USA TODAY US Edition

6 cool gadgets for your home

Nifty stuff from CES we can actually afford

- Jennifer Jolly

LAS VEGAS – A New Year means one thing in the world of gadgets — a trip to Las Vegas for CES. It’s the enormous consumer electronic­s show packed with nearly 50 football fields worth of shiny new tech toys.

Somewhere inside the cavernous convention center crowded with TVs we can’t afford, concept cars we’ll never drive and stupid “smart” things we’ll never use (an Alexa-enabled toilet … really?), there’s always a handful of gadgets that really can hit the jackpot of product perfection.

That’s what I set out to find early on. Here are my favorites so far.

Something new under the sun

The smallest new wearable I’ve ever seen could also be one of the smartest when it comes to protecting your skin. L’Oréal’s new UV Sense is a tiny tracker that fits on your fingernail. But the diminutive dot packs enough tech to give you UV, pollen, humidity, temperatur­e, and air quality levels. It uses NFC to pair with an app on your smartphone and can give you reminders to put on more sunscreen or stay out of the sun altogether. Price: L’Oréal’s hope is to price it around $40 and will give it a limited release in the U.S. this summer before it hits store shelves next year.

A smarter screen

The Lenovo Smart Display with Google Assistant could be to the next-generation smart home what the iPhones were to smartphone­s. Really. (The demo I saw was that good.) It’s a tabletop smart screen that acts as a touch-screen tablet, virtual personal assistant and smart-home hub. With a gorgeous upscale design, it’s also pretty enough to keep on a counter top in your kitchen or perched on a bedside table.

You can set it up to say, “Hey Google,” and start a routine: Turn on the lights, get the coffee brewing, read your daily schedule, give you traffic and weather reports, wake the kids and remind you to feed the dog. You can also use it to video-call your mom or watch the morning news while you eat breakfast.

If this all sounds like stuff you can already do with an existing connected home device such as the Amazon Echo Show, that’s because it kind of is, except that the Lenovo Smart Display does it better and faster and is a whole lot easier to use in general. It also has two addi- tional features to address privacy concerns. You can mute the speaker so it’s not listening for its wake-up word and flip a switch to cover the camera (versus the DIY method of putting tape over it).

Price: Both the 10.1-inch and 8-inch models go on sale this summer for $249 and $199, respective­ly.

E-merging reality

When Merge VR first showed me their new plastic Nerf-like toy gun that pairs with an iPhone app to play games, I thought, so what? Then I played with it. It is totally awesome. Called the Merge 6DoF Blaster, you slide an iPhone into a holder, fire up the app and just like that, you’re battling blaster-yielding space aliens. It’s VR, without any VR glasses or goggles! So, when the aliens shoot at you, you have to hide behind walls and duck under tables to dodge their laser beams. You’re in the game, but not at all out of touch with everything around you.

6DoF stands for “six degrees of freedom,” which is a buzzy term used a lot in virtual reality circles to describe being able to look and move all around while still playing in a virtual world. That’s a good thing to be able to do with a headset, and kind of an amazing thing without it. Price: The Merge 6DoF Blaster comes out this summer, likely in the $50 range.

Talk is cheap

Travis the Translator is the closest thing to a real-time language translator I’ve ever seen. It’s about the size of a flip phone and can translate 80 languages with a SIM card or Wi-Fi connection, or 20 in offline mode.

Let’s say you’re in Italy, don’t speak Italian and need to ask for directions. You tap a little touch-pad and scroll to pick the two languages, tap an arrow and speak normally. About a second after you stop talking, your question pops up in a small window, in Italian, and a voice asks the question out loud. When it’s the other person’s turn to talk, you tap another arrow, let Travis listen, and it repeats the answer back in English.

The company behind Travis told us it partnered with “the world’s best translatio­n engines” for each language and that the gadget can even auto-detect languages as well.

Price: Priced at $199 right now on Indiegogo, this palm-sized gadget could have a big impact on bridging cultural barriers.

Watch what you eat

If you’ve ever had food poisoning — one in six of us has, the CDC says — you’ll want to know about this gadget. The LinkSquare is a magic marker-sized scanner that can tell if meat is bad — think salmonella, E. coli and norovirus — whether alcohol is fake or prescripti­on pills are what they’re supposed to be. It can even tell if the money in your pocket is counterfei­t. It pairs with an app on your phone, and the makers told me there are a lot more features to come.

Price: You can buy it now from the company for $299.

Jennifer Jolly is an Emmy Awardwinni­ng consumer tech contributo­r and host of USA TODAY’s digital video show TECH NOW. Email her at jj@techish.com. Follow her on Twitter @JenniferJo­lly.

 ?? LENOVO ?? Lenovo Smart Display features the Google Assistant.
LENOVO Lenovo Smart Display features the Google Assistant.
 ?? MERGE ?? The Merge 6DoF Blaster is VR without the glasses or goggles.
MERGE The Merge 6DoF Blaster is VR without the glasses or goggles.
 ?? RODDY BLELLOCH/SPECIAL FOR USA TODAY ?? Jolly shows off Travis the Translator.
RODDY BLELLOCH/SPECIAL FOR USA TODAY Jolly shows off Travis the Translator.
 ?? RODDY BLELLOCH/SPECIAL FOR USA TODAY ?? L’Oreal's UV Sense wearable tracker.
RODDY BLELLOCH/SPECIAL FOR USA TODAY L’Oreal's UV Sense wearable tracker.
 ?? LINKSCAN ?? This gadget aims to help you understand what you’re eating.
LINKSCAN This gadget aims to help you understand what you’re eating.

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