
Originally published byThe Verge
You don't really ever have to explain why a universal remote is a good idea. You have a bunch of stuff that needs controlling; this thing controls them all. Many companies have set out to build a product worthy of this idea, and one product came much closer than most. It was called the Harmony, and for many years it was the best universal remote on the market. Maybe the only one that mattered. And still, even the Harmony couldn't make it work.
On this episode of Version History, we tell the story of the Harmony. The Verge's David Pierce, Nilay Patel, and John Higgins are joined by Matt Rogers, the CEO of Mill and former co-founder of Nest, …
🇺🇸
More news from United StatesUnited States
NORTH AMERICA
Related News
How America's Energy Department is Building a National Platform for Doing Science with AI
21h ago
🕹️ SOLSTICE: Hold the Light Until Dawn - A 3D Browser Game for the June Solstice Jam
21h ago
Why Your AI Agent Shouldn't Use a Human's Credentials
21h ago
I rewrote SafeJSON’s privacy copy because “privacy-first” was too vague
4h ago

I replaced my $100 webcam with my Android's built-in option, and my video calls look twice as crisp
1d ago