This tabletop sleep device and sunrise alarm clock aims to help you put your phone away before bed

“Relaxing” isn’t a word anyone is likely to associate with CES. If anything, it is the antithesis of CES, an exhausting and wildly overstimulating marathon event that takes place in the already exhausting and wildly overstimulating Las Vegas. But a demo of Ambient’s bedside device, Dreamie, ahead of its appearance at CES-adjacent Pepcom had me properly lulled and ready to go right back to bed. Dreamie is a smart sunrise alarm clock and nighttime wind-down device that has a built-in podcast player, a catalog of green, pink and brown noise sound masks, guided breathing programs, contactless motion sensors to provide insights into your sleep habits, dynamic lighting with simulated sunrise wake-ups and Bluetooth connectivity for headphones.

But most importantly for anyone trying to avoid using their phone immediately before bed, it’s a standalone system in which all controls, features and scheduling options as well as data storage are on-device. And there’s no subscription. 

The goal of Dreamie is “to help you separate from your phone while providing a lot of the conveniences that you would normally have,” said CEO and co-founder Adrian Canoso. You can set multiple alarms on different schedules, access soothing content to fall asleep to and customize how gradual your sunrise wakeup is. There are environmental sensors to clue you in on the humidity, temperature and lighting conditions over the course of the night, to give you a better idea of how these things may be affecting your sleep. 

Dreamie is a relatively small device compared to other sunrise-style clocks, with a truncated pill-shaped body and a sleek circular touchscreen. Around the display is a hidden dial for volume control, and it feels great to rotate, with just the right amount of resistance. There’s also a touch strip on top of the device to easily adjust the dimness of the light by dragging your finger along it. From the display, you can even change the direction the light is pointing so you don’t blast yourself (or your partner) with it when your eyes aren’t ready, casting the light off to the back instead. 

The Dreamie alarm clock is pictured displaying its brightness controls, and is glowing warm light
Dreamie’s brightness controls
Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget

Its 20-LED array can go from a soft, warm orangey glow to cool and bright blue-white, and certain programs, like the aurora borealis soundscape, will trigger other colors of the rainbow, throwing soothing green, blue and magenta. More impressive is the rich sound that comes from its 50 millimeter speaker. Dreamie has a 360-degree speaker grille on the bottom of the device that sends sound in all directions to create more immersive ambient sound. 

When a speaker is pointing toward you, “it’s almost like a laser beam coming at you,” which isn’t exactly the most relaxing experience, explained Canoso, who previously worked in industrial design and robotics, and before that, as a studio recording engineer. “[Dreamie] projects the sound all the way around… So when you put it next to you on a night table, it sounds more diffused. It’s not the loudest speaker out there because we’ve optimized it for rich sound quality at lower volumes. We don’t need it loud. We just need it to sound good.” 

And sound good, it does. It’s seriously got me thinking I may finally have found the thing to replace the Philips Wake-Up Light I’ve been clinging to for close to 10 years now that has decent lighting but absolutely abysmal sound quality.

Dreamie, which costs $250, recently started shipping after a successful crowdfunding campaign, and certain features — including podcasts and sleep insights — haven’t launched just yet (though I did get to see the podcast library during the demonstration, so it is a real thing, and it’s expected to roll out later this month). Those and other future features will arrive via free over-the-air updates. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/smart-home/this-tabletop-sleep-device-and-sunrise-alarm-clock-aims-to-help-you-put-your-phone-away-before-bed-004751464.html?src=rss

Read more @ Engadget

Latest posts

You need to listen to Billy Woods’ horrorcore masterpiece for the A24 crowd

Billy Woods has one of the highest batting averages in the game. Between his solo records like Hiding Places and Maps, and his collaborative...

Google’s new commerce framework cranks up the heat on ‘agentic shopping’

To further push the limits of consumerism, Google has launched a new open standard for agentic commerce that's called Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP). In...

Minisforum beats Dell, HP and Lenovo to unveil first Ryzen AI 9 HX470 PC — AI X1 Pro-470 mini PC supports 12TB SSD storage...

Minisforum's AI X1 Pro-470 targets heavier local AI workloads than Ryzen AI Max+ systemsFirst Ryzen AI 9 HX470 mini PC debuts ahead of wider...

You won’t believe this, but Khadas Mind Pro mini PC actually fits an RTX 5060 Ti graphics card, 64GB RAM, and 2TB NVMe SSD...

Khadas Mind Pro mini PC crams desktop-level GPU and memory into a tiny caseMind Graphics 2 Dock adds RTX 5060 Ti and extra connectivity...

These are my four favorite Asus computers from CES 2026

Asus makes quality consumer electronics, whether you’re talking about laptops, desktops, keyboards, mice, or other accessories. And the ROG and TUF gaming brands provide...

More than just AI, here are the three Gigabyte CES 2026 products to watch

Gigabyte had a massive focus on AI at CES this year, particularly on the data center side. But for consumer tech, the company focused...

Forget the robots, these are the best computing innovations at CES 2026

The CES show floor is often a wild, seemingly lawless place where you’ve got e-Bikes and vacuum cleaners next to dancing robots and beauty...

GameStop is kicking off 2026 by shutting down over 400 stores in 42 states

GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen is in line to potentially earn $35 billion in stock options, so long as the company hits a $100 billion...

Instagram says it fixed the issue that let someone send all those password reset emails

If you're one of the many, many people who received a password reset email from Instagram the other day, the company says it fixed...

Here are over 20 gadgets that’ll help you achieve your New Year’s resolutions

It happens every year: we set ambitious New Year's resolutions - work out more, spend less, keep the house cleaner - full of optimism...