The most innovative gadgets of 2018
Our favorite new ideas of the year, from an AI-enhanced frame
for your digital photos to a transcendent home pizza-making machine.
In case you hadn’t noticed, innovation is a
tricky business. The fact that a product is innovative doesn’t necessarily make
it good—see, for instance, Google’s Clips camera. Furthermore, what many people crave in the gear they buy isn’t so much
revolution as evolution. That’s why the venerable MacBook Air line refused to die even after Apple was ready to move on.
For this roundup of some of 2018’s best gadgets, we focused on
stuff that reflects fresh thinking. But in every instance, what’s new serves
the higher purpose of making the products in question more useful. Their
innovations are so well executed that you quickly forget they’re novelties. You
just enjoy the little ways they make your life better—which might be the
highest compliment you can pay a new idea.
THE MODERN-DAY
PHOTO FRAME
Every day, Google Photos users collectively upload more than 1.2
billion pictures and videos for safekeeping. But once they’re up in the cloud,
it’s hard to remember that they even exist.
That’s where the Google Home Hub comes in. Officially a “smart
display” that can respond to Google Assistant voice commands, the Home Hub
spends most of its time cycling through Google Photos on its 7-inch screen. All
you have to do is decide which people should appear in the frame, and Google
does the hard work of refreshing the screen with new pictures.
Although the Google Home Hub isn’t the first smart display of its
kind, it’s the only one so far that omits a camera, so you might feel more
comfortable putting it on your nightstand. It also has a clever “ambient”
display mode that uses warmer screen tones in the evening and flips to a barely
visible clock in the dark. The idea was to build something that feels less like
an intrusive piece of technology and more like something you’d naturally have
around–you know, like a picture frame.
$149 ($129 through December 24), Google
APPLE’S
PENCIL, PERFECTED
The original version of Apple’s Pencil pressure-sensitive stylus,
which shipped with the first iPad Pro in 2015, was a wonderful tool for drawing and painting in a bevy
of iPad art apps. But Apple didn’t give you any way to transport the
stylus with your iPad, which meant that there was a pretty good chance you’d
end up leaving it at home. If you didremember to tote it, its
battery ran down quickly. And the ungainly way you recharged it—by removing a
cap and sticking the stylus in the tablet’s Lightning port—was one of the least
Apple-esque maneuvers ever associated with an Apple product.
What a difference the new $129 Pencil—which is compatible only
with Apple’s new iPad Pro models—makes. For transport, it snaps magnetically to the edge of the tablet, a
trick Apple picked up from Microsoft’s Surface. The Pencil charges while it
clings to the iPad Pro. That does away with the whole silly charging regimen of
the previous Pencil. Bottom line: The odds that you’ll have a fully charged
Pencil at your fingertips when you want it are now dramatically higher, which
makes the whole concept much, much better.
The new iPad Pro models are pretty sweet upgrades in other ways,
too. Apple ditched the home button/Touch ID sensor in favor of Face ID,
allowing it to shrink down the tablets’ bezels and fit more screen into less
space. The company also gave these new models its monstrously powerful,
AI-optimized A12X chip, ensuring that they can run existing apps as fast as
possible—and opening up new possibilities for apps yet to come.
A MORE INSTANT
INSTANT POT
Chances are, you’ve at least heard of the Instant Pot—the
countertop pressure cooker that went viral on Amazon a few years ago. If you’re
yet to take the high-pressure plunge, the Instant Pot Max is the
industrial-quality, idiot-proof way to get started.
The Max is the first countertop pressure cooker to cook as fast as
the pressure cookers you can buy for your stove. It also has the Instant Pot’s best interface to
date, with a touch screen that lets you
hop between sous vide and slow cooking in a second, and easily tweak all sorts
of other settings. More importantly, the Max has a steam release valve that’s
controlled electronically, rather than mechanically. That means you don’t need
to sacrifice your fingers to an Old Faithful plume of steam every time you want
to release the pressure on the cooker. You just hit a button, and the Max
handles the rest.
You can get a cheaper Instant Pot than the Max for sure—and if
price is a concern, you should. But the Max is a more enjoyable, controllable,
polished product than its predecessors. It feels like the Instant Pot has grown
up.
$200, Instant Pot
DOLBY DOES
HEADPHONES
No brand is more associated with serious audio than Dolby. But its
technologies have always been an ingredient in other
companies’ gear—until now. With Dolby Dimension, a new pair of wireless
headphones, Dolby is finally offering a consumer
product of its own.
Now, the world obviously didn’t need another set of Bluetooth
headphones. And at $599, these ones aspire to reach the tippy-top of the
mainstream market. But the Dimension ‘phones are no mere Bose or Beats
wannabes. They’re optimized for listening inside the home, with a nifty storage
base that keeps them fully charged when you’re not listening. Buttons on the
right headphone cup let you switch between three gadgets—say, a TV, phone, and
tablet—on the fly. And Dolby’s LifeMix technology melds noise cancellation with
the ability to pump real-external audio into your ears on demand—say, if your
spouse wants your attention—letting you choose just how how aggressively you
want to tune out the world around you.
Most importantly, the Dimension headphones sound (and feel) good,
with a dimensionality that justifies their name. If the notion of watching a
blockbuster movie on your giant-screen HDTV while listening to the soundtrack
over headphones sounds ludicrous, you haven’t planted these on your noggin.
$600, Dolby
POLAROID
REBORN
More than a decade ago, Polaroid stopped making cameras, and it
seemed like the era of instant film photography was over. It turned out it was
just resting. Today, analog aficionados have a bunch of cameras to choose from.
There are models from FujiFilm, Lomography, and—since last year—a revived
version of Polaroid that goes under the brand Polaroid Originals.
The newest Polaroid Originals camera, the OneStep+, looks a lot
like the original OneStep from the 1970s, including the rainbow stripe down its
middle. But the plus sign in its name indicates that this film camera isn’t a
mere old-school point and shoot. It connects to a Polaroid smartphone app via
Bluetooth, providing access to numerous new features, including light-painting
and multiple-exposure options, manual settings, and the ability to trigger the
shutter by clapping your hands or otherwise raising a noisy ruckus.
In the end, the main attractions are the lovably retro,
exuberantly physical snapshots, which cost $2 a shot. Still,
it’s fun to see the definition of what a Polaroid camera can evolve to do—ever
so slightly—for the 21st century.
A PHONE WITH A
BRAIN
Strictly in terms of hardware, Google’s Pixel 3 ticks all the
boxes that a high-end phone should. It has a vibrant display, a
slick-yet-playful design, and a speedy camera that excels in any lighting
conditions. Its dual-lens selfie cam, which can zoom out to fit more people in
the frame, is an especially nice touch.
What really sets the Pixel 3 apart, however, is its Google
Assistant smarts. A camera feature called Night Sight, for instance, takes
unrealistically well-lit photos in the dark by stitching together multiple
images, using machine learning to pick the right white balance and exposure
levels for each frame. And with Call Screen, users can have Google Assistant
pick up the phone, ask who’s calling, and provide a transcript. It’s a
satisfying way to screen out telemarketers and troll your friends.
Those features get to the heart of why Google is building phones
in the first place, rather than ceding the entire job to other Android vendors
like Samsung and Motorola: None of those companies can be trusted to put Google
Assistant front and center. The Pixel 3, by comparison, is all about letting
Google’s AI shine.
Starting at $799 ($699 through December 22), Google
ONE SMALL
VICTORY AGAINST SCREEN ADDICTION
For years now, the trend in smartphone design has been inexorable:
Bigger is better. But in 2018, many people are wondering if their immersive,
large-screen phones were getting in the way of the pleasures of everyday analog living. Enter Palm, a startup which has borrowed the name of the once-mighty maker of personal
digital assistants. Its namesake device runs Android apps and
makes phone calls. But it’s proudly tiny, with a 3.3-inch screen that
wouldn’t have looked particularly small a dozen years ago, but now feels
positively Lilliputian.
The Palm, a Verizon exclusive in the U.S., isn’t trying to wean
you entirely off your bigphone, whose phone number it can share. But the idea
is that you might be happier with something less attention-grabbing when you’re
working out, spending time with loved ones, or otherwise engaged in activities
that should get most of your focus. Along with its undersized dimensions, it
reflects this philosophy in its software, which includes features such as a
“Life Mode” that prevents unwanted notifications and calls from distracting
you.
At $350-plus a $10/month fee on your Verizon bill—the Palm isn’t
for folks who are merely intrigued by the idea. Give its creators credit,
though, for defiantly ignoring the conventional wisdom about what a pocket-sized
communications device should strive to be. In a sea of largely similar
smartphones, it’s a choice, not an echo.
$350, Palm
THE COUNTERTOP
PIZZERIA
Wood-fired pizza ovens are all the rage at restaurants, and for
good reason. You need a highly specialized, 750-degree space to create those
same, goopy-crispy Neapolitan-style pizzas we’ve seen immortalized on shows
like Ugly Delicious.
Breville’s Smart Oven Pizzaiolo is the
product of four years of development at the company, to translate the
experience of a large brick oven into a relatively small appliance that can fit
on your countertop. Its innovations are in the sheer number of ways it cooks
your pizza—at the same time. It features radiant heat from above, shaped in
concentric circles, to char the edges of the crust without carbonizing the
middle. And it also features a heated stone platform, crisping up the bottom
directly.
It’ll smoke the heck out of your condo, granted, and sometimes
loose cheese will burst into flames on its cooking deck. But this pizza maker
can bake restaurant-quality pies in as little as 90 seconds. Plus it has
settings for pan pizza and New York style pies–along with a total control “hack
mode”—for those days you crave variety. The $800 Pizzaiolo is a splurge for
sure, but nothing will make you feel so accomplished as cooking the perfect
margarita pizza inside your own kitchen, and bragging incessantly about it to
everyone.
$800, Breville
By Harry McCracken, Jared Newman, and Mark Wilson.
https://www.fastcompany.com/90279390/the-most-innovative-gadgets-of-2018
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