
While society moves at its own pace, technology just keeps getting demonstrably better and more powerful. More and more tech products are having a profound impact on the way we live our lives, Most people own smartphones — they’re the best, most personal computers we’ve ever created — but what else should a modern man or woman own in this day and age? These are the five pieces of technology that are, in my opinion, must have if care...
5 Amazon Echo

This deserves a spot in your home because it’s simple, beautiful, easy to use, and extremely useful. You just plug it into a wall, connect it to your WiFi network via the Alexa app, and you’re up and running! The Echo can hear you from one room to another, thanks to its seven omni-directional microphones, and respond to you quickly and naturally. While the Echo can do all sorts of amazing things, like call you an Uber or read you the day’s news, it’s much better at the simple stuff, like setting timers and playing music. , I know this feels kinda last year for a Tech guys but really i can't leave it behind as it does so much more prior to today lifestyle as we know we are always living in the futuristic world with new inventions every day, i know we have the Google home but i just love this more i thing it does more in some aspects
4 LG OLED E6 Series

The look of the LG OLED E6 is impressive. From first glimpse, the TV appears high end. The upper part of the TV is so thin that it is hard to imagine televisions getting any thinner than this. The stand and speakers are flat with the table surface which is an interesting design. The OLEDE6's incredibly slim 'picture on glass' design technique creates simply the most gorgeous TVs ever made. Each OLED pixel produces its own light and colour independent of its neighbours. Unprecedentedly deep black colours sit right alongside even the brightest HDR whites without a hint of light 'bleed' - something just not possible with current LCD technologies. The OLED E6 series delivers levels of contrast and light control just not possible with LCD.
This works wonders for high-contrast HDR sources, as well as making today's standard dynamic range sources look better than on any other TV. The OLEDE6's lose some detail in very bright HDR areas, and occasionally suffer fleeting colour noise. They're not cheap, either. But none of that stops them being utterly brilliant.
A sound bar attached to the bottom of the screen, meanwhile, produces sound quality that wouldn't be out of place on an external audio system.
3 SmartCode 916 - Smart Home Lock

The SmartCode 916's small size makes it less conspicuous than other locks, and allows you to use your old house keys if you want. Kwikset's SecureScreen feature — which makes you punch in two random digits before entering your code — helps ensure burglars can't guess your password by fingerprint smudges alone. And it has an alarm if someone tries to break in. The 916 lacks a standalone app, but can be connected to several smart home hubs via Z-wave or ZigBee. Overall, a great all-around lock that allows you to ease into the world of smart locks, "unlocking" its best features as you feel comfortable.
2 LG Watch Sport

LG Watch Sport is the smartwatch to beat right now simply because it's a full-featured fitness tracker wrapped in a smartwatch running Android Wear 2.0. While other smartwatches can do "fitness tracking" that just amounts to logging runs and calories burned, this watch tracks your all-important strength training, too.
It's also one of the few smartwatches that supports an LTE connection, meaning, if you pop a SIM card into the back of the watch, it can make and receive calls and data – without your smartwatch nearby.
It doesn't have the best battery life, despite its bigger-than-normal size, and apps are still being announced for Google's newly refreshed platform. But it's a proper step up for Android Wear and smartwatches in general.
1 Snapchat Spectacles

Much like Snapchat itself, you either get it or you don't. Snapchat parent company Snap Inc. demonstrated its mastery of artificial scarcity when it debuted its Spectacles video-recording glasses late last year. An easy setup process, good-enough video quality and stylish look made Spectacles a hit. But the company’s distribution process—vending machines with limited stock that randomly appeared across the country—made them a phenomenon. From a hardware perspective, Spectacles could use improvement—they’re not great when it’s dark out and they’re troublesome for prescription eyeglass wearers. But Snap’s first foray into hardware shows promise at a time when camera companies like GoPro are struggling.
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