It’s an extra deviceto buy, charge, configure, program, and carry.The novelty of using (and charging) a stand-alone device will wear off quickly. While this seems simple, this is one of the top reasons why consumers don’t use wearables. The “learning m...
Most notably, it costs $199 to start and requires no subscription to use. Since the R1 is being marketed as an alternative to smartphones that can help you get more done in less time, a key selling point is how cheap it is to buy and use regularly. Though since you would need a 4G...
Even in the instances where the R1’s Vision mode works well, I’ve found it to be nothing more than a cool tech demo. Is it technically impressive that I can point the R1 at my living room and have it tell me it sees a “cozy and colorful living room” with “a brown couch and...
The Rabbit R1 is not good enough to make me, for example, buy an attachment strap so that I could wear the thing. For what it does, I'm pretty happy doing it with my phone. For the additional functionality it provides, I'm pretty sure that'll end up being baked into yourfavorite ...
Sometimes, I get too lazy to read an article in its entirety. This is where the Rabbit R1 swoops in to save the day. Credit: Mashable I can point it at a screen with a lengthy, verbose text — and it will give me the gist of the story. I've also done the same with emails, ...
The Rabbit R1 handheld AI device is a simple Android device, and a developer made the AI run on an iPhone.
“Today is the beginning of a new era in human-machine interaction… We’ve come to a point where we have hundreds of apps on our smartphones with complicated UX designs that don’t talk to each other. As a result, end users are frustrated with their devices and are often getting lost...
It does have an 8MP camera, but it's not designed to take photos. Instead, the built-in shooter is for the Rabbit R1's "Vision" feature (a perk where the AI can give you descriptions of things by "seeing" them). The Rabbit R1's "Vision feature" in action. Credit: Kimberly ...
The best gadgets at CES are the ones you’d never see coming. Not the iterative updates, where everything gets a little brighter and a little faster but nothing fundamentally changes. No, we like the E Ink toilets and thecrab-walking carsand the rolling projectors that show you...
My Brother Rabbit is a beautifully drawn adventure set in a surreal world that mixes reality with a child’s imagination. A young girl faces a terrible reality when she falls ill. The little girl and her brother use the power of imagination to escape the