Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Paper or digital? The hybrid Slice Planner gives you the best of both worlds

Add as a preferred source on Google

Do you drive yourself a little bit bonkers switching back and forth between digital and paper planners? That’s a common problem with people who want the syncing and flexibility of digital planners and the immediacy and “realness” of paper. The hybrid Slice Planner, currently in a Kickstarter campaign, is designed for people who need to manage busy lives yet want the best of both digital and paper planning tools. In addition to calendar syncing, Slice Planner enhances planning with utilizing computer vision (CV) and augmented reality (AR) technologies.

A key to Slice Planner’s concept is using a clock-face diagram on the paper side of the hybrid planner. According to the designers, 65 percent of the population are visual thinkers, so a clock face helps them focus on tasks and time. The radial clock-face diagram also enables the AR and CV features.

Recommended Videos

A PDF version of the paper planner will be available for those who just want to print out hard copy sheets. Two attractive versions of the Slice Planner notebook, one hardcover and the other with a leather soft cover that holds planner refills, will keep your pages neater and easier to use and carry. Each paper planner has 224 pages with a 12-hour calendar clock face on the left side pages and open space for notes and diagrams on the right side pages. Use the next two pages if your days extend longer than 12 hours.

 

The free Slice Planner app, which works with Outlook, Google, and Apple digital calendars, adds features and flexibility to the calendars and your planning management. The app uses your smartphone camera and Google Vision’s optical character recognition (OCR) to recognize and synchronize events and notations from the paper clock face diagram to your digital calendar (legible handwriting helps). AR comes into play when you focus the camera on your paper calendar — overlapping events show up in red in the app, alerting you to adjust the schedule.

A Smart Crop app tool helps you transfer written notes or drawings. Draw a solid line around the note, formula, figures, or whatever and the app crops that segment digitally and attaches it to a calendar event. You can use this tool to capture content on any surface, not just the paper Slice Planner, so you can grab content on a whiteboard or from a book, for example.

The Advanced Sharing app feature enables sharing notes or diagrams or any selected content from paper. You can send the content via email, store it in the cloud, or attach it to calendar events.

You can get breaks on the eventual retail prices for the hardcover ($37) and leather soft cover ($50) versions of the Slice Planner by pre-ordering via the Kickstarter campaign. A limited number of paper planners will ship in December, with full production scheduled for March 2017.

Bruce Brown
Bruce Brown Contributing Editor   As a Contributing Editor to the Auto teams at Digital Trends and TheManual.com, Bruce…
Anti-surveillance clothing is getting cheaper, but don’t expect an invisibility cloak
Affordable shirts now claim to confuse facial recognition, although their protection depends heavily on the camera and software watching you
Chart, Plot, Adult

Anti-surveillance clothing is starting to look less like an art-school experiment and more like something you could actually wear outside. Shirts designed to confuse facial recognition systems now cost about as much as ordinary streetwear, although buying one won’t make you disappear.

The Guardian reports that designers are using face-like prints, unusual cuts and infrared lights to interfere with computer vision. These techniques target specific weaknesses, so their success depends on what happens to be watching you.

Read more
This spinning drone hides in plain sight using a visual illusion
This drone doesn't turn invisible. It tricks your brain into thinking it has.
Phantom Twist

For decades, engineers have chased the dream of an invisible drone. The usual approaches have involved transparent materials, camouflage coatings, or complex optical systems that bend light around an object. Researchers at Northwestern University decided to take a completely different route. Instead of hiding the drone itself, they chose to fool the human eye.

The result is Phantom Twist, an experimental drone that spins so rapidly it almost disappears into the background. It's not technically invisible, but to anyone watching, it looks more like a faint blur than a flying machine.

Read more
This smart knitted fabric can flip switches, count your steps, and even change shape
Grandma's knitting just entered its Iron Man era
Representative Image

For most of us, knitting brings to mind sweaters, scarves, and perhaps an ambitious grandmother determined to make winter more fashionable. Researchers at Harvard University, however, have a far more futuristic vision. They've transformed ordinary knitted fabric into a programmable material capable of changing shape, acting as an electrical switch, sensing movement, and potentially forming the foundation of tomorrow's wearable technology.

The research, published in Advanced Functional Materials by scientists at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), demonstrates how machine-knitted textiles can "snap" between multiple stable shapes without relying on motors or rigid mechanical parts.

Read more