The new Nest Cam IQ gets a big boost in image quality and smarts


I’ve been using Nest home security cameras in my home for years. They’ve always been the leader in image quality and cloud DVR features and they have announced the new Nest Cam IQ indoor camera which adds some exciting updates that I can’t wait to try for myself.

First of all, the IQ has a 4K image sensor with HDR and what Nest is calling Supersite. The updated image sensor is important as the new Nest will be able to tell the difference between your spouse coming in the door and an intruder and will alert you either way.

The Nest Cam IQ also has an updated built-in microphone and speaker for 2-way conversations.

The IQ isn’t available just yet, but you can pre-order one for $299 and two for $498.

You’ll also need to purchase a Nest Aware subscription for the cloud DVR features. Nest Aware subscriptions are $10 or $30 a month with a discount when you pay for a year at a time.

For more info visit nest.com

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The new Nest Cam IQ gets a big boost in image quality and smarts originally appeared on on June 4, 2017 at 8:00 am.

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Samsung Galaxy S8, headphones, and more – Weekly roundup


Before the week ends, make sure you take a look at a full listing of all the reviews and news that were posted this week. Click through to make sure you didn’t miss anything.

Reviews

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Samsung Galaxy S8, headphones, and more – Weekly roundup originally appeared on on June 3, 2017 at 10:08 pm.

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The most unique fidget spinner you can buy


Have you jumped on the fidget spinner bandwagon yet? It seems like where ever I turn, there are fidget spinners in all manner of colors, shapes, and sizes. But no matter which one you buy for your kids (or yourself), someone else can buy the same one. If you’re into unique fidget spinners, then consider buying one from Slickwraps with your own custom artwork.

Slickwraps is a company known for smartphone skins. Now they are taking advantage of the fidget spinner craze and selling their own spinners with the option of adding a custom skin.

The custom artwork can come from linking to your Instagram, Facebook account, Slickwraps clipart, or your own uploaded images.

Look at this awesome fidget spinner! It’s a one of a kind that can be yours for the low low price of $12.99. 🙂 Just head over to slickwraps.com and make your own unique fidget spinner. Hurry before this fad fades!

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The most unique fidget spinner you can buy originally appeared on on June 3, 2017 at 4:52 pm.

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Syncwire SW-AC01 four-port USB charger review


“Dad! Do we have another USB charger??!! The batteries in my calculator are dead and I need it for homework!” 

Sound familiar to you? I think I hear phrases similar to this once or twice a week in my house. There never seems to be enough power sockets. Just prior to wiring this review, I checked my daughter’s bedroom and found four single-socket USB chargers crowding two wall sockets, powering her phone, Bluetooth speakers, TI calculator, and portable power supply. She even unplugged a lamp to accommodate the charger she needed for the calculator.  I guess she would rather do the math than being able to see what she’s writing. Priorities, priorities…

Enter Syncwire’s SW-AC01 four-port USB charger. This powerhouse provides a generous 6800mA, or 34 Watts, staggered across two 1 Amp and two 2.1 Amp USB Type A sockets. There are no cords included. Measurements are 2.5 x 2.75 x 1.75”, not overly large, but certainly heftier than your standard iPhone wall-wart. For reference, if one were to assemble four iPhone adapters into a cube, it would be about the same dimensions as this adapter.

On a recent trip to South Carolina, I simultaneously charged my phone equipped with a monster brick backup battery, my daughter’s phone, my iWatch, and a Bluetooth headset.  It was a pleasure to pack a single supply, rather than a gaggle of gadgets. I was thankful the SW-AC01 sports folding two-prong plug, making it easy to toss into a backpack without worrying about damaging the plug (been there, done that).

International adapters are included. Syncwire’s implementation of these plugs is innovative, not requiring the built-in Type-A “American style” plug to be deployed to attach the international adaptor of your choice. Very clever.  This means that unlike many comparable models, the SW-AC01 does not need a separate adapter and stays considerably tighter to the wall. This is safer, sturdier and helps prevent accidental unplugging. Several years ago, I had this occur while in Italy and I assure you, it’s a very uneasy feeling knowing your phone battery is near death with a full day ahead in a country where you don’t speak the language and Google Translate is a necessity to prevent from tipping a cab driver so much that he can retire.

I’ve noticed a trend lately that manufacturers are cutting costs by not including power supplies with the devices they sell. It only makes sense to have one (or more) of these useful USB supplies handy. Syncwire’s SW-AC01 fills the need for additional power, saves on the crap I carry, and returns several wall sockets to me, restoring my ability to scold my daughter because she’s trying to read and it’s too dark in her room.

Source: The sample for this review was provided by Syncwire. Please visit their site for more info and Amazon to order.

 

Product Information

Price: $17.99
Manufacturer: Syncwire
Retailer: Amazon
Pros:
  • Inexpensive
  • Innovative international plug adapter design
  • Ample capacity
Cons:
  • none

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Syncwire SW-AC01 four-port USB charger review originally appeared on on June 3, 2017 at 8:31 am.

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Woolet 2.0 wallet review


Writing this review really has been a journey for me. You see, I am someone who frequently loses small (and medium, and large) items with frightening regularity. This is why I rely on a scientifically proven system of “leaving things wherever I might be when I decided I no longer need them and hoping I can find them later.” No internal discipline seems to exist that I can summon forth to prevent me from leaving things in potentially unexpected places.

To combat this failing, I’ve taken to attaching tracking devices to the more important bits of tat that I might misplace, and it’s been a successful approach for the most part. Over the last couple of years, several companies have cropped up offering small, battery-powered devices that will help you to keep track of your bits and bobs. I’ve tried most of them, and I consider myself an expert, or at the very least, can say that I’ve spent dozens of hours looking for things that, ostensibly, should be beeping very loudly right now because I told it to in the damn app.

Today, I bring you the Woolet 2.0 from Woolet. According to Woolet (the company, not the wallet), the second version of their namesake product brings a louder buzzer, better protection for the internal electronics, and other, more minor improvements to the Woolet (the wallet, not the company) line.

The Woolet 2.0 looks nice, if unexciting. It features four credit card slots, each of which is intended to hold only one card at a time. A larger, fifth slot can hold an additional four cards. I, personally, had no issue putting two or even three cards in the slots designed for a single card, as they are generously sized, and lined well enough to ensure that cards slide in and out with ease. The Woolet also includes a flap covered pocket in the bill pocket that allows you to carry any number of things such as dental floss, a prophylactic*, a competitor’s product, some coins, or a very small book. For reasons that will become apparent, I found the small pocket very useful.

The Woolet Experience

This review has taken me a very long time to write. I’ve been trying to be sure I’m giving the Woolet a fair shake, though I’ve faced more than a couple hurdles. For starters, the Woolet arrives in a state somewhere between dead and vaguely charged. You need to get it on a QI charging pad to get it charged enough to pair with your phone or tablet. This is where the first issues became apparent.

I have a few QI chargers around the house, but wanted to use the Woolet supplied charger to ensure a thorough review of what was sent to me. The Woolet QI charger is best described as a beautiful mess.

I received my first Woolet QI charger – you can see where this is going – and used it for a few days, doing battery tests and giving it a good overall workout. I think leg day was too much for it, however, and it stopped working soon after testing it. I wasn’t terribly surprised when it died, either, as there is one glaring flaw in the design. The Woolet QI charger (pictured) is a chunky slab of leather with an embossed logo and beautiful stitching. What it lacks, though, is any true mechanical support for the micro USB port centered on one end. At some point, and during reasonably careful handling, the contacts on the Micro USB port were levered off their pads on the PCB, and the charger promptly stopped working. After requesting, and receiving a replacement charger, I set to seeing what was wrong with the first and got out my stitch ripper. Having several hundred (they’re sold in spools!) Micro USB ports handy, I desoldered and replaced the Micro USB port. This worked immediately. Once working, I purposefully put downward pressure on the cable and was able to easily peel it off the board. I’ve now tested three times, and it takes only 2.8lbs of pressure on an attached cable at two inches from the connection to break the USB port off the PCB. I can say at least that they appeared to have chosen a good PCB fabricator, as the traces have yet to pull off the board, despite multiple reflows!

I believe that, for $89, one should be able to expect a bit more durability than I’ve seen here. Given that there are dramatically cheaper QI charging options on Amazon, I’d recommend against the Woolet branded charger.

If the Woolet (the company, not the wallet) charger is not for me, how about the Woolet (the wallet this time) itself? I’ll skip to the point and say I’m not a fan. That said, neither is the Woolet. It’s a wallet.


The Woolet app is very simple, and while it provides some nice features, it doesn’t change the fact that the Woolet itself is not quite ready for prime time.

After installing the app, and charging the wallet, I followed the steps to pair the Woolet., and failed. I was unable to get it to pair the first dozen or so times I tried. Shortly before my patience ran out entirely, it paired. I named my Woolet in the app, and approximately 90 seconds later, I got a notification on my iPhone that I’d left my Woolet at home. Given that I was still at home, and that I hadn’t stood up, much less traveled outdoors, I was confused. I dismissed the notification, assuming it was a test or some one-off bug. A few minutes later, however, I received another notification, this time while the Woolet was nine inches from my phone. This drove me right back into the app, where I tapped the Help option and was immediately encouraged to set Quiet Zones, which tell the app to NOT lie about where your Woolet might or might not allegedly be so long as you remain in a particular area such as your home or office. I’m not surprised that this seems to be the first goal of the built-in help, as without the quiet zones, the Woolet can get a bit needy. I set the Woolet on my desk at work, two feet from my phone, and removed the quiet zone. Though the Woolet did not wander off, I received 4 notifications in four hours that I’d left it behind. This is more than a bit annoying.


One feature that the Woolet sports is the ability to make it play a little tune to help your search should you lose it. In theory, this is a tried and true technology, being found years before in products like Tile’s… Tile. Really, if car companies were as creative as tracker companies, I’d be driving the Acura Acura. The issue is that Woolet has a very, very puny buzzer, and one that’s under a couple layers of leather at that. I was frequently unable to hear it in a room if the air conditioner was going. This frustrated me to no end, as I’d committed to using the Woolet as my primary wallet for the duration of the review period. In an attempt to ensure that I didn’t lose my credit cards, I tucked a Tile Slim into the flapped pocket in my Woolet and tested it out. I was able to hear the Tile through the same amount of leather, and also with the PCB in the way from outside the room, with the door closed. That is, as far as I am concerned, almost all you need to know about which solution I’d prefer to trust with my valuables.

Conclusion 

In the end, I cannot recommend the Woolet 2.0 to anyone based on its performance over the last couple of months. I’ve watched others’ video reviews of the Woolet and have not been able to recreate the same, generally more positive results that they seem to have had. The reality remains that even if the constant false alarms weren’t an issue, the inaudibility of the buzzer really limits the Woolet’s value in my view. The Woolet is available now from Woolet.co, with models ranging from $109.00 to $149.00.

*Do not put prophylactics in your wallet. That’s liable to create surprises later.

Source: The sample for this review was provided by Woolet. For more info visit their site.

 

Product Information

Price: $109.00 – $149.00
Manufacturer: Woolet
Cons:
  • False alarms
  • Quiet buzzer

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Woolet 2.0 wallet review originally appeared on on June 2, 2017 at 3:18 pm.

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