AquaGenie is “the world’s smartest water bottle,” a $70 internet-of-things device that “knows your water goals” and will connect to the Internet to inform you if you have met them.
AquaGenie is your daily companion that keeps you on track and fully hydrated, helping you achieve all your health, wellness, fitness and weight loss goals! Attractive, durable, easy to wash and easy to use, your AquaGenie tracks your consumption, reports it to most fitness apps, and goes with you everywhere.
The AquaGenie bottle knows your daily water goal and how much you’ve had to drink. To keep you on track, when it sees you’re behind, a glowing ring at the base of the bottle lights up to remind you to take a sip. It’s that simple!
To recharge, just place it on its stand for an hour and you’re good to go for a week! No wires, no batteries to change, no need to set it still to take a measurement.
Unlike your current water bottle, it’s wireless! Ah, but I snark. And in the wake of the Juicero “$500 bag-squeezing machine” fiasco, that’s too easy. Beyond the naked consumerism, there’s something deeply weird about the idea of smart gadgets. They tell us what we experience. Here, for example, is a machine that reminds you when and when not to be thirsty. You pick it up and ask it: am I thirsty?
Somewhere behind the gadget is a less human machine that doesn’t know us but needs us to do things for it, and which has a lot of stories to tell to help us on our way. “Capital” sometimes seems too obvious an answer. [via Nick Douglas]