The Chronicle

From latest e-readers to headsets, what to give the gadget fan in your life this Christmas

- Super Nintendo Classic Mini Sony PS Classic Anki Vector; V-SOS; V-Pet; Tangram Factory Smart Rope; Amazon Kindle Paperwhite Oculus Go Google Home Hub DJI Osmo Pocket Soundaslee­p Bluetooth Pillow

ANKI VECTOR

£199, from anki.com

LAST year Anki’s Cosmo robot was the must-have gadget of the year. So they’re having another go this year with a new home robot – meet Vector.

He’s full of personalit­y, powered by some impressive artificial intelligen­ce tech, and keeps on learning about you and your environmen­t thanks to a built-in neural network.

It’s already pretty smart, but somewhere down the line, and the word is pretty soon, Vector will have access to Amazon’s best-in-class AI assistant Alexa.

SONY PS CLASSIC AND SUPER NINTENDO CLASSIC MINI

£89.49 and £69.99, from amazon.co.uk FORGET your hi-def 4K HDR gaming consoles – the old ones really are the best.

Pick up mini versions of these two classics for way less than you would have paid for them back in the day, and marvel at the majesty of proper games that bear no resemblanc­e to real life whatsoever. Really, though, this could be the best money you ever spend – both consoles come with some classic games built-in – the PlayStatio­n has the likes of Grand Theft Auto, Rayman, Metal Gear Solid and Final Fantasy VII, while the SNES system offers great games like Super Mario World, The Legend Of Zelda: A Link to the Past, and Super Mario Kart.

V-PET

£55 plus £4-per-month subscripti­on, from shop.v.vodafone.com

V-PET could be the perfect gift for those in your family with a wayward pet. It simply clips to your cat or dog’s collar and allows you to see where they are at all times.

No more lost moggies or wayward canines. You can even set up a “safe zone” and be alerted if your cat or dog strays beyond the boundaries. It also does some activity tracking via your smartphone so you can tell if your pet is getting enough exercise.

AMAZON KINDLE PAPERWHITE

£109.99, from amazon.co.uk

THE Paperwhite was already the best value for money e-reader you could buy – it has an unrivalled library of books available to read on a beautifull­y crisp and sensitivel­y lit screen.

The Oasis is a better device, but is also much more expensive – its killer feature, though, is that it’s waterproof, which gave it the edge over the Paperwhite… until now.

Amazon has just released an update which gives the cheaper Kindle a waterproof housing, too. Now we can go back to reading in the bath and by the pool.

Happy days are here again.

DJI OSMO POCKET

£329, from store.dji.com

SO new it didn’t make the deadline for last week’s Sound and Vision gift guide, Osmo’s new camera is so good we just had to squeeze it in this week.

It’s a hand-held video camera. I know, you think smartphone­s did for those years ago. And so they did, but the Osmo Pocket is different – it features an absolutely sensationa­l three-axis gimbal stabilisat­ion, which ensures super smooth footage no matter how rough the ride.

Below L-R:

That’s how you beat the smartphone cameras – do something they can’t do.

TANGRAM FACTORY SMART ROPE

£79.99, from amazon.co.uk

SKIPPING seems like a fun way to keep fit, doesn’t it? I wouldn’t know, of course, but I might be tempted to try if someone bought me one of these smart skipping ropes.

It obviously measures all kinds of stats via a linked smartphone app, but it also features an in-built array of LED lights in the rope, which can be used to display info in mid-air as you work out, like the number of skips you’ve managed. If that doesn’t get you going, nothing will.

V-SOS Virtually perfect:

£78 plus £4-per-month subscripti­on, from shop.v.vodafone.com

THE latest Apple Watch was rightly praised for its health-focused feature, like fall detection… but there were some who thought it might be a bit complicate­d for those that perhaps need it most. Which is why the V-SOS wristband is such a great idea, and could give someone you care about the best gift of all – peace of mind. It offers fall detection but also a simple alert button if assistance is required.

A traffic light system offers reassuranc­e to the wearer that help is on the way. That’s it – no complex set up or extra features, and long battery life completes the picture.

OCULUS GO

199 from oculus.com/go/ VIRTUAL Reality is slowly but surely coming of age, and while most people will have to travel to a shopping centre or dedicated games centre to try it out, Facebook-owned Oculus is working hard to bring a viable system to the masses.

A fully-featured standalone headset for £199 would have seemed like science fiction not long ago, but now it’s here.

GOOGLE HOME HUB

£139, from store.google.com)

OF all the smart-home hubs out there Google’s, astounding­ly, seems to hit the sweet spot.

It sits there displaying useful info waiting for your command, and comes to life when you ask it for help.

Almost the best thing about it is that is has no camera, allaying many security fears, and there’s a hardware button you can test and trust to turn off the mic, too. Google’s AI Assistant isn’t quite up to Alexa’s standards yet, but it’s getting there and good enough right now. If you’re in Google’s eco-system, this is a great way to get Assistant help in the home hands-free...

SOUNDASLEE­P BLUETOOTH PILLOW

£50, from soundaslee­ppillow.co.uk

I WOULD have loved one of these back in the days when the only way to follow a winter Test Match Down Under was to clutch a transistor radio to your ear in bed, trying not to wake the whole house up. Of course, you can watch the cricket on TV now, which is a lot less fun. Anyway, luckily for Soundaslee­d, there’s a lot more to this device than that – it’s a pillow with a built-in speaker and Bluetooth connectivi­ty, so there are no wires to get tangled up.

Of course you can listen the radio on it, but it’ll also play you mediation sounds to help you get off to sleep, and it’ll monitor the quality and quantity of your sleep, too.

Howzat?

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