bespoke

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  • Samsung Bespoke AI Oven

    Samsung's new wall oven lets you livestream a video feed of what's cooking

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    01.02.2023

    Samsung is adding a wall oven and wall mount hood to its lineup of Bespoke appliances. The oven will let you livestream a feed of what you're cooking on social platforms.

  • Klipsch T10 Bespoke wireless earbuds

    Klipsch's tiny T10 wireless earbuds arrive as a $2,500 'bespoke' model

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.17.2022

    Klipsch has finally released the T10 earbuds it unveiled in 2020 — but you're now paying at least $2,500 for the custom-only design.

  • Samsung Electronics

    Samsung's customizable refrigerator comes in nine colors and eight sizes

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    06.05.2019

    Samsung wants to capitalize on consumers who value personal tastes and experiences, and they plan to do so with refrigerators. Yesterday, Samsung revealed Project PRISM, or what it's calling a "new era of customized home appliances." The first product in its lineup is BESPOKE, a refrigerator for which users can choose the material, color and size, as well as other features.

  • Philippe Starck wants you to make 3D-printed custom furniture

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.11.2014

    Philippe Starck is no longer satisfied with crafting exotic-looking products that don't change -- he wants to give you control over the design process. He tells the Wall Street Journal that his newly opened custom furniture venture, TOG, will eventually become an open source community that lets you create your own 3D-printed furniture and share designs with others. He'd also like to see kiosks that make it easy for anyone to produce their own furniture, even if they can't justify a 3D printer of their own.

  • Loewe Reference ID TV hits the UK in July with full customization and a 1TB DVR

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.02.2013

    Loewe has staked its success in the TV market on personalized designs, and it's taking that concept to its logical extreme with the upcoming Reference ID. First shown at IFA last year, the LCD set is now due to reach the UK in July with progressively wilder customization options. Owners will only have a choice of covers for the built-in 160W speaker at first, they'll get frame selections later in the summer, and full customization of materials and patterns this fall -- if they want a set housed in leather and gold, it can happen. Conformists might still be happy with the Reference ID between its 3D-ready 400Hz panel, media streaming and a dual-channel DVR with 1TB of space. Loewe's adaptable design won't be cheap for discerning Brits, however: 40-, 46- and 55-inch variants will respectively cost £4,500, £5,500 and £6,500 ($7,007, $8,564 and $10,121), and that's before applying a personal touch.

  • Fujifilm X-Pro1 mirrorless camera review

    by 
    Sharif Sakr
    Sharif Sakr
    04.27.2012

    More Info Fujifilm confirms X-Pro1 at CES Fujifilm X-Pro1 interchangeable lens camera preview Sony Alpha NEX-7 mirrorless camera review Hear any mention of retro-styled cameras with exorbitant price tags and it's hard not to get suspicious. That kind of talk brings to mind Leica's incessant re-branding of Panasonic Lumix models, or those unicorn limited editions out of Japan that just leave us baffled. But it's okay, you can relax with the Fujifilm X-Pro1. At $1,700 for the body only it's crazily expensive, sure, but not when you compare to an $8,000 Leica M9-P. Besides, it's a legitimate heir to a strong line of Fuji shooters that includes the much-loved X100 and the more accessible X10. That's a strong pedigree, and no matter how deeply you peer into its mirrorless aperture, the X-Pro1 should offer up enough technology to stop you being cynical. Like what, you ask? Well, a genuinely surprising bespoke 16-megapixel APS-C sensor, for starters, plus a hybrid viewfinder designed to keep everyone happy all of the time, and a Fuji X lens mount that already has a Leica M9 adapter available (plus others, like Nikon, if you scan eBay). It all adds up to something special, but before you go tweeting this article to whimsical rich uncles, there are also some complicating factors you ought to be aware of. Even in a utopian paradise where everyone could afford this sip of photographic luxury, it's far from certain whether everyone would choose it over other interchangeable lens cameras. Read on past the break and we'll explain why.