4 more of David Pogue’s cheap and unexpected tech gifts


You don’t need an article to tell you what the hot new big-ticket holiday tech gifts are. If you owe your spouse, or parent, or child something expensive and glamorous—well, the world is full of iPads, phones, game consoles, and TVs. Have at it.

But what about everyone else? What about people who deserve a little something this time of year, but, you know, aren’t that important?

For that, I offer four more cheap and unexpected tech gifts. Nothing over $80, and nothing they saw coming.

TaoTronics Bluetooth Transmitter

So the world’s moving to wireless earbuds. Great!

Except for those times when you want to listen to something besides your phone. How are you supposed to use wireless earbuds with an airplane-seat TV? Or your TV at home? Or your electronic keyboard or guitar? Or just about anything else in the world that doesn’t have Bluetooth?

Easy: With the TaoTronics transmitter ($27). It plugs into the headphone jack of anything that plays sound, no matter how ancient—and suddenly, you can listen on your own wireless Bluetooth headphones! (In fact, two people can listen simultaneously.)

This particular TaoTronics model, in fact, can also send sound the other way. That is, it can receive sound as well as send it. You plug it into some old speaker, receiver, or TV (into the input jack), and now you can play music from your phone to that formerly non-wireless speaker.

It makes sense if you think about it.

The Dotti

This charming square device is ($30) like a modern Lite Brite. It has 64 giant square pixels, each capable of lighting up in any color you choose. They’re very bright and very vivid.

I know, I know: why?

The Dotti comes with six fairly good answers to that question:

  • For visual notifications. The Dotti can light up with graphics that indicate incoming calls, missed calls, text messages, calendar appointments, Facebook/Twitter/WhatsApp notifications, and so on. Phone on vibrate? No longer does that mean you’ll miss important alerts.

  • For the time. When it’s not alerting you to calls and texts, the Dotti can serve as a digital clock.

  • For doodling. Using the accompanying phone app, you can “draw” on the Dotti screen, changing individual “pixels” to whatever colors you like. It’s real-time: Each time you tap a dot on the phone’s “map,” the corresponding pixel lights up on the Dottie. You can save your graphics, share them online, or download other people’s masterworks.

  • For animating. In fact, you can string eight of your “drawings” together into a simple, looping animation; you control its playback speed. I can think of quite a number of young budding programmers and animators who’d get a kick out of this process.

  • For rolling the die. Shake the Dotti to make its screen light up like a die, showing from 1 to 6 dots in the familiar layout.

  • For music. Choose one of your songs from within the Dotti app, and marvel as the Dotti lights dance in sync with the playback.