For tech companies, it’s not enough that many of us now fall asleep with our smartphones next to us, then reach to grab our phones yet again immediately after opening our eyes. They want us to have as many touchpoints in our lives as possible, an infinite number of ways in which we might interact with their products and services. So now they’re coming for our bedsides.
Lenovo’s Smart Clock is one of a few examples of this, along with Google’s Home Hub, Amazon’s new Echo Show 5, and the two-year-old Echo Spot. All of these products are small enough to live on a bedside table, just inches from where you lay your head at night. The companies say these little devices with screens could go anywhere; on a kitchen counter, in your home office. But they lend themselves particularly well to the space that exists between slumber and stumbling into the shower each morning. They show you your calendar, tell you the weather, play snippets of news, and, oh yes, blare loud noises into your brain if that’s what gets you going in the morning.
The Lenovo Smart Clock is the most affordable of the bunch at $80. It’s also more limited than some of the others, though, particularly the $129 Google Home Hub. One of my favorite things about the Home Hub, which occupied my bedside table until the Lenovo Smart Clock replaced it last week, is that it cycles through my Google Photos. It’s a minor feature that offers surprisingly large heaps of delight, because I don’t know about you, but I often forget which gems exist within the roll of nearly 10,000 photos I have. But no matter; the Lenovo Smart Clock won’t show photos. (Perhaps we are asking too much of our smart home gadgets? It is, after all, a clock.)
Even though it doesn’t act as a digital photo frame, the Lenovo Smart Clock is still a nicely designed, simple expression of Google Assistant in an alarm clock. It weighs less than a pound and has a heather gray fabric cover that softens what might otherwise be hard edges. The resulting aesthetic skews dorm room, or maybe post-college West Elm. Its 4-inch touchscreen display has noticeable but inoffensive bezels and two rubber foot strips on the bottom to give it some grip. The only Lenovo branding on the thing lives in a fabric tag stitched on the back.