A couple weeks ago I had a fascinating video call with a gentleman named Dror Sharon, the CEO of a company called Consumer Physics. He showed me a product called Scio that just went up on Kickstarter ...
Dror Sharon, the CEO of ConsumerPhysics, was showing off a prototype of his handheld “food scanner” at TechCrunch Disrupt NY’s Hardware Alley this week, called the SCiO. The device is a pocket-sized ...
Like most small products with a cult following, SCiO has its fans and detractors. Those detractors took to the Internet recently to complain that the handheld molecular scanner, which raised $2.5 ...
SCiO is the pocket-sized sensor that could tell you everything you want to know about, well, just about anything. Inventor Dror Sharon’s creation is an infrared spectrometer the size of a thumb drive ...
Consumer Physics came up with the SCiO scanner, a gadget that can analyze certain food's nutritional value in just 10 seconds. The nutritional report is then sent to and viewed via its accompanying ...
A new Kickstarter has just been funded to create a device about the size of a car clicker to tell you what is in your food. The scanner harnesses the power of physics and chemistry to figure out ...
Some of you may remember the SCiO, originally a Kickstarter darling back in 2014 that promised people a pocket-sized micro spectrometer. It was claimed to be able to scan and determine the composition ...
If your technology product doesn’t seem to most users like a magic trick, you’re not trying hard enough: It’s an industry adage that explains a lot of successful products. But another selling point ...
The maker of a pocket spectrometer, which can scan and identify a variety of objects, says his company is working hard to fulfil outstanding orders. The Scio device was backed by about 13,000 people ...
There are few technologies as comprehensive as Google. A simple search can tell you more than you ever wanted to know about the world around you. But the world's largest search engine, robust as it ...