The PIQO projector fits a home theater in your pocket

I’ll let you in on a little secret. People who watch Netflix or stream full-length movies on their tiny mobile phone screens are more likely to be psychopaths. This isn’t a scientific study, this is just one of those things like putting milk first and cereal after. There’s a universal standard to preparing cereal, Sharon, and it’s clearly by putting the flakes first and adding the milk later. Similarly, the only acceptable way to watch movies and TV series is on a large screen, and not a 6-inch cluster of pixels.

That’s where pico-projectors come into the picture (geddit, into the picture?). These projectors are small and powerful enough to cast a projection the size of your laptop screen, have the battery capacity of roughly 5-6 hours, allowing you to beam your smartphone screen onto a wall and binge watch a good 3-4 episodes at a time on a relatively big screen. They’re nice and all that, but they don’t match up to the PIQO projector, the Napoleon of pico projectors.

Small enough to fit in your pocket, the PIQO outshines (geddit, outshines?) every projector in its category. It can cast a massive 240-inch screen with a resolution of 1080p on any flat surface, allowing you to turn practically any place you go into your own personal theater. It also packs powerful speakers too that complement the crisp bright picture (200 ANSI Lumens), and a battery that supports 50 hours of music playback or 5 hours of video playback. To really round things off, the PIQO even comes with fast-charging, allowing you to completely charge its battery in roughly over an hour.

The PIQO’s the kind of projector you’ll want to take everywhere because you can. It comes with a nifty tripod and a remote, and pairs with everything from your phone to your tablet, laptop, game console, and even supports flash drives (it comes with Bluetooth 5.0, Airplay compatibility, and wi-fi screen mirroring). The PIQO runs Android, letting you access all your streaming and browsing apps on it without pairing devices, and even letting you download content to its 16gb internal drive for offline viewing!

Designed to make projectors ubiquitous pieces of tech that you always have access to, the PIQO can be used to watch movies, stream videos, play games, watch matches, or even put up presentations. Unbelievably powerful for its size and uncompromisingly compatible across products and scenarios, the PIQO makes carrying a 240-inch high definition with you convenient and possible… because watching something as grand as Game of Thrones or The Crown on a screen the size of your palm should be a punishable offence.

Designer: PIQO

Click Here to Buy Now: $325 $700 (53% off) Hurry, only one week left!

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Click Here to Buy Now: $325 $700 (53% off) Hurry, only one week left!

In a world filled with plus-sized phones, Palm’s new phone is perfectly petite!

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At 3.3 inches, Palm’s latest smartphone has the smallest display in practically a decade (even the first ever iPhone had a 3.5 inch screen), but it does so with reason. The tiny, incredibly handy phone wants to be the phone you carry for convenience. It’s small and practically fits in your palm, and comes with a custom version of Android Oreo that mimics the tiled appearance of the Apple Watch menu screen.

Designed for people who love having phones that they can navigate through with one hand,the Palm comes with a 3.3-inch 1280×720 display with a respectable 445ppi. On the inside sits a Qualcomm Snapdragon 435 SoC, 3GB of RAM, and an unusually small 800mAh battery. You’ve got a 12MP rear camera with a flash, and an 8MP front-facing camera that’s capable of using facial recognition to unlock your phone (given that a 3.3 inch phone is a little on the smaller side for a fingerprint sensor). You’ve also got IP68 dust and water resistance, Bluetooth, GPS, LTE, and believe it or not, USB-C.

The new phone marks the rebirth of the brand that dominated the WebOS age, giving people the feel of a palmtop computer a decade ago. After fizzling out, post being acquired by HP, Palm was sold to TCL in 2014. Launched on the 15th of October with a complete rebranding (and endorsement by Stephen Curry), the new and improved Palm is poised to be the “ultraphone that’s designed to serve as a smaller, simplified companion to a larger smartphone.”

Designer: Palm

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The Microlino makes ‘adorable’ an automotive trait

As far as automobiles go, cute isn’t a term you see thrown around too often. The VW Beetle, for instance was one of the first cars to be perceived as cute (I’m more of a Mini Cooper man myself), but post its success, not many cars have harnessed that aesthetic… or harnessed it well (Google’s self-driving car looks cute, but feels more like a toy robot than a car).

Inspired by the BMW Isetta from the 50s (another adorable car), the Microlino does a rather wonderful job of looking cute, but at the same time also looking road-friendly. It harnesses the color palette you’d associate with Vespa and Lambretta scooters, and applies it to itself, looking friendly and approachable, but more importantly, it looks fit for the road. The electric car comes at just 2.4 meters long, and doesn’t have doors on the sides, but rather has one on the front. The dashboard and steering wheel literally open along with the door on the front, that allows both driver and passenger to board and deboard the vehicle. Its rather compact build makes it perfect for commuting effectively within the crowded city, although its aesthetic makes it ideal for a road trip on the French Riviera… and depending on the battery you choose, you can travel as much as 125 miles on a single charge.

The Microlino grabbed our attention primarily for its aesthetic, and held onto our attention with its impressive interiors and feature list. I’m personally not a speed-seeker myself, and consider the Vespa to be my soul-vehicle… but after seeing the Microlino, I may just change my mind! Besides, would you just look at those absolutely heart-warming color options!?

Designer: Micro Mobility

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