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toaster

January 17, 2024

Revolution’s New Smart Toaster Will Have Wi-Fi and Tell You The Weather

Last week at CES, Revolution Cooking, a company that’s made a name for itself by creating the world’s most high-end, tech-enabled toaster, gave us a sneak peek at its latest-generation bread crisper.

The new Revolution toaster, which the company says will ship on May 1st, not only has the same recognizable touchscreen and proprietary and patented InstaGLO heating technology that powers the first generation toaster (and the new Macrowave oven), but it will be the company’s first Internet-connected edition.

So, why add Wi-Fi to a toaster? According to Sean Robbins, Revolution’s head of marketing, one obvious reason is to enable over-the-air feature rollouts and improvements to the product’s heating technology. However, perhaps the most significant reason relates to the role a toaster plays in a toast-lover’s daily routine.

“People who love to toast, it’s kind of a daily ritual for them,” said Robbins. “So we talked to our best customers and asked them what would you love to have on the home screen. We heard things related to what their daily routine is. ‘I want to start my day and make my toast, and I wonder what the weather is that day.'”

According to Robbins, the Revolution connected toaster is also the first to get the green light from UL. The product safety standard company, well-recognized for its certification stamp of approval, had previously frowned upon Internet-connected toasters. This is because adding connectivity to a product with an open heating element was considered a significant safety concern. Because of this, Robbins says that owners of their new toaster still won’t be able to remotely control the heating element, but they will have the comfort (and perhaps more importantly, retailers will have the comfort) that UL says this thing is safe.

While the Internet-connected toaster has become something of an Internet meme, often used to ridicule over-engineered products and an Internet of Things gone awry, there have been relatively few attempts to add connectivity to toasters. While some have taken a swing (and the tech press commentators have reacted predictably), the reality is since Revolution essentially kickstarted the whole high-end touchscreen toaster craze (there are a bunch of copycats on Amazon now) and has built a loyal customer base for its tech-enabled toaster, my guess is that they’ll likely find a receptive audience for those who also want their toaster to tell them whether they should bundle up for the day.

You can watch my interview with Robbins below.

Revolution Talks About Its Latest Smart Toaster at CES 2024

January 12, 2022

CES 2022: Meet the Graphene Kitchen Styler, a Cooking Appliance Made With the World’s Thinnest & Strongest Material

For most of us, graphite is the black smudgy drawing material at the center of an everyday wooden pencil. For material scientists, it’s the foundation for perhaps the most interesting nanomaterial ever discovered.

That nanomaterial is called graphene, which is an extremely thin layer of carbon arranged in a honeycomb-shaped (hexagonal) lattice.

Graphene was first isolated in 2004 when a couple of scientists stuck everyday household tape to graphite to separate the fragments. They repeated touching the tape to the thin dusting of graphite particles until they had a layer one atom thick. They were eventually able to take this method to create the world’s first sheet of what is called graphene. It was this discovery – as well as a better understanding of the amazing resulting properties of the material – for which the two scientists from the University of Manchester eventually won the Nobel Prize in physics in 2010.

Ever since, it’s those same properties that have made graphene the focus of material researchers around the world. Not only is graphene the world’s thinnest material (again, one atom thick), it’s also the strongest. In addition, graphene is also transparent and is an excellent conductor of both heat and electricity. As a result, some of the applications being explored as part of the “graphene gold rush” include everything from conductors to touch screens to concrete strengthener.

And now, a home kitchen cooking appliance.

That’s right, at CES last week, a company called Graphene Square showed off a new cooking appliance concept that uses graphene to heat and cook food. The product, called the Graphene Kitchen Styler, looks something like a transparent space-age George Foreman grill. To make, say, toast, you insert a slice of bread between two transparent clamshell sides, close it, and watch through the transparent graphene material as the bread gets toasty and brown.

According to a company spokesperson, the graphene can go up to 200 degrees Celsius within 90 seconds. And while the video below shows the appliance browning toast, Graphene Square says they’ve also used the Graphene Styler to cook steak, chicken, and even boil water.

CES 2022: A look at the graphene-based cooking appliance from Graphene Square

While graphene itself is a pretty exciting material technology, it remains to be seen as to whether consumers would want this specific appliance built with it. And while the Graphene Square says this product could be to market by 2023, it may just be that the company – which is more of a B2B materials science manufacturer than consumer products company – is trying to entice a Samsung or LG to consider graphene for one of their future kitchens appliances.

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