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

Philips Wake-up Light

Add as a preferred source on Google


Philips Wake-up Light Fall is coming. And along with crisp days, beautiful foliage and the promise of eating-related holidays, the annual tilt away from the sun also brings with it some less desirable consequences: shorter days. For those of us who live and die by the alarm clock, darker mornings mean an even bigger struggle to throw back the sheets and face the day.

Philips wouldn’t be the first company to build an alarm-clock light that simulates dawn – those have been around for decades – but it would be the first to combine that concept with another standby of most techie bedsides: an iPod dock. The HF3490 offers iPod addicts some relief from the morning battle with a shot of both their favorite music and gradually brightening light, easing the transition from the land of sugarplum fairies to the land of cubicles and TPS reports.

Recommended Videos

The HF3490 uses a translucent white veil to hide both the integrated speakers and light, and a red LED display for its more typical time-telling function. A small white arm pokes out the side to serve as a perch for an iPod. In the morning, it will ratchet up lighting over the course of 30 minutes, and fade in a song from the iPod over the course of 90 seconds. For another approach, you can also choose to wake to the integrated FM radio or one of four nature sounds. Besides easing the beginning of the day, it can also ease the end with a dusk simulation that gradually dims out the lights and music as you fall asleep.

The Philips HF3490 currently sells for $200 – only a little more than its standalone $170 wake up lamp. More information can be found at Philips.

Philips Wake-up Light
Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
AI security cameras may soon recognize your walk before they recognize your face
A new AI gait system tracks body motion through skeletal keypoints, aiming at long-range identity checks where face scans and fingerprints fall short.
Security cam

Security cameras are built to look for faces. New research suggests they may soon have another target, the small habits buried in the way someone walks.

A paper published in the International Journal of Reasoning-based Intelligent Systems describes SKDMap-Net as a gait recognition system designed to identify people from walking video, even when the camera doesn’t get a clean look at their face. Instead of relying on a close-up scan, it studies how a body moves from frame to frame.

Read more
A 20-second 3D printer breakthrough comes with exactly the kind of catch science loves
The process can create complex microstructures far faster than some laser-based methods, but full 3D control is still a work in progress.
Aluminium, Smoke Pipe

A 3D printer that can make a structure in about 20 seconds sounds like a lab claim wearing a cape. The clever bit is real. The catch arrives before anyone starts dreaming about instant replacement parts.

University of Utah researchers have demonstrated a holographic 3D printing technique that hardens tiny structures in one exposure instead of building them layer by layer. That one-shot approach could avoid the weak, leaky seams that stacked printing can leave behind. For now, though, this is a tool for microstructures, not a shortcut to printing whatever object pops into your head.

Read more
Amazon is full of copycats and shady brands. This Chrome extension lets you avoid them.
Advertisement, Poster, Text

Shopping on Amazon used to be simple. You searched for a product, compared a few familiar brands, and checked out. These days, it often feels like you're scrolling through an endless parade of names that look like someone leaned on a keyboard before hitting publish. That's exactly the problem Knockoff is trying to solve.

Created by developer Josh Pigford, the Chrome extension doesn't promise to expose counterfeit products or magically tell you what's good. Instead, it tackles something arguably more annoying: the flood of unfamiliar, mass-produced brands that dominate Amazon search results.

Read more