Home IT Info News Today From Amazon Echo to Oculus Touch: Best Personal Tech of 2016

From Amazon Echo to Oculus Touch: Best Personal Tech of 2016

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From Amazon Echo to Oculus Touch: Best Personal Tech
From Amazon Echo to Oculus Touch: Best Personal Tech

2016 may have been a bad year for most things, but it was actually a pretty good year for technology, with plenty of new products and services released that were worth the digital ink used to describe them.



Sky Q


Traditional broadcast TV services have stagnated over the past couple of years, while over-the-top services such as Amazon Video, Netflix and the BBC’s iPlayer led the way. Sky’s Q dragged broadcast TV kicking and screaming into the 21st century with a modern interface, fast box and service that put time and place shifting at the heart of it.


It records, it downloads, it supports 4K and can spit video around your house via Q Mini boxes or the Q app on smartphones and tablets using your home network.



Wireless Earbuds


Bluetooth headphones are almost mainstream. From Beats and Bose to old school brands such as Sennheiser and Marshall, almost every manufacturer has a set. But 2016 was the year that truly wireless earbuds — no wires connecting them at all — became a thing.


Many tried and failed to produce wireless earbuds, but they weren’t capable of maintaining a stable connection between your ears because pushing the low-energy Bluetooth signal through your head when there’s any interference in the air is difficult.


Apple had to delay its AirPods, but at the end of 2016 Jabra’s Elite Sport and Bragi’s the Headphone proved it could be done. You’ll still have to pay early adopter prices, but they do what they say on the tin.



Oculus Touch Controllers


2016 was the year of virtual reality. From HTC’s Vive to Google’s Daydream, there was a headset to suit almost any budget. But it was the release of Oculus’ Touch controllers [pictured above] that really made VR an experience worth having.


The revolutionary hand controllers did more than just track the motions of your hands and give you buttons to squeeze. They actually tracked the position of your fingers on the controllers — you can point, grab, squeeze, give the thumbs up and pull a trigger with ease. The natural import of your hands into the virtual world is simply brilliant, even if you still need a £1,000 PC to run it.



Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge


We’d had curved screened smartphones before, but the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge showed just why they were good. With a stunning 5.5in curved-edge screen, Samsung made a phablet in the body of a standard smartphone. It made a large-screen experience in a non-hand-stretching size with an excellent camera, waterproofing, expandable storage and all-day battery life to boot.



Amazon Echo, Echo Dot and Alexa


Voice assistants have been around in the form of Apple’s Siri and Google’s voice search since 2011. But it was Amazon’s Echo speaker and Echo Dot that brought voice control into the home.


For answering questions, reading the news, playing music and being an everyday assistant with timers, alarms, alerts and even being a calculator when you’re elbow deep in a DIY project, Alexa can do it all and amazingly can hear you above the racket of daily life.


But it was Alexa’s smarthome integration that really made the Internet of Things a reality, connecting and controlling disparate devices using voice commands. Want the lights on? Just ask. Maybe set the heating to a few degrees warmer? Yep. With the right equipment, it can even turn your TV over to the right channel and turn it all off when you head to bed.



Bose QC 35


Commuting sucks, but noise-canceling headphones that block out the drone of your train, bus or airplane can make it a little more bearable. After years of avoiding wireless, Bose finally brought its world-leading noise-canceling technology to Bluetooth headphones in the QC35s.


With an unrivaled ability to block out the world in a comfortable and sophisticated-looking frame, the QC35s are simply marvelous.



Dyson 360 Eye


Robot vacuums have been around for years, with many relying on simply bumping into things to make their way around your home. Dyson’s 360 Eye brought a vision system that maps out your home and added a proper vacuum cleaning bar to create one of the best around.


It costs a pretty penny, but it’ll get on with the chores cleaning your home more effectively than any other robot while you’re out living rather than home vacuuming.



Amazon Kindle Oasis


E-readers are a commodity item now, available for under £50 and able to carry millions of books. Amazon’s Kindle Oasis bucked the trend for the race to the bottom: an ultra premium ebook reader that costs as much as a tablet, but does just one thing exceptionally well.


With a real leather battery case that detaches to leave a svelte screen with buttons, which gets out of the way to let the book shine on the front-lit screen, the Oasis is the e-reader to top all e-readers. A luxury in the digital book era.



Samsung SmartThings Hub


The Internet of Things is a mess of different smart devices that refuse to talk to each other. Samsung’s SmartThings Hub acts as the bridge between brands, connecting your Z-Wave, Zigbee and Wi-Fi devices into one big happy family.


Some devices are supported natively, but it is the large developer community working tirelessly to hack together ways to connect stubborn devices that really makes SmartThings. If you’re comfortable getting your hands a little dirty on the backend — with some pretty extensive instructions — then the Hub can join everything up and bring your house under control.

© 2016 Guardian Web
syndicated under contract with NewsEdge. -.

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