Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Sphero’s Specdrums let you drum up a symphony of sound with colors

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

At this point, Sphero has nearly become synonymous with Star Wars. The Boulder, Colorado-based company initially made a name for itself with a medley of rolling, remote-controlled robots, namely a miniature BB-8 and R2-D2, both of which the company has said it will no longer produce due to licensing. In their stead, however, Sphero is branching out into an entirely new segment of consumer tech: Music.

More CES 2019 coverage

At CES, the company showcased Specdrums, a set of connected rings that let you harness sound using colors and surfaces of your own choosing, as well as a companion app available for Android and iOS devices. The kit — a result of Sphero’s recent acquisition of Specdrums — uses light sensors embedded in each ring to identify colors, which you can then pair with specific sounds.

Recommended Videos

Once you tap the Bluetooth-enabled ring against the surface again, whether it be a picture frame or your pants, it will trigger the corresponding sound on your mobile device.

The appeal of Specdrums, aside from the kit’s ability to generate sounds using your surroundings, is its sheer level of flexibility. The apt-titled companion app, Mix, features an assortment of customizable sounds built on a variety of different instruments and loops, though, you can also connect to GarageBand, Ableton Live, and other music-making apps via Bluetooth MIDI. Specdrums will even ship with a Play Pad, a keyboard-like device that utilizes colors instead of traditional keys.

“We firmly believe that play is a powerful teacher. With the addition of Specdrums, we are strengthening the ‘A’ in STEAM in our product roadmap,” Sphero CEO Paul Berberian said in a statement. “With Sphero’s infrastructure and the groundwork that the Specdrums founders have already completed, we believe there’s a huge opportunity to continue to inspire curiosity in classrooms and beyond.”

The rebranded Specdrums will go on sale beginning Monday, January 7, and begin shipping a week later. You’ll be able to buy a single ring for $65 or a pair for $99, each of which will afford you two hours of play time.

DT Staff
Digital Trends has a simple mission: to help readers easily understand how tech affects the way they live. We are your…
Research shows educational institutes must not put too much faith in AI text detectors
A UF study shows these tools are so unreliable that the entire evidentiary basis for claims about AI-generated academic writing may need to be reconsidered from scratch.
Man using ChatGPT on a laptop

Here’s an uncomfortable thought for every academic institution currently using AI detectors to police student and researcher submissions: the tools don't work as reliably as institutions assume. 

A paper presented at this week’s 2026 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy by researchers at the University of Florida concludes that commercially available AI-generated text detectors are “poorly suited for deployment in academic or high-stakes contexts.”

Read more
Google wants Gemini to help build the next big scientific breakthrough
Gemini for Science pushes agentic AI deeper into real research workflows
gemini for science

Google is building Gemini deeper into the research workflow, starting with ideas, tests, and scientific literature.

At Google I/O 2026, the company announced Gemini for Science, an experimental suite built around agentic AI science. It targets the manual work behind discovery, including hypothesis building, computational testing, and literature review.

Read more
You can now walk through AI versions of real places with Google’s Project Genie
Text, Logo

Google is pushing its experimental AI world-building project into surprisingly realistic territory. The company announced that Project Genie can now use real-world imagery from Google Street View to generate interactive virtual environments, blending real locations with imaginative AI-generated styles.

At its core, Genie is what Google calls a “world model” — an AI system capable of creating explorable digital environments where AI agents, robots, or even users can interact naturally. Until now, those worlds were mostly synthetic. But with this new update, Genie can anchor itself to real places pulled directly from Street View imagery. This is actually where things start feeling like a glimpse into the future of simulation.

Read more