Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Photography
  4. Smart Home
  5. Legacy Archives

Hands on: Memoto life logging camera prototype debuts at SXSW

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

We’ve been at SXSW for about two days and so far we’ve seen several nerds wearing Google Glass, drunk hipsters flooding Sixth Street, Darth Vader pedicabs, and of course, the beloved Grumpy Cat. But there’s been so much more we wish we could document, and those fleeting moments went by so quickly, they were unsnappable. Namely, Molly McHugh thinks she saw Anna Kendrick party hopping last night, and we’re pretty sure we ran past Tumblr CEO David Karp several times (wearing some more Google Glass, no less). Alas, we didn’t have enough time to whip out an iPhone to snap a pic.

Recommended Videos

So in comes Memoto. The miniature life logging camera made headlines last fall when it broke its Kickstarter funding goal – garnering more than $550,000 from its initial goal of $50,000. We sat down with Memoto chief marketing officer Oskar Kalmaru who flew in from Sweden to show off the prototype of the little camera everyone wants their hands on.

memoto hands on
Image used with permission by copyright holder

At first glance, the square Memoto camera, measuring just a bit over an inch per side, is extremely light. Once the user has the camera clipped on his or her shirt, bag strap, or jean pocket, the product is virtually unnoticeable. One may think of it as a sneaky spy cam, but it’s designed to blend in naturally, Kalmaru says, so you don’t have to think about document your daily life. Instead, the camera automatically does it for you. Memoto takes a 5-megapixel photo every 30 seconds, essentially creating a stop motion video of your day. It’s also got 8 GB of internal storage and a battery that’ll last for approximately two days of shooting. The photos are initially stored locally, but the final product will also stream pictures straight to a cloud service for backup.

memoto camera appBut why live log? For Kalmaru, it’s the little instances of daily life that seem mundane now, but may be precious in the future. “For example,” he says, whipping out the Memoto app on his iPhone, “here is a video of me taking my son to daycare. It’s little moments like these that you want to hold on to – everyone has photos of their first and last day of school but nothing in between. [Memoto] captures the real part of life.”

While the camera specs may not rival that of the latest point-and-shoots or smartphones, the little stop motion clip makes for a good way to create GIFs – especially for those who are obsessed with all things Internet. Users can also drag the video back and forth to find specific moments from the gallery that one may ordinarily miss in real time. Still, not everyone may want to live log every single moment – some parts of life might be better kept intimate and unrecorded. Unfortunately, there is no off button on the Memoto; Once you’re on the boat, you must stay on – unless you take the camera off and store it away. 

memoto live logging camera side
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Memoto live logging camera will ship late April to early May, with the starting price of $280 plus the cost of online service subscription. Be aware, however, that the final product won’t look as naked as the current prototype. Users will have the option of selecting a Memoto camera in Arctic White, Graphite Gray, Black, and Orange in either a matte or glossy finish.

Natt Garun
An avid gadgets and Internet culture enthusiast, Natt Garun spends her days bringing you the funniest, coolest, and strangest…
This new chip stacking technique could be the key to unlocking faster AI performance
Researchers solved the fragile chip stacking problem holding AI memory back, and the results are significant.
ai-chip-image

Every time you use ChatGPT or generate an image with AI, there is a memory chip working at extreme speed behind the scenes. However, that chip has a memory bottleneck problem, and a Korean research team may have just solved it.

Researchers at POSTECH (Pohang University of Science and Technology) developed a new way to stack more than 10 ultrathin semiconductor chips on top of each other, achieving a memory density roughly four times higher than the best commercial chips available today (via TechXplore).

Read more
ChatGPT can now finish what you started, and that’s a much bigger deal than it sounds
Man using ChatGPT on a laptop

Just a few minutes after unveiling its new GPT-5.6 family — Sol, Terra, and Luna — OpenAI is back with another announcement. This time, it's introducing ChatGPT Work, a new AI agent designed to do more than answer questions. Instead of helping with one task at a time, it can take on entire projects that span multiple apps, documents, and services.

If you've ever spent an afternoon jumping between different apps just to finish a single assignment, ChatGPT Work is trying to eliminate that back-and-forth. The idea is to describe the end goal and figure out the steps in between.

Read more
If you’ve grown tired of babysitting ChatGPT, the new GPT-5.6 models might be the fix
open ai logo on mac

OpenAI seems to have a new AI model waiting in the wings every few months, and today is no different. The company has officially unveiled the GPT-5.6 family, bringing three new models to ChatGPT, Codex, and its API. The big star of the show is GPT-5.6 Sol, but it's joined by Terra and Luna, which are designed to deliver strong performance at a lower cost.

The days of endless follow-up prompts may be numbered

Read more