Among the packing peanuts this week are a bendable phone from Lenovo, a scale that can track your heart's health, a running shoe that doubles as a game controller, and a refined speaker for streaming audio.
As always, these are not reviews -- partly because some items are currently just concepts. The ratings denote only how much I'd like to try each with my own hands -- or wrists, in the case of our first product.
Bending Time
Lenovo has peeled back the curtain on a smartphone that you can wrap around your wrist, sporting a full-color screen.
The "CPlus," as Lenovo calls the prototype, runs Android and has a 4.26-inch display. It will be available in 12 colors if and when it goes on sale.
It's clear bendable smartphones will be a viable consumer product in the near future, though I'm still struggling to imagine ever wanting to wear a phone on my wrist. I don't wear a watch, so something with a far bigger screen would require a great deal of adjustment.
I do see some practical usefulness here, as I'd be less fearful of keeping a phone in my back pocket where it may bend and break. It might prove a little easier to watch videos while lying down if I bend the screen just enough to make it more stable.
It also measures a range of other key metrics, including body-mass index, weight, your body composition -- that is, the breakdown of fat, bone, water and muscle mass -- and your standing heart rate. The less-expensive model, at $130, measures everything but blood circulation.
You can, of course, track all of these measurements over time with a smartphone app. While there's no real substitute for seeing a doctor and getting a proper checkup, Body Cardio seems like a good way to keep tabs on your health on a day-to-day basis.
If only it could take care of the actual workout part of burning fat and building muscle too.
Rating: 4 out of 5 Critical Measurements
Gaming Gym Shoes
I go back and forth over whether I enjoy products that along with an overt use have a secret, secondary, somewhat unrelated function -- but there's no way I'm not going to love the daylights out of a sneaker that doubles as a game controller.
The controller isn't entirely out of place here. Lenovo's sneaker has fitness tracker functions, and the controller works with a mobile game that falls under the "endless runner" category -- it's essentially a platform game in which the object is to get as far as you can through an often-infinite course in a single run.
It's not quite clear how the game works, since the sneaker is a prototype. Rest assured, the sneakerhead in me is determined to start racking up those high scores as soon as possible.Rating: 5 out of 5 Tired Feet
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