Skip to main content

Welcome to the real world: Hardware takes over SXSW

SXSW Interactive week has always been all about the apps. While social-networking platforms and novel new apps still have major pull here, there’s no denying that hardware – real palpable gadgets that you can see and touch – stole the show this year. Virtual reality, consider this your notice: Real life is back.

It’s impossible to ignore. Leap Motion took over an entire corner block, complete with finished units for anyone and everyone to test out, hands on.

Lytro grabbed prime real estate at the SXSW Create tent, where the team held talks, demos, and photography how-to sessions, and even rented its magic focus-and-refocus cameras out to the public. For days, everywhere you looked in Austin, someone was snapping with a Lytro.

You can’t turn a corner without running into a 3D printer. In fact, Makerbot CEO Bre Pettis spoke at the opening day of SXSW keynotes this year. “We’re launching hardware at SXSW,” he said while unveiling the Makerbot Digitizer, a product that scans items and then allows you to recreate them with a 3D printer. “It is the best time to get into hardware … Join the next industrial revolution.”

lytro sxsw
The Lytro photo booth, where users had a variety of objects available to test the one-of-a-kind camera. Image used with permission by copyright holder

The star of the SXSW hardware show isn’t even trying to grab any spotlight – it’s just doing it. During the first half of this week, Google Glass sightings were everywhere. Tumblr creator David Karp was strolling 6th Street with a pair. A nameless developer told me I wasn’t allowed to get a shot of him wearing the specs (we did anyway – not sorry). A friend convinced another privileged Google Glass-wearer to let him try them on – mid-party, many drinks deep, mind you – but says the results are everything we’ve hoped for. “It’s just like in the video, where you see the box pulling up all the information,” he tells me. “This tech has a mystical exclusivity around it, and I was excited to see how I would like this new quasi-reality.” The verdict? Awesome.

It wasn’t always like this. Last year, we were all glued to our phones, still newly-addicted to Instagram, just learning what the hell “SoLoMo” meant, still trying to grab that damn Mayor’s badge. This year, we’re waiting in line to get hands on with hardware we haven’t been able to try anywhere else.

If SXSW is any indication of digital and social trends – and whatever your opinion of the festival, it’s certainly had a cyber-cultural impact – the fact that more than a dozen panels were dedicated to talking about the world outside of our smartphones is a big indicator of where our interests lie. The shift has provoked a series of “apps are over!” articles from pundits, who claim that since SXSW (among other things) has signaled a returned interested in products we can touch and prod, this means the age of the installation has come to an end.

But that’s too simple. Couldn’t it be that we’re just starting to merge our virtual-reality fixation with our actual-reality lives better? That the barriers between staring at smartphone screens and reaching out into the world surrounding us are being lowered?

Life-logging camera Memoto.
Life-logging camera Memoto. Image used with permission by copyright holder

We’re not all about to give up Facebook to buy 3D printers. But our social-network fatigue could be pushing us to start experiencing things outside of our smartphones, laptops and tablets. But these things, by and large, come with a heavy software component, one that you can bet will leverage all that personal data we’ve been stacking up on social networks for years. And that’s likely what most of us want, anyway. We’ve had a taste of personalization and customization, and the mainstream user isn’t going back from that.

Still, it’s all extremely exciting to see. Apps were a huge step in digitally experiencing and interacting with the world around us, and SXSW had its way with them (and then some). Now we’re tip toeing beyond, and it’s resulting in more creative, beneficial products and services. Now we can track, share and monitor our bodies and activity, thanks to FitBits and Fuelbands. Now we can snap photos with cameras that help us record and stream everything we’re doing.

SXSW is a cultural pulse taker, and this year we learned that the confines of a digital social life are no longer the dimensions of your smartphone screen. 

Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
The best tablets in 2024: top 11 tablets you can buy now
Disney+ app on the iPad Air 5.

As much as we love having the best smartphones in our pockets, there are times when those small screens don't cut it and we just need a larger display. That's when you turn to a tablet, which is great for being productive on the go and can be a awesome way to unwind and relax too. While the tablet market really took off after the iPad, it has grown to be quite diverse with a huge variety of products — from great budget options to powerhouses for professionals.

We've tried out a lot of tablets here at Digital Trends, from the workhorses for pros to tablets that are made for kids and even seniors -- there's a tablet for every person and every budget. For most people, though, we think Apple's iPad Air is the best overall tablet — especially if you're already invested in the Apple ecosystem. But if you're not an Apple user, that's fine too; there are plenty of other great options that you'll find in this roundup.

Read more
How to delete a file from Google Drive on desktop and mobile
Google Drive in Chrome on a MacBook.

Google Drive is an excellent cloud storage solution that can be accessed from numerous devices. Whether you do most of your Google Drive uploading or downloading from a PC, Chromebook, or mobile device, there’s going to come a time when you’ll need to delete a file (or two). Fortunately, the deletion process couldn’t be more straightforward. We’ve also put together this helpful guide to show you how to trash your Drive content a couple of different ways.

Read more
Windows 11 might nag you about AI requirements soon
Copilot on a laptop on a desk.

After recent reports of new hardware requirements for the upcoming Windows 11 24H2 update, it is evident that Microsoft is gearing up to introduce a bunch of new AI features. A new report now suggests that the company is working on adding new code to the operating system to alert users if they fail to match the minimum requirements to run AI-based applications.

According to Albacore on X (formerly known as Twitter), systems that do not meet the requirements will display a warning message in the form of a watermark. After digging into the latest Windows 11 Insider Build 26200, he came across requirements coded in the operating system for an upcoming AI File Explorer feature. The minimum requirement includes an ARM64 processor, 16GB of memory, 225GB of total storage, and a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite NPU.

Read more