Sony 27" PS5 Gaming Monitor
Sony has officially unveiled its first gaming monitor bearing the PlayStation logo, and its main promise is fairly simple: transform any old desk into a true PS5 station. This 27-inch screen has a very basic specification: 2560 x 1440 resolution and an IPS display to keep the colors looking sharp even when seen from the side. Not quite cutting-edge, but Sony has been generous with the thoughtful PlayStation features they’ve included.

UltraBar X Desktop Accessory
Manchi, a company unknown to most hardware enthusiasts, just launched a Kickstarter for something called the UltraBar X. At first glance it looks like a skinny touchscreen someone stretched out and placed in front of a keyboard. Measure it though and the core piece is 199mm long, 50.4mm wide and 59.6mm tall – narrow enough to sit on any desk without taking up real estate from your mouse pad.

Retro Cam Raspberry Pi Camera
Blytical wanted photos that looked like they were shot with a thrift store camcorder, not another phone filter. He created Retro Cam, a handheld device that records true analog video and converts it into blurry, flickering stills as well as clips, all without using a single digital trick. It fits in your hand like a bulky point-and-shoot from the early 2000s, but each frame has the smooth blur and color drift of an old VHS tape.

Hisense 50" E6 Cinema Series QLED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV
Holiday seasons demand a TV that can last through those long – and we mean LONG – movie nights and the screaming sports fan in the other room. Hisense has just the ticket with the 50-inch E6 Cinema Series QLED 4K Smart Fire TV, now available for $218.99 – its price has been slashed by a whopping 42% from its original list price of $379.99. What does that get you for an entry level TV? A whole lot – namely quantum dot colour, full HDR support and seamless streaming all wrapped up in a very affordable package.

Apple iPhone Pocket Case Accessory
Apple has just introduced a new way to carry an iPhone, and it comes from an unexpected source. The company collaborated with Japanese fashion house Issey Miyake to design the iPhone Pocket, a flexible knitted pouch that fits over the phone like a sleeve. This attachment, available beginning Friday, November 14, transforms the smartphone into something you can wear rather than stuff in your jeans pocket.

Carnegie Mellon Spatially-Varying Autofocus Camera
Photo credit: Carnegie Mellon University
You find yourself in a garden at the perfect time, when the golden hour paints everything in a warm gentle light. A bee hovers annoyingly close to your lens, a tiny speck of pollen clinging to its leg. In the background, a rose blooms in the distance – and then beyond that, a stunning mountain range stretches out to meet the horizon. No matter how good your camera is, even a fancy $10,000 mirrorless beast, you’re always going to have to make some compromises – choose the bee and the mountains will turn into a blur of creamy bokeh. Some have even tried light-field cameras that inevitably sacrifice resolution for a bit of extra versatility. Every one of them is some kind of compromise.