Mobile Technology

The iBell adds old-school alarm functionality to your iPhone

The iBell adds old-school alarm functionality to your iPhone
The iBell and the iBell mini side-by-side
The iBell and the iBell mini side-by-side
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The iBell and the iBell mini side-by-side
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The iBell and the iBell mini side-by-side
The iBell mini comes in a range of different colors
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The iBell mini comes in a range of different colors

Smartphones are replacing the need for many other devices, making some of them surplus to requirements, and turning others into luxuries rather than necessities. I'm talking about watches, calculators, dedicated media players, and even handheld games consoles and cameras – the capabilities of which are all contained, to varying degrees, in the not-so-humble smartphones lurking inside your pocket. Alarm clocks are another product that should by all rights be on the endangered list ... especially as there is now an iPhone accessory that brings old-school alarm clock functionality to your smartphone.

The product in question is the iBell, an iPhone cradle that turns the vibration of your phone into the physical ringing of two bells mounted on the rear of the device. The iBell can be connected to mains electricity via an AC adapter, meaning you're guaranteed not to be left with an iPhone that is out of charge and unable to sound the alarm to signal you to wake up.

There is also a smaller version of the product available, called the iBell mini. As with the full-sized iBell, this attaches to the iPhone via the dock connector, turning the device into a mobile (but very expensive) alarm clock. This does mean the iBell and iBell mini are incompatible with the new iPhone 5 and its Lightning connector, at least without the use of an adapter.

The iBell mini comes in a range of different colors
The iBell mini comes in a range of different colors

The iBell is available in black or white, while the iBell mini is available in black, white, blue, orange, and pink. Both versions cost US$38, with worldwide shipping costing an extra $16. It's necessary to download an app to make the iPhone alarm trigger the physical bells, and the instructions are in Japanese but "self-explanatory."

Source: Japan Trend Shop via Gizmodo

2 comments
2 comments
Rt1583
Or you could just go down to Walgreens and buy an old school alarm clock for about $10.
Tommy Touch
A solution to a problem that doesnt exist. Its a good business model though, take anything that runs on electricity or has a button and make it an attachement for an iphone, a vibrator, a toaster, a toilet, a bicycle pump. There is no end to how easily an apple customer can be parted with his money! Thanks Gizmag!