This is how you’ll cook in the future – CNET

Whirlpool Smart Over-the-Range Microwave

Whirlpool Smart Front-Control Range

Gourmia GKM9000 multicooker

GE Appliances 27-inch kitchen hub

Innit smart cooking app

YaDoggie Bluetooth dog food scoop

Nima Peanut Sensor

Quartz Bottle

This year at CES a bevy of kitchen appliances both big and small were surprisingly sophisticated. Some had AI voice control baked right in like Instant Pot-style multicookers, mobile cooking apps, even microwave ovens. Others brought huge touchscreens to stoves or simply helped you avoid overfeeding fido.

Whirlpool’s Wi-Fi-enabled Smart Over-the-Range Microwave will work with Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa beginning in spring 2018. The microwave’s touchscreen control panel also keeps track of what you’re cooking so it will eventually begin to predict what you’ll cook next.

Whirlpool’s Smart Front-Control Range, along with the company’s other internet-connected appliances, will work with the voice-activated Google Assistant and the Amazon Alexa assistant.

Small appliance manufacturer Gourmia will include the voice-activated Google Assistant platform in its GKM9000 multicooker. This integration means you can access all the features of Google Assistant from this small, countertop appliance using voice commands that you trigger with the phrase, “Hey, Google.”

GE Appliances has created a smart home hub designed to act as the control center of your kitchen. The hub also contains two cameras: a forward-facing camera that lets you video chat and a cooktop-facing camera so you can capture and post pictures of your meals in progress.

Cooking app Innit that connects recipes to Wi-Fi ovens will now work with the voice-activated Google Assistant. Users can give voice commands to navigate through the app, which is available for iOS and Android. You’ll also be able to give voice commands to GE and Bosch Wi-Fi ovens.

Dog-food delivery company YaDoggie has a solution to keep your pup honest on whether he or she has eaten today. It’s a Bluetooth-connected food scoop and app that keeps track of who fed the dog.

Nima, the company that created a Bluetooth-connected gluten detector, has made a version of its device that tells you if there are traces of peanuts in your food.

Admit it, you clean your water bottle sparingly, at best. The Quartz Bottle wants to take over the responsibility by using ultraviolet light to keep itself and your water clean.


🕐 Top News in the Last Hour By Importance Score

# Title 📊 i-Score
1 Outgrowing Napoleon: How the Space Force can modernize its ranks 🟢 85 / 100
2 Explainer-What are atmospheric rivers and why do they cause flooding? 🟢 85 / 100
3 Hope of finding survivors in Dominican Republic club roof collapse fades as death toll rises to 218 🔴 75 / 100
4 AG Pam Bondi DROPS charges against 'MS-13 leader' arrested in Virginia…but a horrible fate still awaits him 🔴 73 / 100
5 Could the iPhone’s Price Double With Trump’s New 125% Tariff? We Do the Math 🔴 72 / 100
6 Gemini Live’s New Camera Mode Can Identify Objects Around You. I Took It for a Spin 🔴 65 / 100
7 Woman gives birth to stranger's baby in Australia embryo mix-up 🔴 65 / 100
8 The Switch 2’s Mouse Controls Could Make it an FPS-Friendly Console 🔵 55 / 100
9 Protesters in Russia try to disrupt Poland's commemoration of president's plane crash 🔵 55 / 100
10 Google Pixel 9A review: a midrange phone done right 🔵 45 / 100

View More Top News ➡️