2022: John Deere's self-driving tractor, robot masseuses
Could your lightbulb help you out if you’ve fallen and can’t get up? According to a company called Sengled, the answer is a resounding, “yes.” It just unveiled a Smart Health Monitoring lightbulb with a Wi-Fi and Bluetooth mesh dual chip, that uses radar to track biometric measurements such as heart rate, body temperature and other vital signs like sleep monitoring. In a press release, the company says that by connecting multiple bulbs via Bluetooth Mesh and creating a virtual map across your home, the smart light “can even help detect human behavior and determine if someone has fallen and then send for help.” It’s expected out in late 2022; no word yet on a price.
► These are the products from CES 2022 that I'd actually buy: vSmart faucet, 97-inch OLED TV
From the company that gave us that weird, furry pillow with a prolific wagging tail, Quoobo, a few years back, comes the year’s most oddly intriguing new wacky gadget: the Amagami Ham Ham finger-nibbling stuffed animal robot.
The man who invented it says it’s built as a comforting companion based on the character from Japan’s wildly popular “Nemu Nemu” stuffed-animal series. “The robot uses a special algorithm, “HAMgorithm,” to randomly select from two dozen “nibbling patterns” to keep users interested,” reads the press release. “Most people like the nibbling sensation but know they need to teach their children or pets to stop it, because kids and animals will otherwise bite them with full force eventually,” adds Tsubasa Tominaga, the Yukai Engineering CMO who came up with the idea. “It’s our hope that playing with this cute robot will comfort you and brighten up your day at CES 2022,” he said.
I have asked for a review unit of the odd little character, and the company promised to send one with the next month or two, so expect a follow-up, fingers-on for sure.
► Personal computers aren't dead yet: Laptops are showing new signs of life at CES
Jennifer Jolly is an Emmy Award-winning consumer tech columnist. Email her at jj@techish.com. Follow her on Twitter: @JenniferJolly. The views and opinions expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of USA TODAY.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: CES 2022: Bob the Mini Dishwasher, other cool health and wellness gear
Among the odder sights at this year's Consumer Electronics Show: an autonomous tractor from John Deere and robots that will give you a massage.
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) stock has been in turnaround mode since crashing heavily after the release of its third-quarter results on Oct. 21, 2021, as there have been signs of a turnaround in Chipzilla's business thanks to its new products. For instance, Intel's latest Alder Lake central processing units (CPUs) are reportedly gaining market share against Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), as they are based on a competitive manufacturing process, are priced aggressively, and can deliver solid performance. Let's take a closer look at Intel's latest move in the multi-billion-dollar graphics cards market and check how this could be a big deal for the chip giant's comeback efforts.
After Roblox (NYSE: RBLX) stock bounced back briefly yesterday from its sell-off earlier in the week, Friday arrived with more bad news for its investors — and that news arrived already a month stale. As Reuters just reported, the video gaming platform's Chinese app "was shut down on Dec. 8." Roblox stock is down 4.4% as of 10:20 a.m. ET today.
These tech stocks should be able to take advantage of secular growth trends making them worth buying for the long haul.
In this article, we will discuss the 12 best cloud computing stocks for 2022. If you want to skip our detailed analysis of these stocks, you can go directly to the 5 Best Cloud Computing Stocks For 2022. Cloud computing is one of the fastest-growing industries in the technology sector. According to Gartner, spending on […]
In a new interview, former Apple engineer Tony Fadell — who's credited with inventing the iPod and helping design the iPhone — says Jobs taught him how to anticipate and serve a customer's wishes.
Northrop Grumman Corp. has rallied strongly from early December. In this daily bar chart of NOC, below, we can see that prices are above the 50-day and 200-day moving average lines. The 50-day line has a negative slope and the 200-day line is positive.
Piper Sandler analyst Rob Owens upgraded GitLab Inc (NASDAQ: GTLB) to Overweight from Neutral with an unchanged price target of $100, suggesting a 45.2% upside. Many of the demand drivers positively impacted cybersecurity spending in 2021 remain in play as we enter 2022, Owens tells investors in a research note. Add to that a "relatively optimistic" IT spending outlook with security prioritization forecasted to continue in 2022, and the "perfect storm" for increased cybersecurity demand will sus
(Bloomberg) — Sonos Inc. rose after winning a trade agency case against Alphabet Inc.’s Google that analysts including one at Morgan Stanley say could help push the companies into an eventual agreement over patent royalties for home audio systems.The U.S. International Trade Commission on Thursday issued an order that Google must stop importing phones, smart home devices and laptops that are using Sonos’ patented inventions without permission. Barring an unlikely reprieve from the Biden adminis
(Bloomberg) — Box Inc. Chief Executive Officer Aaron Levie won his struggle late last year with an activist investor to retain control of the company. Now, he’s fighting to fend off software rivals seeking to undermine his plan to turn Box’s technology into the central platform for corporate document management.“I’ve never been more excited about the opportunity ahead of us,” Levie said in an interview. “We believe that we are in a really good spot to invest in the product and platform.”As Box
One cheap tech stock that stands out is Intel (NASDAQ: INTC). Intel has lost considerable market share to rivals in recent years, but it still commands the lion's share of chip sales, and CEO Pat Gelsinger has a clear strategy to retake the throne. Here are five reasons why Intel stock is a bargain.
T-Mobile just posted the most postpaid phone net additions in years, but shares are falling in after-hours trading because they missed analysts' expectations.
Cloud computing and software-as-a-service stocks have been hit hard as investors fear higher interest rates, inflation and other headwinds will blunt tech spending in the new year, but some analysts see the pullback as a buying opportunity.
Everything you need to know about the TV technologies at CES 2022.
Amid the COVID-truncated CES 2022 show this year, with multiple companies canceling their plans to attend the Las Vegas confab, one newly introduced entertainment-tech product stood out: Samsung’s ultra-portable, versatile Freestyle HD projector — priced at an affordable $900. In recent years, CES has often served as a platform for high-concept, futuristic tech which may […]
Scalable compute architecture featuring system-on-chips developed by Qualcomm Inc (NASDAQ: QCOM) will power General Motors Co's (NYSE: GM) next-generation hands-free driver-assist system, Ultra Cruise. GM will be the first to use the Qualcomm Snapdragon Ride Platform for advanced driver assistance technology. The technology features a 5-nanometer Snapdragon SA8540P SoC and SA9000P artificial intelligence accelerator. Ultra Cruise's compute, which is about the size of two laptops stacked together
General Motors on Thursday said a trio of chips from Qualcomm Inc will power the "Ultra Cruise" driver-assistance feature on a luxury Cadillac sedan next year. The Qualcomm chips will provide the computing power for the all-electric Celestiq, the company's planned flagship sedan. The automaker says that Ultra Cruise will allow for hands-free driving on both surface streets and freeways to account for up to 95% of roads in the United States and Canada, going beyond GM's current Super Cruise feature that only works on highways.
Now, the time may finally be ripe — and the best contenders for super apps come from the fintech world, especially those platforms dedicated to cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency is quickly growing in popularity amid sky-high equity prices, record-low interest rates and fear of inflation on the horizon, and they could, perhaps, gain more legitimacy if the U.S. government decides to fully regulate them, a topic Congress is currently exploring. Dedicated crypto platforms like Coinbase or even Paypal, Venmo and Stripe, which recently added abilities to use crypto for payments, could evolve into the U.S. versions of super apps, assuming crypto issuers can work with regulators to find a middle ground between protecting the consumer and creating new financial and investment opportunities.
Majority of passengers on two flights from Italy to Amritsar in India test positive for Covid-19.
5G has indeed arrived, bringing with it high expectations on user experience as well as a wide range of exciting business opportunities. At the same time, it’s clear that if 5G is managed in the sa…
COVID-19
Surviving The 2nd Wave of Corona
‘This too shall pass away’ this famous Persian adage seems to be defeating us again and again in the case of COVID-19. Despite every effort