E Ink readers have steadily become better at mimicking the feel of paper, but getting through a book with one still requires the same thing it always has: tapping the screen to flip a page. It’s a minor interruption that adds up over a long reading session, and while third-party ring-style page-turners have tried to address it, they haven’t exactly been the most reliable solution.
BOOX, the brand behind a well-regarded lineup of E Ink readers and tablets, now has its own take on the problem. The Tappy is a compact two-button Bluetooth remote that lets you control your device without touching the screen. It’s the kind of accessory that BOOX fans have quietly wanted, and one that Kindle users have been asking Amazon to make for years.
The Tappy’s appearance takes some cues from a miniature typewriter, with two large, round keys on a compact body that fits comfortably in one hand. A small indicator light on the left side doesn’t leave you guessing about pairing status, mode changes, or battery level, while a level-style power switch keeps accidental presses from being a nuisance. Two spare keycaps are also included in the box.
Those two buttons do quite a lot, actually. The Tappy operates in three distinct modes, each built for a different type of content. Reading Mode handles page-by-page navigation, Browsing Mode lets the buttons scroll vertically through web content or documents, and Multimedia Mode turns them into playback controls for audio. You won’t need more than a five-second hold of both buttons to switch between them.
Picture settling in for a late-night read with your e-reader propped on a stand, flipping through pages without reaching out. Or standing in the kitchen with your hands full, scrolling through a recipe without getting the screen dirty. The Tappy adapts naturally to these situations, and it doesn’t break the immersion of the moment by demanding you reach over and interact with the screen.
Multimedia Mode adds another layer to what the Tappy can do. An audiobook listener lying back can skip chapters or pause playback without sitting up. A commuter with a bag in one hand and coffee in the other can get through content without fumbling. The same two buttons handle all of it, which is part of why the Tappy doesn’t feel like a niche gadget.
A 95mAh rechargeable battery keeps the Tappy running for weeks before it needs a charge, and there’s a USB-C port for fast charging when that time comes. The Bluetooth connection reaches up to 33 feet, well beyond what most reading setups require. That extra range, however, means it can double as a basic media remote for a smartphone, laptop, or even a sound system.
The Tappy pairs with any Bluetooth-enabled device, not just BOOX hardware, which makes the $26 price feel reasonable for what it delivers. It’s a focused little tool that doesn’t try to be more than it needs to be. For anyone who reads regularly on an E Ink device, it quietly removes one of the last remaining physical interruptions that keeps the experience from feeling truly seamless.
The Apple Watch Series 12 is set to redefine the smartwatch landscape with a focus on smarter health tracking, improved battery efficiency, and advanced AI integration. Expected to debut at Apple’s September 2026 event, this latest iteration emphasizes meaningful internal advancements over external redesigns, promising a more refined and intelligent user experience. By prioritizing functionality […]
The recent firmware update for IKEA’s Dirigera hub has resolved a long-standing issue with Thread IPv6 routing, significantly improving network stability for users with multiple border routers. A Smarter House explores how this update addresses previous coordination problems that caused inconsistent performance in larger smart home setups. By enhancing device communication and making sure smoother […]
OpenAI’s Symphony represents a significant step forward in rethinking how task management and automation can be approached. Designed as an open source framework, Symphony integrates AI agents into workflows, allowing them to independently handle tasks like updating statuses, generating code, or submitting pull requests. By connecting seamlessly with platforms such as Linear, Symphony minimizes manual […]
Apple’s iOS 26.5 is expected to land today or tomorrow, introducing a range of updates aimed at improving device performance, battery efficiency, and overall system stability. While the update resolves several longstanding issues, it also comes with minor drawbacks that may affect certain users. Below is a detailed analysis to help you determine whether upgrading […]
Apple Maps is more than just a navigation app; it’s a comprehensive tool designed to enhance your travel experience, whether you’re driving, walking, cycling, or using public transit. While many users rely on its basic navigation features, the app offers a range of advanced tools and customization options that can make your journeys smoother, more […]
The Oppo Find X9 Ultra establishes itself as a trailblazer in the flagship smartphone market, blending advanced technology, premium design, and remarkable durability. With standout features such as a 200 MP camera sensor, sensor-shift stabilization, and a robust yet refined build, it challenges conventional expectations. Although it is not available in the U.S., the device […]
EDC and stationery have been moving closer together for years. Pens became precision objects. Rulers became desk jewelry. Pocket tools started borrowing the language of industrial design, while analog work tools picked up the portability and finish standards of everyday carry. Somewhere in that overlap, products began chasing a sharper balance between usefulness and desire.
UnioArc feels tailored for that exact overlap. It carries the visual language of titanium EDC, but its purpose lives firmly in the world of measurement, drawing, and layout. That combination gives it an immediate hook. It speaks to the person who keeps a notebook close, notices edge quality, values compact gear, and wants a tool that can move from workbench to sketchbook to shirt pocket without feeling out of place.
Seven measurement and drawing functions collapse into a single folding titanium ruler. Closed, it measures 145mm, roughly smartphone length. One motion releases the magnetic lock, the sleeve joint clicks straight, and it extends to 295mm for full A4 coverage. No sliding mechanisms. No multi-step deployment. The transformation happens edge to edge, from zero to full length in a single click. Three scales cover metric, imperial, and a dedicated millimeter track. All markings are laser-engraved into the titanium surface, which means they will never fade, peel, or rub off. The zero point starts right at the tip, eliminating offset math when measuring depth or inserting the edge into tight spaces.
A 0.5mm recessed groove runs along the bottom edge. It catches a pen tip, holds it stable, and lets you mark immediately after measuring. That same groove improves grip when you’re holding the ruler at an angle or cutting against it. The flat middle edge guides craft knife blades flush against the surface for clean cuts without wobble. The top edge carries a 25-degree bevel to reduce glare and improve readability under direct light. Three edge profiles, three distinct jobs, one continuous form. This kind of multi-layer thinking shows up throughout the design, where individual features earn their place by doing multiple things well instead of one thing adequately.
Precision compass holes span 140mm in 10mm increments. Insert one pen through a hole near the pivot (the sleeve joint), insert another at the desired radius, and draw smooth circles from 10mm to 140mm diameter. No center puncture. No damaged paper or leather. Swap the stylus pen for a craft knife and you can cut perfect circles in paper, thin materials, or vinyl without leaving a center mark. For woodworkers and leather crafters, this solves a persistent workflow annoyance. A full 180-degree protractor sits engraved at 5-degree increments. Need to mark 35 degrees? 55 degrees? Read it directly, no interpolation required. A 90-degree quick-check corner handles faster right-angle verification. A small arrow indicator simplifies complementary angle reading: subtract the arrow-aligned angle from 180 degrees and you have the answer without rotating the tool or doing mental math.
Fold the ruler to 90 degrees, align the reference line with your scale, and set any spacing you want for parallel lines. The arms lock into a true right angle with no wobble or drift as you move across the page. For architectural sketches, textile patterns, or technical drawings, this turns a multi-tool task into a single-ruler operation. The locking mechanism holds firm enough for consistent spacing across long runs. The same two arms that handle linear measurement also slide apart while staying parallel, clamping around boards, straps, or stock to give direct thickness readings. It functions like a simplified caliper without requiring a separate tool. In workshops or on job sites where you need quick material checks, this compresses another measurement step into the same instrument you’re already holding.
No screws hold the sleeve joint together. No washers. Nothing to tighten or maintain. Resistance comes from precision fit between machined titanium surfaces. The two arms slide into each other and lock at 180 degrees with zero gap, zero step, zero play. That interlocking geometry prevents the common folding ruler problem where pen tips drop into gaps or lines skip at the hinge. The transition from one arm to the next reads as seamless. This is critical because any interruption in the edge breaks the flow when you’re drawing continuous lines or cutting long paths. TiBang solved it by making the joint itself part of the measurement surface instead of treating it as a hinge that happens to sit between two rulers.
Grade 5 Titanium throughout, CNC-machined from solid stock rather than stamped or cast. That process ensures consistent dimensional accuracy across every unit and allows for fine detail work in the compass holes, protractor markings, and edge profiles. Sandblasted titanium gives a raw, matte appearance that develops micro-patina over time. PVD Black applies a deep black coating with increased surface hardness for a technical, permanent look. Both finishes share identical machining tolerances and functional geometry. Weight sits at 66.5 grams, just over two ounces. Light enough to carry all day without noticing, heavy enough to feel substantial when you pick it up. The 5mm thickness keeps it shirt-pocket slim, fits inside notebook sleeves, slides into small tool rolls. Fold it shut and magnets snap the arms together with a tactile click. No rubber bands. No retention clips. It stays closed in your pocket and opens when you want it to.
Architects, product designers, woodworkers, leather crafters, engineers, and EDC enthusiasts will recognize the workflow this tool targets. Anyone who moves between sketching, prototyping, and layout work carries some version of this measurement kit already. UnioArc compresses that kit into a single pocketable object, which is exactly the kind of consolidation that makes sense for people who work across locations or keep minimal setups. TiBang has two previous Kickstarter campaigns behind them, both shipped with 100% fulfillment and zero missed deliveries. Mass production and backer surveys are scheduled for May and June 2026, with quality inspection and packaging slated for July and August 2026. The timeline accounts for buffer periods around international shipping and customs clearance, which suggests they’ve learned from previous campaigns how to build realistic delivery windows.
UnioArc is live on Kickstarter with a Launch Day pricing of approximately $55 USD (42% off MSRP of $95) and Super Early Bird pricing climbing to $60. The ruler works standalone, but optional add-ons include a leather sheath in two colors for $12, a PVD Black finish upgrade for $15, and a Pocket Titanium Everlasting Mini Pen for $9. Shipping begins in July and August 2026 following quality inspection. All reward tiers include free worldwide shipping with no additional fees. TiBang manufactures, ships globally, and communicates throughout the process.
Every major tech conference eventually finds its thesis statement. CES landed on “everything is connected.” SXSW staked out culture-meets-technology. BEYOND Expo‘s thesis for 2026 is more specific, and honestly more timely: AI has spent years proving itself in software, and the interesting question now is what happens when it leaves the screen. The official theme, “AI: Digital to Physical,” takes over from last year’s theme of Transforming Uncertainty into a Trigger for Innovation. Timed perfectly around the global speculation that AI’s a bubble, it’s a genuine reflection of where the most consequential AI work is actually happening right now, in robotics labs, automotive platforms, wearables, and manufacturing floors across the Greater Bay Area.
BEYOND has been building toward this moment since Dr. Lu Gang launched it during a global lockdown in 2021, a decision he’s called delusional in hindsight during an interview with Yanko Design, but with the kind of grin that says he’d do it again. The original problem he was solving was simpler than people realize: Asia’s most interesting founders kept showing up at CES and Web Summit as attendees rather than headliners. A hardware startup out of Shenzhen with genuinely world-class AI chops would get a 3×3 booth on a back wall while the stage went to the usual suspects. BEYOND was built to fix that imbalance, and five years in, it’s working.
The 2026 edition is aiming for 30,000 attendees, a significant jump from 2024’s 20,000, and the programming reflects a maturing event that knows its own strengths. The summit lineup spans Humanoid Robotics and Embodied AI, Enterprise Agentic Workflows, Autonomous Driving, AI-Integrated Wearables, and a PayFi and Decentralized AI track that will either feel prescient or premature depending on your priors. What ties all of it together is the through-line of AI becoming something you interact with physically, not just through a chat interface. That’s a meaningful editorial choice, and one that puts BEYOND in a different conversation than conferences still treating large language models as the whole story.
The most interesting addition this year is the GBA Innovation Tour, which gives international attendees direct access to Greater Bay Area manufacturing infrastructure. This matters more than it might sound. Lu Gang has argued for years that what makes Asia’s tech ecosystem genuinely different isn’t just the innovation pipeline, it’s the compression of the distance between idea and physical product. Watching an AI concept move from prototype to production in a Shenzhen facility in weeks rather than months is something you can describe in a keynote, but apparently you need to see it to really understand the scale and speed involved. The tour is BEYOND’s way of making that argument visceral rather than theoretical.
Last year’s theme, “Unveiling Possibilities,” was about reframing uncertainty as creative fuel, which was the right message for a chaotic moment. “AI: Digital to Physical” is more declarative, more confident. It names a specific transition that the industry is mid-stride through, and plants BEYOND squarely in the middle of it. Registration and exhibition details are live at beyondexpo.com.