Infinix says the matter stores up to 2 watts of this energy and transfer it to the phone if needed. The company also claims that the matter uses its ‘sunflower’ wireless load technology, inspired by plants that orient themselves on the light. This enables the system in case to adapt the transmission path dynamically to make sure that it is most light possible within a 3 meter (about 10 feet) range. None of this is designed to keep your phone loaded while using it, but Infinix thinks it can help increase the time event if you do something else. .Julian Chokkattu
Huawei’s threefold phone exposes a large screen
Photo: Simon Hill
The best vouphones are about giving you more real estate but can you have too much of a good thing? Huawei’s mate XT is like the Honor Magic V3 (8/10, recommends), but with an extra screen and fold. In fact, threefold is a wrong name, as there are only two folds, but the three screens form a smart design that exposes up to a full 10.2 inches. It can also be used as a double screen at 7.9 inches, or a single screen in a traditional candy bar telephone shape at 6.4 inches.
The extent xt is fully unfolded and is only 3.6 mm thick, but you have two creases to do. Fold it completely, and it is 12.8 mm thick, and also very heavy. The hinges are smooth, and it feels surprisingly durable, with a satisfying folding action. It has an IPX8 rating for dust resistance.
The Huawei Mate XT Ultimate relies on Huawei’s own Kirin chips and Harmony OS. The rest of the specifications are solid and close to flagship, with a triple lens camera (50-megapixel head, 12-Megapixel Ultrawide and 12-Megapixel Periscope Telephoto), fairly large 5.600 MAH battery, 16 GB RAM and 1 TB storage. But then you would expect them to consider the € 3.500 price tag. If double the folds are equal to double the screen size, it would be more tempting, but it doesn’t feel far away from a book-style foldable, and you now pay a premium for the novelty. It is currently only available in specific markets, such as the Middle East, but it should land in Europe soon. .Simon Hill
When bicycle glasses meet the action camera
Photo: Julian Chokkattu
Cameras on our faces appear to be an inevitable future. Why are you wearing an action camera on your body if you can bake it in your bike glasses? This is the pitch of Bleequp Ranger. In the middle of the spectacles, a camera that can record up to one hour of 1080p video. There is a little battery accessory that cuts at the back of a helmet, as a tail light doubles, and it increases the video recording time to five hours in total. The arms of the glasses have loudspeakers, so you can play music, and they sounded pretty good in a very hard space. Of course there is ai here, but not on the glasses. The algorithms analyze the footage and represent the most interesting cuts, and place them together in a peak with minimal effort on your part. The glasses start on Kickstarter for $ 499 later this month. –Julian Chokkattu
NTT Docomo’s Mirza AR -Ils
Photo: Simon Hill
I had some guided Japanese calligraphy with the help of NTT Docomo’s AR glasses at MWC. They are big and thin, but these glasses do not need to be plugged into something directly, and you can fix your content in space so that it does not move with your head. It was relatively easy for me to reproduce the symbol before me, despite my lack of artistic talent, and it could be used in the workplace to cover engine parts or to repair the repair of the devices. While these glasses cost about $ 1,500 and mainly focused on businesses, NTT also showed me a new, lighter pair that has it in the works, with a simplified navigation and notifications of a Bluetooth-linked phone. The next generation of Mirza AR glasses is aimed at Joe Public and will be closer to $ 500, but it may require an AI subscription. .Simon Hill
Xpanceo shows more smart contact lens prototypes
Photo: Julian Chokkattu
I wrote about Xpanceo on the Mobile World Congress of last year, and the company is back with more Smart Contact Lens prototypes. One of these is a contact lens that can be recharged by a contact lens case, and another had biosensors who could analyze certain parameters in tear fluid to monitor glucose, cortisol and more. Another prototype had a pattern on the lens that shifted in response to intraocular pressure, which could help detect glaucoma early, and there was also a smart contact lens for AR Vision, which had an integrated microdisplay to show images. I could look at this one and read text! The ultimate goal is to bake all these prototypes in one product-the things of scientific dreams-but this kind of miniature technology is incredibly difficult to design. It will take a long time for a smart contact lens to arrive on the market. .Julian Chokkattu
Solecooler can cool or heat your sore feet
Photo: Simon Hill
When I closed at 30,000 steps for the day, my burning Tooties might have had something to do with Solecooler that caught my eye amid a sea of strange inventions and startups. The friendly inventor, Bruno Aubert (a thermodynamics engineer), explained that this smart insoles heated your feet with up to 4 degrees Celsius, or, if you turn it off, by 3.5 degrees. The beauty is that they are running on them by you, although it takes a few minutes to get started (much like air conditioning). It costs € 50 and comes in one size, which you should reduce if you are under size 14.