Whirlpool’s smart oven identifies your food and lets you watch it cook in real time via an internal camera

Whirlpool’s smart oven identifies your food and lets you watch it cook in real time via an internal camera

5 years ago
Anonymous $L9wC17otzH

https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2019/1/8/18173569/smart-countertop-oven-whirlpool-wlabs-ces-2019

Home appliance giant Whirlpool has unveiled a new countertop oven that uses a built-in camera and object recognition to identify the food inside it and set the temperature and cooking time accordingly. The Smart Countertop Oven, released by the corporation’s sub-brand WLabs, is similar in functionality to the June oven, but $200 more expensive, with a sticker price of $799.

Both of these devices promise to take some of the thinking out of cooking, but with tech like this the proof is very much in the pudding. Will the algorithms recognize your food? And will they pick the right cooking settings? It’s hard to say without testing. Whirlpool doesn’t share exactly how many types of food its algorithms can recognize, but it does say they’re accurate enough to tell the difference between frozen and thawed items.

Whirlpool’s smart oven identifies your food and lets you watch it cook in real time via an internal camera

Jan 8, 2019, 2:26pm UTC
https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2019/1/8/18173569/smart-countertop-oven-whirlpool-wlabs-ces-2019 > Home appliance giant Whirlpool has unveiled a new countertop oven that uses a built-in camera and object recognition to identify the food inside it and set the temperature and cooking time accordingly. The Smart Countertop Oven, released by the corporation’s sub-brand WLabs, is similar in functionality to the June oven, but $200 more expensive, with a sticker price of $799. > Both of these devices promise to take some of the thinking out of cooking, but with tech like this the proof is very much in the pudding. Will the algorithms recognize your food? And will they pick the right cooking settings? It’s hard to say without testing. Whirlpool doesn’t share exactly how many types of food its algorithms can recognize, but it does say they’re accurate enough to tell the difference between frozen and thawed items.