The Rufus Cuff, an Android OS wearable, looks like something out of a science fiction TV show. It's possibly the only device out there that can't be categorized using regular criteria. It could be ...
Less is more has reigned supreme as the tech industry’s design aesthetic, especially when it comes to gadgets and gizmos that seem to get progressively smaller and thinner. But breaking with tradition ...
Most of the early smartwatches we've seen run scaled-down software designed for teeny-weeny screens. But then you also have devices like Neptune Pine and Omate TrueSmart that are basically full ...
With its three-inch screen, the Rufus Cuff thumbs its nose at smartwatches with their tiny faces and dainty wristbands. The wearable device, which bills itself as a “wrist communicator” and runs on ...
So you’ve got a wearable device with a 1.8 inch screen and the ability to show you caller ID strapped to your wrist? That’s cute. The Rufus Cuff is more like a full-fledged smartphone that you can ...
The Rufus Cuff isn’t your typical wearable and the team behind it knows that. It started out consumer focused but as time went on, enterprise became part of the picture and has taken the lead in the ...
There's no way I would wear the Rufus Cuff wrist computer. After a few minutes with this 3.2-inch Android tablet strapped to my body, my wrist started to get all sweaty. It felt bulky, weird and to be ...
The Rufus Cuff is like something out of a science-fiction film. It’s definitely not one of the slim and tiny smartwatches you’re accustomed to seeing and using, nor does it pretend to be. Rather it’s ...
Forget those dainty devices like the Samsung Galaxy Gear. The Rufus Cuff is going big and testing the boundaries of smartwatch size. Freelance writer Amanda C. Kooser covers gadgets and tech news with ...
It’s been a year and a half since Rufus Labs launched a crowdfunding campaign for a wrist computer that puts a 3.2 inch touchscreen on your arm. Now the company says it’s getting ready to ship the ...
Phablets – smartphones with displays stretching over five-inches or so – looked ridiculously out of proportion just a few short years ago. Today, even Apple makes one. Technology firm Rufus Labs now ...
We’ve seen a lot of wearable gadgets emerge over the last few years, but none have made as big of an impression as the soon-to-launch Rufus Cuff. All 3.2 forearm-filling inches of it. For a smartwatch ...
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