Segway releases new 500W electric bikes with self-lowering dropper posts

Segway has revealed two new electric bikes, the Myon and Muxi, promising to “lower the barrier to entry and make cycling genuinely accessible for everyone”.

Both bikes appear more conventional than the brand’s previous offerings, but use Segway’s Intelligent Ride System.

This system includes electronic shifting, automatic lights and advanced security features, including Apple Find My and AirLock, and a new Lost Mode that enables you to disable the ebikes remotely.

Alongside the bikes, Segway has announced a new range of accessories.

This includes the Xiro Dropper Post, which senses when riders are slowing to a stop and lowers automatically, as well as a rearview radar.

There is only one spec level per bike, with the Muxi priced at $1,699.99 and the Myon at $1,999.99.

Segway Myon

Segway Myon in black studio
The Myon is available in two colourways. Segway

The Myon features a step-through frame design that integrates some innovative features.

Segway has equipped the bike with electronic shifting, despite the low cost.

Segway Myon Drivetrain
The system is powered by the bike’s battery. Segway

This sees easy-to-press +/- buttons on the handlebar, connected to a proprietary servo control unit mounted on the seatstay, which then operates a cable-actuated Shimano Cues derailleur.

The brand says this keeps the cable length minimal, reducing wear, and enables shifting to be fine-tuned in the app.

Segway Myon Headlight
There’s a headlight on the front of the bike. Segway

The Myon also benefits from automatic lights, which increase or decrease output depending on the surrounding environment.

Segway Myon turning light
The indicators are incorporated into the handlebar. Segway

It also integrates indicators and brake lights to the rear of the bike, helping to keep other road users aware of your intentions.

A 500W hub motor, combined with a 722W battery, powers the bike, which is said to provide 85Nm of torque and an 80-mile range.

Segway Muxi

Segway Muxi in house
Simplicity is prioritised on the Muxi. Segway

The Muxi features a stylish, borderline retro design that is said to offer utility and versatility.

The bike features the same 500W hub motor and 722W battery as the Muxi, but replaces the derailleur with a simpler singlespeed, direct-drive setup.

Segway says the bike has good cargo-carrying capabilities, offering a Passenger Kit that includes a seat, foot pegs and wheel guards.

Segway Muxi at cafe
The Muxi is designed as a cargo bike. Segway

To help in this respect, the bike features a Hill Start Assist function to prevent rollback when starting on an incline, Hill Descent Control for confident descending and reduced brake wear, and Regenerative Braking for improved efficiency.

It also features a Traction Control System, which detects wheelspin and modulates power to help keep riders in control. 

Here are the launches and landings we’re most excited about in 2026

Last year delivered doses of drama and excitement in the space business, with a record number of launches, breathtaking vistas of other worlds, and a multitude of breakthroughs and setbacks. 2026 is shaping up to be another thrilling year in the cosmos.

For the first time in more than 54 years, astronauts are training to travel to the vicinity of the Moon, perhaps within the next couple of months. NASA, SpaceX, Blue Origin, and other companies are poised to take major steps toward actually landing humans on the Moon, perhaps within a few years.

New rockets are slated to debut in 2026, and scientists hope to open new windows on the Universe. Here, we list the most anticipated space missions scheduled for this year, ranked according to our own anticipation for them. We also assess the chances of these missions actually happening in the next 12 months. Unless specified, we don’t assess the chances of a successful outcome.

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MTV Rewind is a developer’s tribute to 24/7 music video channels

MTV shut down its remaining 24/7 music channels in several countries, including the UK and Australia, at the end of 2025. The main MTV network shifted its focus to reality shows long ago and it occasionally dips back into music with things like the Video Music Awards, but this shutdown felt like the end of an era. If you yearn for the days when MTV actually played music videos, though, you might be in luck. A developer who goes by the name of Flexasaurus Rex has paid tribute to the MTV of old with a web app that has several channels of non-stop streaming music. 

MTV Rewind has 11 channels at the time of writing, including one that features videos from the original channel’s first day of existence in 1981. There’s a channel dedicated to MTV Unplugged performances, a rap-focused stream, one for each decade from the ‘70s to the ‘20s and (my personal faves) 120 Minutes and Headbangers Ball options. MTV Rewind has so far pulled in more than 33,000 music videos. That’s over two months worth of music, as Loudwire notes.

“MTV was a cultural institution that changed music, fashion and youth culture. Then they stopped showing music videos and became reality TV,” Flexasaurus Rex said. “I felt a wave of sadness when the announcement hit. Nothing felt like it could fill that void. So I started coding. Built it in 48 hours: MTV Rewind.”

Each channel plays videos in a random order and there’s a shuffle all option if you can’t decide which stream to watch. If a song isn’t hitting for you, just tap the skip button. There are some era-appropriate ads too. For instance, I hadn’t seen this one from the Got Milk? campaign before it popped up. It reminded me of the J. Walter Weatherman gag from Arrested Development:

The app’s database is powered by IMVDb (The Internet Music Video Database). The videos are all pulled from YouTube, one of the things that helped spell the demise of MTV’s 24/7 music channels. There wasn’t exactly a strong case for Total Request Live to stay on the air, for instance, when we have access to practically every music video ever at our fingertips.  

One of my favorite things about MTV Rewind is that it has a hit counter like the Geocities of old. So very ‘90s. In fact, the whole thing is rad. Tubular, some might say. 

MTV Rewind isn’t associated with MTV or its parent company. However, it does use MTV’s name. Here’s hoping Paramount’s lawyers don’t crack down on this. It’s nice to have fun things on the internet. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/music/mtv-rewind-is-a-developers-tribute-to-247-music-video-channels-120000424.html?src=rss

Pimax Dream Air Begins Shipping in “small batches” With Temporary Headstrap

After multiple delays, Pimax has finally begun shipping its next PC VR headset, albeit in “small batches,” which arrive with a fabric headstrap—something of a temporary solution until the company can ship out its official headstrap.

The News

Dream Air is Pimax’s first thing and light PC VR headset, which is set to arrive with Sony’s high-end micro-OLED panels, packing in a 13.6MP (3,840 × 3,552) per-eye resolution.

Now, Pimax told Road to VR that it actually began shipping Dream Air in “small batches” before the end of the year for the purposes of external beta testing.

While official shipments are set to kick off sometime this month, a few users have already received Dream Air with what Jaap Grolleman, Pimax’s Head of Communications, describes as a stopgap measure to get the first units out the door.

“We’re still working on the final backstrap, but we don’t want to make that a showstopper to start shipping and start collecting feedback on the headset,” Grolleman said in a recent video.

Pimax Dream Air 2D Strap | Image courtesy Pimax

Those early batches of Pimax Dream Air are shipping with what the company calls its “2D headstrap”, as it’s made out of fabric, with Grolleman noting that it’s “perfectly fine to use, even in long sessions as it hugs your head from behind and slightly above.”

A “3D headstrap”—more of an Apple Vision Pro-inspired knit affair—is said to arrive later to who initially received the 2D strap with their order.

Pimax hasn’t provided info on when the 3D strap will arrive, or when the company will cut off shipments including the 2D strap.

Pimax Dream Air 3D Strap | Image courtesy Pimax

Notably, Pimax says it’s also developing a “hard backstrap,” which includes off-ear audio, which will be available sometime after Dream Air begins its wider rollout.

As for Dream Air SE—the cheaper variant which uses 6.5MP (2,560 × 2,560) per-eye displays—Pimax says small batches will begin shipping out in February 2026.

Pimax initially announced Dream Air last December, as it hoped to enter the emergent thin and light PC VR headset segment, which includes entries such as Bigscreen Beyond and Shiftall MaganeX Superlight 8K. The headset however suffered a number of delays following its planned May 2025 launch.

My Take

If you’ve been following Pimax, you already know this is how they operate: official announcements and initial shipping dates feel more like walking into a brainstorming session, as the company often changes designs, specs, and release windows multiple times before official release. Along the way, the company usually tends to announce other devices, making the reporting process more like taking apart a watch to see what time it is.

On the face of it, you might think that’s fairly amateurish behavior, but Pimax has proven to do what few companies can: publicly iterate with the expectation that it will eventually deliver.

It’s been that way ever since the company funded its original 2017 Pimax “4K” headset via Kickstarter—back when Pimax announced it was releasing the first consumer-oriented wide-FOV PC VR headset alongside a bevy of modular accessories. Some of those never came, and some arrived two years later.

Okay, maybe that was amateurish, but the company is still here, and still serving up competitive hardware, which says something.

The post Pimax Dream Air Begins Shipping in “small batches” With Temporary Headstrap appeared first on Road to VR.

DRM Splash Screen Updated To Simply Drawing A Colored Background, Displaying A BMP Image

Back in October was an initial proposal for a DRM splash screen client for the Linux kernel that would be primarily useful for embedded systems for rendering a simple “splash screen” when updating the system firmware/software, early display activation at boot, during system recovery, or similar processes. Sent out today was a second revision to the DRM splash screen code…

Philips Hue ‘SpatialAware’ feature harmonizes all the lights in a room

Philips Hue has introduced a new software feature called SpatialAware at CES 2026 designed to ensure that all the lights in a space are in harmony with each other. Available exclusively for the Hue Bridge Pro, it takes into account each light point in a room and tailors the colors to ensure a natural representation. “In a sunset scene, for example, the lights on one side of the room emit warm yellow tones to mimic the setting sun, while the ceiling lights on the opposite side reflect darker shades,” the company wrote on its blog. The new feature is set to launch in the spring of 2026.

To use the feature, you scan a room with your smartphone camera and use augmented reality to determine the positions of individual lights. A smart algorithm then ensures each light point is coordinated. Any lamps added after setup will be taken into account. Then, you use SpatialAware to select a scene like “Lake Mist” and activate the mode. 

Philips Hue SpatialAware
Philips Hue room without SpatialAware
Philips Hue

In the example at top, the company shows how all the lights in a room are “no linger mixed together in a colorful jumble [above] but are perfectly coordinated. The same applies, for example, to the gradient color transitions of corresponding products, where SpatialAware even takes the orientation into account.”

Philips Hue also introduced a few other features. To start with, the company is adding support for migrating multiple Hue Bridges to a single Bridge Pro during the setup process. In addition, the Hue Secure Camera, Hue Secure video doorbell and Hue contact sensors will soon work with Apple Home. Users will also see live video with picture-in-picture mode on Apple TV and get real-time alerts on the Apple Home app. 

The Hue AI assistant has been updated so you can now creation automations based on natural language requests — for instance, “wake me up at 6:45 AM every day except on Wednesdays.” New AI assistant languages have been added (Dutch, German and Spanish) and the Hue app will start showing automations within the rooms and zones they’re set to control, so you won’t need to jump around in the app as much. All those new features are set to arrive in Q1 2026. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/smart-home/philips-hue-spatialaware-feature-harmonizes-all-the-lights-in-a-room-101843600.html?src=rss

Congressman Introduces Legislation To Criminalize Insider Trading On Prediction Markets

Ritchie Torres has introduced a bill to ban government officials from using insider information to trade on political prediction markets like Polymarket. The bill was prompted by reports that traders on Polymarket made large profits betting on Nicolas Maduro’s removal, raising suspicions that some wagers were placed using material non-public information. “While such insider trading in capital markets is already illegal and often prosecuted by the Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission, online prediction markets are far less regulated,” notes Axios. From the report: Rep. Ritchie Torres’ (D-N.Y.) three-page bill, a copy of which was obtained by Axios, is called the Public Integrity in Financial Prediction Markets Act of 2026. It would ban federal elected officials, political appointees and bureaucrats from making insider trades on prediction sites sites such as Polymarket. Specifically, the bill prohibits such government officials from trading based on information that is not publicly available and that “a reasonable investor would consider important in making an investment decision.” […] It’s not clear if House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) would put Torres’ bill to a vote in the House or if President Trump would sign it. “We’re looking at the specifics of the bill, but we already ban the activity it cites and are in support of means to prevent this type of activity,” said Elisabeth Diana, a spokesperson for the prediction website Kalshi.

Diana added that the “activity from the past few days” did not occur on their platform.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

What shaped computing education in 2025 — and what comes next

To mark the start of 2026, we’re releasing a special episode of our Hello World podcast, which reflects on the key developments in computing education during 2025 and considers the trends likely to shape the year ahead.

Hosted by James Robinson, the episode brings together a conversation between three Foundation team members — Rehana Al-Soltane, Dr Bobby Whyte, and Laura James — and perspectives from colleagues and partners in Kenya, South Africa, and Greece.

The Hello World Podcast team

The podcast is framed around three major themes that defined 2025: data science, AI literacy, and digital literacy, all of which continue to play an increasingly important role in education systems worldwide.

Looking back at 2025

In the podcast, Rehana reflects on a year characterised by research, collaboration, and community, highlighting the importance of global partnerships in developing and localising AI literacy resources for diverse educational contexts.

From a research perspective, Bobby explains that 2025 was about pulling together what we already know and making sense of it, to better understand what good data science education should look like, including curriculum design, pedagogy, and appropriate tools.

Laura focuses on resilience and creativity in computing education, as well as the growing presence of more personalised forms of artificial intelligence, which present both significant opportunities and complex ethical challenges.

The new set!

A key concern raised throughout the episode is the risk of cognitive offloading, whereby learners rely on AI tools to bypass critical thinking processes. The speakers emphasise the need for learning experiences and assessments that value process, reasoning, and reflection rather than solely final outputs.

The episode also examines barriers to the adoption of computing and AI education, including teacher confidence, limited access to devices, restrictive school IT policies, and the need for translated and localised resources.

Contributions from our colleagues around the world highlight stark contrasts in educational contexts, with challenges such as funding constraints, connectivity issues, and teacher training needs, alongside examples of innovation where educators are adequately supported.

What’s ahead

Looking ahead to 2026, Rehana outlines the potential of interdisciplinary approaches to AI literacy, integrating AI concepts into subjects such as geography, history, languages, and the arts to increase relevance and engagement (look out for our upcoming research seminar series on the topic).

The cast on set

Bobby anticipates a gradual shift towards more data-informed approaches to computing education, with greater emphasis on classroom-based trials and research that directly informs practice.

Laura offers a strong call to renew focus on cybersecurity education, arguing that security and safety must remain central as digital systems and AI technologies continue to evolve.

In a series of concise predictions, the speakers point to increased attention on explainable AI, wider integration of AI literacy across the curriculum, and renewed concern for digital safety and security.

More from Hello World

You can subscribe to Hello World and listen to the full podcast episodes from wherever you get your podcasts. Or you can find this and previous Hello World podcasts on our podcast page.

Also check out Hello World magazine, our free digital and print magazine from computing educators for computing educators.

The post What shaped computing education in 2025 — and what comes next appeared first on Raspberry Pi Foundation.

MSI Shows Off Stylish New Laptops And A Sleek New Handheld At CES 2026

MSI Shows Off Stylish New Laptops And A Sleek New Handheld At CES 2026
Of course, not to be left out, MSI’s at CES 2026 with a pile of premium products. In this post, we’re taking a short look at the three lines of laptops that MSI brought to the show as well as a new version of the Claw gaming handheld that resolves one of our biggest complaints about the original Claw 8 AI+.

We’re fans of MSI’s Prestige

The world’s most famous bike mechanic is retiring

Even if you don’t know his name, the likelihood is you’ve seen his moustachioed face and even followed his maintenance advice. That’s because Park Tool’s director of education, Calvin Jones, has become cycling’s most famous mechanic since he began at the company way back in 1997.

But Park Tool announced yesterday “with gratitude and a little sadness” that Jones is retiring after 28 years at the cycling tool company. 

Park Tool said Jones is probably best known for his work on the company’s YouTube channel, where he has presented bike maintenance videos for 15 years. But his role at Park Tool has extended far beyond presenting. 

“In addition to his contributions to product development and thousands of hours logged fielding customer feedback, Calvin has applied his deep knowledge of bikes and his aptitude for instruction to projects large and small,” an official press release said.  

“I think the thing I admire most about Calvin is that to this day he lives and breathes what he teaches,” said Eric Hawkins, Park Tool’s CEO. 

“He’s passionate about the science of bikes and is a gifted teacher who can clearly explain even the most complex concepts. Through his writings, videos, and personal interactions he’s helped millions understand how their bike works and how to best keep it working. It’s been an amazing run, and now, nearly 29 years later we owe a lot to Calvin for his unique ability to demystify bike repair and maintenance.”

Park Tool's Calvin Jones at a bike race in 1997.
Jones at a bike race in 1997. Park Tool

Jones joined Park Tool with a wealth of experience already under his belt. He got his first job in a bike shop in 1973 and worked as a team mechanic for USA national teams. He was also a mechanics’ instructor for the US Olympic Training Centre and a chief instructor at Barnett Bicycle Institute.

“Moving on from Park Tool, there are some educational projects that I would like to be part of. Plus, I am looking forward to focusing more on my riding,” Jones said. 

Jones will continue to be involved in the Stillwater chapter of the Minnesota Cycling Association and will stay on the board of Project Bike Tech. He’ll also attend *iceBike 2026 in London and Frostbike 2026 in Minneapolis for anyone in the industry who would like to wish him well. 

Jones might not be disappearing from our screens forever. In a video announcing his retirement, he said: “If I think of something I think you need to know, you may find me here at this YouTube channel.” 

MSI Cubi NUC AI+ 3MG Boasts Intel Panther Lake In A Half-Liter Form Factor

MSI Cubi NUC AI+ 3MG Boasts Intel Panther Lake In A Half-Liter Form Factor
MSI is joining the modern NUC race and showing off one of the first Intel Panther Lake mini PCs of its kind at CES 2026. Meet the MSI Cubi NUC AI+ 3MG, the latest in MSI’s Cubi NUC AI+ series, which you can outfit with up to an Intel Core Ultra 9 386H. That’s is one of the highest-end Core Ultra Series 3 offerings, flaunting 16 cores and a

An AI-Generated NWS Map Invented Fake Towns In Idaho

National Weather Service pulled an AI-generated forecast graphic after it hallucinated fake town names in Idaho. “The blunder — not the first of its kind to be posted by the NWS in the past year — comes as the agency experiments with a wide range of AI uses, from advanced forecasting to graphic design,” reports the Washington Post. “Experts worry that without properly trained officials, mistakes could erode trust in the agency and the technology.” From the report: At first glance, there was nothing out of the ordinary about Saturday’s wind forecast for Camas Prairie, Idaho. “Hold onto your hats!” said a social media post from the local weather office in Missoula, Montana. “Orangeotild” had a 10 percent chance of high winds, while just south, “Whata Bod” would be spared larger gusts. The problem? Neither of those places exist. Nor do a handful of the other spots marked on the National Weather Service’s forecast graphic, riddled with spelling and geographical errors that the agency confirmed were linked to the use of generative AI.

NWS said AI is not commonly used for public-facing content, nor is its use prohibited. The agency said it is exploring ways to employ AI to inform the public and acknowledged mistakes have been made. “Recently, a local office used AI to create a base map to display forecast information, however the map inadvertently displayed illegible city names,” said NWS spokeswoman Erica Grow Cei. “The map was quickly corrected and updated social media posts were distributed.”

A post with the inaccurate map was deleted Monday, the same day The Washington Post contacted officials with questions about the image.
Cei added that “NWS is exploring strategic ways to continue optimizing our service delivery for Americans, including the implementation of AI where it makes sense. NWS will continue to carefully evaluate results in cases where AI is implemented to ensure accuracy and efficiency, and will discontinue use in scenarios where AI is not effective.” A Nov. 25 tweet out of the Rapid City, South Dakota, office also had misspelled locations and the Google Gemini logo in its forecast. NWS did not confirm whether the Rapid City image was made with generative AI.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

ADLINK Express-PTL and COM-HPC-mPTL pair Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors with Arc Xe3 graphics

ADLINK Technology has introduced the Express-PTL and COM-HPC-mPTL modules, built on Intel Core Ultra Processor Series 3 (Panther Lake-H), targeting edge AI, graphics-intensive, and general embedded systems that require high compute density, standards-based form factors, and long-term availability. Both modules are based on Intel Core Ultra Series 3 processors featuring a hybrid CPU architecture with […]

CES 2026: Nvidia’s Updated DLSS Makes Games Run Worse on Older GPUs

Unless you run an AI data center, Nvidia’s announcements this CES have been more on the quiet end. There were updates to GeForce Now cloud streaming and its DLSS upscaling tech, but no new graphic cards. That’s fine—it’s normal for Nvidia to have a quiet year on consumer tech every now and then, and the RTX 50-series GPUs just came out last year. Unfortunately, it turns out those DLSS updates are actually making games run worse on older GPUs.

The new version of DLSS, called DLSS 4.5, is pretty great when it works. It already makes lighting appear far more realistic even when ray tracing or HDR isn’t being used, and in the spring, it will introduce dynamic frame generation, which can adjust how many AI frames are inserted into your game on the fly, so that it doesn’t waste compute producing more frames than necessary, or than your monitor can produce. I saw examples of both of these use cases in person at CES, and as someone who mostly plays without upscaling when I can, I was impressed enough that I might want to get a new GPU and make the swap.

And I stress that “new GPU” part. Unfortunately, DLSS 4.5 only seems to work best on Nvidia’s newest cards. It released in beta for all Nvidia GeForce RTX cards yesterday, but gamers on older RTX 3000-series cards are already reporting issues. According to a report from X user Mostly Positive Reviews (via Tom’s Hardware), users on the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti GPU could see up to a 24% dip in performance in Cyberpunk 2077, and a 14% drop in The Last of Us Part 2. Those are just a few examples, but others in the comments posted their own headaches, as did users on Reddit.

That’s not a small issue. The RTX 3080 Ti might be a few generations behind, but it was near the top of the line when it was current. More importantly, according to Steam’s own data, the RTX 3060 is currently the most common graphics card on Steam, and it’s weaker than the RTX 3080 Ti. And technically, DLSS 4.5 is available for the even weaker RTX 2000-series, which are bound to run into even more severe problems.

So where’s this massive performance loss coming from, and what can you do about it? Likely, it has to do with the new AI transformer model powering DLSS, which Nvidia said was built with RTX 40-series and RTX 50-series cards in mind. While you can use DLSS 4.5 with an older GPU, it doesn’t seem like it’s intended.

Thankfully, if you decided to try out DLSS 4.5 on an older card and you don’t like what you’re seeing, you’re not stuck with it. Currently, public DLSS 4.5 implementation is in beta, and needs to be applied to games by choosing either the “Model M” or “Model L” preset in the Nvidia app (under “Latest” and “Custom,” respectively). Choosing another model, like Model K, should get you back to normal. When DLSS 4.5 gets a full release on January 13, I assume this will get even simpler.

Still, it’s not a great look that most Nvidia gamers can’t use its exciting new feature. Because it can be reversed, it doesn’t break anything, but it also shows that Nvidia is starting to leave all but its most loyal GPU customers behind. And as someone who mostly only uses upscaling while on weaker hardware like the Steam Deck, what I find especially weird is that upscaling is already all about using software to improve performance when you’re lacking raw power. That should theoretically make gamers with weaker cards the target audience.

GeForce Now app on Amazon Fire TV

Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt

But it’s not all doom-and-gloom for my fellow cheap gamers. Alongside DLSS 4.5, Nvidia also announced a native Linux client for Nvidia GeForce Now, alongside a native Amazon Fire TV app. That extends the cloud gaming platform to even more users, and because GeForce Now has a free tier, it’s a pretty sweet deal. Play it right, say by getting a Fire TV on sale and loading up a free game, and you could game using Nvidia’s latest GPUs on the big screen while spending less than $20. Sure, you might have to deal with some latency and video compression while doing it—as is the tradeoff with cloud gaming—but as DLSS 4.5 shows, even using local hardware comes with its own problems.

This Radar-Equipped Stove Shutoff Is One of the Most Practical Things I Saw at CES

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Radar-based sensors seem to be having a moment at CES, especially in tech meant for people to keep tabs on their aging family members. One product in particular caught my eye because it’s focused on a single important function—preventing kitchen fires caused by a person wandering away from the stove. 

iGuardStove is essentially a smart shutoff for a stove or cooktop. Its new, radar-equipped version costs $399 and can work on gas or electric stoves. (For gas, you’ll need to have a plumber install a shutoff valve.) If you leave the kitchen while cooking, a five-minute timer starts. If you don’t return by the time it goes off, the device either cuts the power to your electric stove, or shuts off the supply line to your gas stove. It can also notify a caregiver that a shutoff event occurred.

Why this is aging-in-place tech

A big theme in smart tech this year is aging-in-place. Most older adults would prefer to live at home as long as they can, but health challenges can make that difficult. When it comes to cooking or other activities that require a sharp mind, mental health issues like dementia come into play, as do medications that can have cognitive side effects. With all that in mind, caregivers often worry about a parent leaving the kitchen while cooking, forgetting that the stove is on. 

The National Fire Protection Association reports that cooking fires are the top cause of home fires, the top cause of fire-related injuries, and the number three cause of fire-related deaths. Unattended cooking equipment causes half of those deaths. Older adults are overrepresented as fire casualties compared to younger and middle-aged people.

The device has a five-minute timer, specifically, because that was a safety margin the company developed with safety organization UL, chief marketing officer Jon Landers told me. You can also override the five-minute timer if you’re roasting a turkey or preparing a slow-simmered sauce. In this case you tell the device how long the food is expected to cook, and it lets this cook time complete before resetting to the usual five-minute timer behavior.

Why radar is involved

A previous version of the iGuardStove used motion detectors, but if you’ve ever worked in an office that had lights on motion sensors, you know why that wasn’t a great solution: sit still at a table for too long, and the lights go off. The older version of the device could potentially shut off while you’re just waiting for your dinner to cook, and could be triggered by motion from pets. Radar solves those problems, since it can more accurately identify when a person is in the room.

I’ve been seeing radar in a number of aging-in-place products at CES this year. The Silver Shield from PontoSense uses radar to monitor a person’s presence and movement in a room, reporting movement and potential falls to a caregiver’s app. Luna, a conversation and reminder device from Cairns Health, includes radar that can monitor heart rate and breathing (even through blankets!) when positioned near a person’s bed. The iGuardStove has some monitoring features in common with those devices, but it stays focused on its main task of ensuring stoves aren’t left running unattended. 

Radar can “see” a lot, but it doesn’t feel quite as privacy-invading as a camera. Having a device in the kitchen is also a bit less intrusive than in a bedroom, for those who would feel creeped out knowing that a tech device is watching them sleep. 

Besides shutting off the stove, the iGuardStove can report to a caregiver (via an app, of course) things like what time each day a person first enters the kitchen. It can catch nighttime wandering if the person visits the kitchen at night; it can also send an alert if the person doesn’t seem to be up and active at their usual time. For example, if your mom usually makes coffee around 9:00 every morning, you can ask the app to notify you if the kitchen is still empty at 10:00. 

Other monitoring and safety features

Besides shutting off the stove and reporting on the presence of a person in the kitchen, the iGuardStove has a few other clever features. The version of the device made for gas stoves can detect unburned gas, in case somebody left it on without a burner running. 

The device can also be configured to keep the stove from being turned on by pets or children, or it can be locked to not allow cooking during certain hours or days (say, at night). The app can also alert a caregiver if temperatures get too hot or cold, prompting them to check in if a heat wave or a cold snap is bad enough to affect indoor temperatures.

While a lot of products I’ve seen at CES are speculative or hopeful in their use cases—I often find myself asking “who would actually use this?”—the iGuardStove seems thoughtfully designed and has a concrete use case and benefit. I was impressed! The new device is expected to ship later this year.