A smart display might be for you if you want the convenience of a smart assistant with the added bonus of having something to look at. When you put Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa into a smart speaker with a tablet-sized screen, you get a fun way to see the weather or album art, watch TV shows, follow video recipes, and even make video calls. We've tested most of the major displays on the market and listed our favorites below.

Smart displays are helpful, acting as hubs for your smart home devices, walking you through recipes while you chop away in the kitchen, and in some cases allowing you to video chat hands-free too. But we're not sure how long they'll be worth it, or even exist, in their current form. Meta's Portals that we liked are also no longer available. Google recently stopped issuing software updates for some third-party displays (more on that below), and it seems to have shifted focus to its new Pixel Tablet, which is a tablet that moonlights as a smart display (you can also read about it below).


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Amazon seems to be continuing with new smart displays, but a recent report claimed the company lost $10 billion last year thanks to failures around the Alexa voice assistant. The company also laid off 18,000 people in 2022 and another 9,000 this year, and the Alexa team was purportedly hit hard.

The future of these smart home devices isn't clear right now, but if you're going to get one, we suggest sticking with devices directly from the brand whose voice assistant you prefer. Otherwise, consider one of our favorite tablets instead.

The Google Nest Hub Max is a great all-around smart display. It has an unobtrusive design, a 10-inch touchscreen display, some pretty good speakers, and a camera for video calls over Google Duo or non-Google services like Zoom. The camera can also identify individual members of the house and shows personal information only pertaining to each person. Just know you'll need the right amount of space for it, and while you can turn the camera off, you may want to pick up a privacy cover to block it when it's not in use.

The second-generation Echo Show 8 is the middle child in the Show family, smaller than the 10 and bigger than the 5, but we think it's the best choice for most people. Generally, 8 inches is a great size for a smart display. It won't be hard to read recipes in the kitchen or watch movies on this screen, and it won't take up the entire counter in small kitchens. It has the same pixel density as the larger Echo Show 10, so it's a sharp screen.

WIRED reviewer Parker Hall says it's a solid speaker and does all the expected smart display tasks like controlling smart home products and video chatting (yes, there's a camera). He particularly loves the timer setting, where you can see it count down. It doesn't swivel to follow you around the room like the Echo Show 10, but the camera does have auto-pan and zoom features to keep you centered in the frame during video calls (as long as you don't wander too far out of view). The camera has a shutter for when you aren't using it.

The Pixel Tablet obviously costs much more than our other picks in this guide. But you get both a handy smart display and a tablet to binge movies on when someone else in the household is hogging the TV. The multi-user support lets you add up to eight accounts, each of which can have custom apps, layouts, and wallpapers all protected by fingerprint. It's a tablet for the whole family.

Echo Show 15 for $280: This is the largest of them all, with a 15.6-inch display with customizable widgets, so you can have smart-home device controls and calendar reminders available at all times. It's made to be mounted on your wall like a TV (you can get a stand, but it's sold separately), and the Show 15 also pairs with a Fire TV remote (or you can use the app) to use the streaming features. Voice commands for streaming don't work well, so it feels like a weird in-between of a smart display and a TV that doesn't excel in either department.

We don't believe you need a smart display by any stretch. If you don't feel the need for a screen (we already have enough of those!), a smart speaker offers the power of a voice assistant with often much better sound. We like the Sonos One Gen 2 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) because it will give you the best sound you can get from a compact smart speaker, and it works with either Alexa or Google Assistant. Sonos speakers also connect really easily with each other and can be directly controlled from your Spotify app, or from any app with AirPlay support.

Google is no longer updating software for two of the third-party displays we previously recommended in this guide: the Lenovo Smart Display and JBL Link View. If you already have one, it will still work, but some features will likely suffer or disappear entirely as time goes on. As of now, Google hasn't said if the Lenovo Smart Clock Gen 2 and Smart Clock Essential that we like will also lose updates, but it seems that might be the fate of all third-party devices soon, which is why we don't recommend them anymore.

I'm looking for help in displaying the data that is created by the daq assistant in labview in table format. I'm collecting several temperatures, using the logging function in the daq assistant to log to a tdms file, and than displaying the data in a waveform chart.

While the data is being logged/charted, I would like to display a snapshot of the current values in a table format. I'm not versed in the low level daqmx VIs. I'm suspecting if anyone can even point me to the format that the daq assistant produces its data output in, I could come up with a way to create the table but any and all help would be greatly appreciated.

The data type that comes from a DAQ Assistant is the Dynamic Data Type. You will not be able to wire this directly to a table indicator, but you can convert the data from the Dynamic Data Type to the string format the table expects. James_W asked some good questions that will help dictate what you need to do in order to convert the data to the string format, but one simple thing you could do is use the Convert from Dynamic Data into a Number to Fractional String primitive. I have my Convert from Dynamic Data configured as "2D array of scalars - columns are channels", but you can use whatever type works best for you. If you want to display the time, you will need to calculate it from the waveform by how James_W described and insert it into your array of strings that gets displayed on the table.

Lenovo Smart Display and Google Photos work brilliantly together. So you can turn your family albums into slideshows or display a different photo each day. And with Lenovo Smart Display 7, color tone sensors auto adjust to the time of day, enhancing every image perfectly.

I am running home assistant on a Raspberry with HAOS. Is there any way to use the display output of the host Raspberry to display a status dashboard on a nearby screen, or is the local console only limited to the command line interface for system management?

I bought a 32x64 Pixel P5 matrix display. The diffuser and pixel grid is 3d printed. The first layer (diffusion layer) is printed in white PLA. The rest of the layers (light blocking grid) is printed in black PLA. This process requires a good 3D-printer that can print a perfect first layer. As can be seen, mine is pretty bad. It's too small and the right half diffuses the light unevenly.

I have a Raspberry pi4 with a intergrated touch screen monitor that has Home assistant installed via Venv on it.

I am using it as a control panel to control Home assistant, currently I have it to where it shuts off when not being used I prefer to have it keep doing that, I can remote in using putty to SSH and send these commands, export DISPLAY=:0 and xset dpms force on it turns on the display for a few mins just like I want, my question is how do I get Home assistant to do this via automation when it senses that I am home, I already have automation that turns on the lights and couple other things when I get home that part is done just need to add in the commands to turn on the monitor

Ok the commands on your last post do work under the Homeassistant user name on SSH, but does require a password to execute so now I am going to try to setup a account to do this without a password we will see what kind of train wreck this becomes LOL

We are currently in the process of moving from SharePoint 2013 to SharePoint Online and want to replicate showing the Assistant Name and Phone information (Sometimes there are multiple assistants), but there does not appear to be an easy way to do this. We cannot recreate the sync between PeopleSoft and the SPO User Profile service as custom connections do not appear possible.

I am interested in the HP LP2275w display and I could not find any support for MAC OS X (e.g. HP Display Assistant Utility). Strange that they built in a DisplaPort connector which is more wide spread among mac hardware.

I just connected an HP C4D27AA 27" display to my mid 2012 15" Mac Book Pro Retina (Mavericks) and set it up using: Mac System Prefferences>Display, Best for Display, Standard. Then had to adjust "underscan" until the picture fit the screen. initially it was too big and I could not see the edges. Then in Arangement, check or uncheck the box for mirroring. if unchecked, drag the two screens to where you want them. feft,right,top,bottom. I affects how your cursor travels from one screen to the other. hope this helps.

In robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery, the first assistant (FA) is responsible for tasks such as robot docking, passing necessary materials, manipulating hand-held instruments, and helping with trocar planning and placement. The performance of the FA is critical for the outcome of the surgery. The authors introduce ARssist, an augmented reality application based on an optical see-through head-mounted display, to help the FA perform these tasks. ARssist offers (i) real-time three-dimensional rendering of the robotic instruments, hand-held instruments, and endoscope based on a hybrid tracking scheme and (ii) real-time stereo endoscopy that is configurable to suit the FA's hand-eye coordination when operating based on endoscopy feedback. ARssist has the potential to help the FA perform his/her task more efficiently, and hence improve the outcome of robot-assisted laparoscopic surgeries. ff782bc1db

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