Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Legacy Archives

Flic is a smart, wireless button that lets you play music, make calls, order pizza

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apparently tapping screens of various sorts and sizes is becoming too arduous for the human race, so we need to revert to tactile buttons to make it even easier to accomplish everyday tasks. That’s the proposition of the Flic, a smart button that can be set up to do just about anything (within reason) you want to do on a day-to-day basis – from snapping photos, to making calls, to playing music, to snoozing your alarm, and beyond.

At first glance, the Flic is a soft, pleasant-looking button that sticks to various surfaces. However, once a user sets up functions for their Flic via the accompanying app, the true power of the smart button shines through. Each Flic can execute three actions – one by clicking, another by double-clicking and yet another by holding.

Recommended Videos

There are many potential use cases for the Flic – for instance, it can be used to control smart features in your home (e.g., lighting, device power, unlocking doors), help you find a misplaced phone or use speed dial to contact a family member (or your favorite pizza joint).

 

 
The smart button uses Bluetooth Low Energy to connect to an iPhone (4S and later), iPad (third generation and later) or Android device (4.3 and later), and works up to 150 feet away from its paired device. One Flic button can last up to 60,000 clicks or about five years, according to the Swedish team behind the device. It uses standard button cells, which can be replaced.

The Flic, which is smaller than a quarter, is housed in a silicon mold and can withstand outdoor environments and dust. It also comes with a reusable double-sided adhesive, which can be cleaned whenever it gets dirty.

The button will retail for about $35, though backers of the crowdfunding campaign can get some at a discount. There’s also a $10 Flic Clip, which turns the smart button into a wearable device.

The Flic’s Indiegogo campaign, which closes on Jan. 3, has raised more than $420,000, catapulting past its original $80,000 goal. Shipments are scheduled to begin in March.

Jason Hahn
Former Contributor
Jason Hahn is a part-time freelance writer based in New Jersey. He earned his master's degree in journalism at Northwestern…
Robots can now ‘see’ touch thanks to a new color-changing tactile sensor
Researchers have developed a color-changing tactile sensor that turns pressure into visible information.
Robot Touch Human Finger

Most robots are pretty good at seeing, but touching? That's been a much tougher problem. While humans instinctively know how hard they're gripping a coffee mug or pressing a button, robots have traditionally relied on complex arrays of tiny sensors to estimate the same thing. Now, researchers at Queen Mary University of London believe they've found a much simpler solution: make touch visible.

A sensor that turns touch into color

Read more
Chrome is getting better at understanding the breaks and punctations you never say out loud
Voice typing in Chrome is about to feel much more natural
Google Chrome on Android Featured

Google is quietly making voice dictation in Chrome feel a lot more natural. With the latest Chrome 151 Beta, the company is introducing a new capability that allows the browser's speech recognition engine to automatically infer punctuation based on the way people speak, eliminating the need to explicitly say commands like "comma" or "full stop."

The update may sound minor at first glance, but it addresses one of the biggest frustrations with voice typing: speaking naturally often produces text that lacks punctuation unless users consciously dictate every punctuation mark. By teaching Chrome to understand pauses, rhythm, and speech patterns, Google is taking another step toward making conversations with computers feel more human.

Read more
Horror films play music to warn about danger. These headphones use the same trick to save you from robots
Spherephones replaces factory alarms with music that tells you what is coming and from where.
spherephones-georgia-tech

The ear has always processed what is coming before the eye does. In horror movies, the music always tells you something bad is coming. Now researchers at Georgia Tech are using the same idea in real life to keep factory workers safe around robots.

They have built a wearable headset called Spherephones that converts nearby robot movement into spatial music, giving you a warning before a machine gets too close. It helps the user stay aware without breaking their attention.

Read more