Floats in the pot, beeps when it’s hot

The irony of life is that as I wrote this article, I ended up burning my toast so bad my living room’s filled with a dense smoke… but that’s exactly what I’m talking about. No one has the time to watch water boil (although my toaster shouldn’t have gone rogue on me) and a lot of the time, you forget that you’ve got something on the stove and minutes later, you’ve overboiled your pasta, or you’ve boiled your water so much your saucepan has hard water stains on it.

That’s where the BoilingBeeper comes in. A small, innocuous, yet potentially life-saving device, the BoilingBeeper is a tea-bag sized blue, floating device you drop into your water pre-boiling. As the water temperature rises, the BoilingBeeper floats on the surface, monitoring temperature levels. The minute your water begins boiling (at 212°F or 100°C), the Beeper emits a loud beeping sound, akin to the whistling of a kettle, letting you know that it’s time to turn the stove off. Take it out of the boiling water and it turns off the minute its sensor is out of contact with the fluid. Ideal for the multi-tasker, or the forgetter (me, basically), or if you’ve got the telly running, the BoilingBeeper works for everything from pasta, to veggies, to even delivering on those perfectly boiled eggs.

A watched kettle never boils they say… Who says you need to watch it?! I say.

Designer: Boiling Beeper

Buy It Here

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Wireless Sensor Tags alert you to movement and temperature changes, fit on your keyring

Wireless Sensor Tags alert you to movement and temperature changes, fit on your keyring

There's plenty of sensor gear around for hobbyists to play with, but not so many polished products for the monitoring-obsessed. Cao Gadgets is attempting to fill that niche with its functionally named Wireless Sensor Tags -- small devices which monitor movement and temperature, notifying you if anything's amiss. A magnetometer registers movement by changes in its orientation, and can inform you of door openings or similar disturbances, while the temperature triggers are based on upper or lower thresholds. The $15 sensors (or $12 if you want three or more) have a battery life that should last several years depending on their setup, but there is one catch -- you also need the Tag Manager hub ($50), which plugs into your router via Ethernet. It keeps in frequent contact with any subordinates in its 200-foot range, and if after several attempts it finds one MIA, a warning can be sent in case any of your home guards have walked or fallen asleep. The tags also have inbuilt beepers which can be pinged to track down any rogue possessions they're partnered with, like your keys.

A lot of thought has been put into micromanaging the tags, which are customizable through web-based, Android or iOS apps, and will send out alerts via email, Twitter, or push notifications on slates and phones (text-to-speech is available if you're too lazy to read). If you're into your data, you can also access trigger statistics from the software, complete with graphs. The home monitoring kit is available now, and instead of crashing your browser with too many embeds, we've decided to point you to the source below for the half-dozen demo vids.

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Wireless Sensor Tags alert you to movement and temperature changes, fit on your keyring originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Aug 2012 22:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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