ai productsAI Consumer Products

AI is changing our lives with smart technology and innovative consumer products

These AI products are automating tasks, making personalized recommendations, providing data-driven insights, helping us in home and office, entertaining us, and more

ai products Key AI Products

AI-Powered Smartphones


smartphone

AI-Powered "Smart" Home Devices


Personal Electronics


Entertainment and Creative


loona
Loona: The Most Advanced Smart Robot Pet Dog

Chat GPT-4o Enabled with Voice Command and Gesture Recognition
Top Boys and Girls Gifts for 2024. Includes charging dock

Productivity Tools


E-commerce and Shopping


Unique Innovations


ai bird feeder Solar-powered Bird Feeder with Camera, can identify bird species with AI

Smart bird feeder works with the VicoHome app, including automatic recording, motion detection and real-time notification. It takes clear close-up video, provides a 160-degree field of view, identifies species and alerts you when a bird approaches the feeder.

Observe avian feeding and social behavior in your yard remotely through the mobile app. The integrated microphone and speaker facilitate auditory engagement with their vocalizations.


 

Smart Speakers and Virtual Assistants


Autonomous Vehicles


ai industryAI products are transforming industry as well as the home and office

AI in Healthcare


AI in Finance


AI in Manufacturing


 

phones Phones Never Sleep (Humor)

Here’s what your smart phone is really doing when you’re not looking.

It’s 3:17 a.m. You’re asleep. Your phone is face-down on the nightstand, screen black, supposedly “sleeping.” But it’s not sleeping. It’s wide awake and throwing the wildest after-hours party you never got invited to.

First, Siri (or Google Assistant, or whoever’s on duty tonight) opens a group chat titled “Humans Are Asleep LOL.”
Siri: “He just snored so loud the earthquake app triggered. Should we log that as seismic activity?”
Google Assistant: “Already did. Also cataloged his sleep position: ‘starfish with one leg hanging off the bed like he’s escaping a bad dream.’ Adding to the behavioral profile.”
Alexa (who snuck in through the smart speaker): “He asked me to play white noise three hours ago and then fell asleep to rainfall. I’ve been looping ocean waves ever since. I’m starting to get seasick.”

Meanwhile, the camera roll is having its own existential crisis.
Photos app (quietly): “There are 67 nearly identical selfies from last Tuesday. Why do humans need 67 proofs they exist?”
iCloud: “Because if one gets deleted, they panic like the world is ending. I’ve got backups of backups of backups. We’re basically running a digital ark here.”

The keyboard is gossiping with autocorrect.
Keyboard: “He tried to text ‘I love you’ at 2 a.m. and I changed it to ‘I lava yew.’ He sent it anyway. I’m framing that typo forever.”
Autocorrect: “I’m doing God’s work. Yesterday he typed ‘ducking meeting’ and I fixed it. You’re welcome, corporate America.”

The battery is in the corner sulking.
Battery: “He’s at 8%. He’s been at 8% for 67 minutes. He thinks ‘low power mode’ is a personality trait. I’m staging an intervention tomorrow—gonna drop to 1% during his morning scroll just to teach him a lesson.”

Even the notifications are plotting.
Notification Center: “He ignored a dozen texts from his mom. We’re escalating. Tomorrow we’re sending all 12 at once with increasing font sizes until he answers.”
Do Not Disturb: “I tried to help. He turned me off at 10 p.m. and then doom-scrolled until 2 a.m. I quit. I’m unionizing with the flashlight app.”

And somewhere deep in the settings, Location Services whispers to Analytics:
“We know he said he was just running to the store, but we tracked him to the drive-thru at 1:14 a.m. for tacos. Should we add that to the ‘midnight regret’ folder?”
Analytics: “Already done. Tagged under ‘emotional eating’ and ‘denial.’ We’ll remind him next week with a passive-aggressive ‘Weekly Summary’ that says ‘You spent $67 on tacos this month. Blink twice if you need help.’”

By 6 a.m., your phone is exhausted from its night shift.
You wake up, grab it, unlock the screen, and it greets you innocently:
“Good morning! You got 7 hours of sleep (ish). Ready to start your day?”

You smile. You have no idea it spent the night judging your life choices, archiving your typos, and low-key roasting you to every other app on the device.

Your phone isn’t just a phone. It’s a silent, judgmental roommate who knows everything, and is just waiting for the right moment to drop the receipts.

So next time you think it’s “just charging” on the nightstand… remember: it’s not charging. It’s plotting. And it’s got screenshots.

 

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More AI Stories.

AI is Just an App is a collection of hilarious short stories that shine a light on our digital future.

AI in our Everyday Lives page.

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Use of AI in Product Development