Convenient Smart Home
Why a dedicated mattress vacuum is the allergy season upgrade you need
Whether you feel it or not, your mattress gets nasty
As allergy season rolls around, most people focus on the obvious fixes: air purifiers, antihistamines, keeping the windows shut. But when was the last time you vacuumed your mattress? Exactly.
We spend nearly a third of our lives in bed, and over time it quietly collects dust, skin flakes, and all kinds of microscopic buildup. You might not see it, but it’s there.
Your mattress isn’t as clean as you think
Even if your space looks spotless, mattresses and upholstered furniture trap particles deep inside the fabric, even if you wash their covers regularly.
For some people, that can contribute to allergy symptoms, causing discomfort throughout the day. For others, it just makes your sleep environment feel kind of gross.
If you’re not experiencing symptoms? Good for you, but that doesn’t mean your mattress is magically cleaner. It just means you’re not reacting to it.
Either way, it’s not exactly what you want to be sleeping in.
Deep cleaning that goes beyond the surface
Regular vacuums aren’t designed to pull out what’s embedded deep inside fabrics. They mostly skim the top. The FEPPO Pro mattress vacuum is built specifically for this.
It combines a 500W motor with 16,000 Pascals of suction and a tapping system that hits up to 40,000 times per minute. It’s essentially shaking loose dust from deep within your mattress so it can actually be removed.
And it’s corded, which honestly makes a difference. Unlike using your existing vacuum with another attachment, you don’t have to wait for it to recharge after cleaning your floors. You just plug it in whenever you feel like cleaning and go. The cord is long enough that you can move around your bed or couch without it feeling annoying.
It also uses UV-C light and ultrasonic waves, so it’s targeting even those particles invisible to the naked eye. The UV-C light works at the surface level, while ultrasonic waves reach deeper into the fabric layers to help reduce buildup over time. There are also safety sensors, so the UV light only turns on when it’s in contact with a surface.
Another thing people don’t think about: moisture. FEPPO Pro uses 140°F hot air to help dry out fabrics while cleaning, which helps sanitize it. There’s also a subtle fragrance built in so it leaves your bed feeling more fresh than when you started cleaning.
I used it to clean my couch, too, which I haven’t vacuumed in about a year. Because guests sit on it even with outside clothes and its covers don’t come off, it naturally gets even dirtier than the mattress.
Filtration that doesn’t throw anything back into the air
With a multi-layer HEPA filtration system, it captures 99.97% of fine particles (down to 0.3 microns). The dual dust cup design helps keep suction consistent without clogging.
So what you pick up actually stays contained—instead of floating right back into your room.
Is it your GadgetMatch?
If you’ve never thought about vacuuming your mattress before, you’re not alone. But also, maybe it’s time to start.
You don’t need to be sneezing or waking up congested to justify cleaning the place you spend a third of your life in. It’s basic hygiene that most people just ignore.
Could you use a regular vacuum with an attachment? Sure, it’s better than nothing.
But for something you use every single day, having a tool that’s actually designed for it—especially at under $70 on sale—just makes sense. Because whether you feel it or not, your mattress does get dirty.
You can either ignore it, or actually clean it.
Computers
Samsung’s SECRET That Made OLED Even Better
Say hello to the new QD-OLED Penta Tandem display tech by the Korean giant
Samsung Display just unveiled QD-OLED Penta Tandem technology. This is a next-generation display structure that stacks five emission layers to improve brightness, efficiency, and overall OLED performance.
In this video, we simplify what Penta Tandem actually is, how it works, and show you two monitors that already have the technology — specifically from MSI and Dell.
For more details, check out Samsung Display here.
TCL CSOT is one of the world’s largest display panel manufacturers. However, most people have never even heard of them.
At SID Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, they unveiled the APEX Pixel Technology across three categories:
- Super Pixel for smartphones
- Real Stripe RGB (IJP OLED) for monitors and automotive; and
- RGBC for TVs
Also, THE Michael Josh takes you inside their booth at the Los Angeles Convention Center to break down:
✅ The world-first Super Pixel mobile display (clarity, lowest power, 165Hz refresh rate)
✅ The World’s First Foldable & Portable IJP OLED Monitor Display (28″)
✅ Intelligent Cockpit Display Suite 3.0 — sliding + curved
✅ The World’s Highest Image Quality WHVA Ultra LCD TV Display (85″)
More so, what does it mean when your phone uses Real RGB instead of sub-pixel rendering? Why is inkjet-printed OLED the next big thing in display manufacturing? And what’s a fourth color sub-pixel?
Know all of these in our Spotlight on TCL CSOT’s Display Technologies.
Convenient Smart Home
Giving up counter space for reverse osmosis: Living with Waterdrop M6H in NYC
A 7-stage filtration system
Living in New York City means two things when it comes to the kitchen: constantly negotiating with counter space and having the best drinking water in the country.
That’s exactly where a countertop reverse osmosis system like the Waterdrop M6H finds its place. It fits into apartment life surprisingly well, though not without tradeoffs.
Peace of mind
New York City is known for having some of the best drinking water in the country, and for most people, straight-from-the-tap is perfectly safe and dare I say: tastes the best, too.
But using a reverse osmosis system isn’t necessarily about fixing bad water. It can also take already good water and filtering it down to a much finer level.
The Waterdrop M6H uses a 7-stage filtration system, which goes beyond basic filtration to remove things like heavy metals, chlorine, PFAS, and microplastics, which you might not think about daily but are still present in trace amounts. It also has UV sterilization, adding another layer of protection by targeting bacteria that may not be caught in filtration alone.
That extra layer of filtration becomes especially helpful when you have guests or family visiting. My parents, for example, have more sensitive stomachs, so even small differences in water quality can matter.
One tradeoff with reverse osmosis is that it also removes naturally occurring minerals like calcium and magnesium. In practice, it shouldn’t be a major concern for most people. Food, not water, should be the primary source of these nutrients.
Built for apartment living
One of the biggest advantages of the Waterdrop M6H is how easy it is to set up. There’s no installation, no need to touch your plumbing, and if you’re renting: no back-and-forth with a landlord.
It sits on my counter like any other appliance. It’s roughly the size of my super automatic coffee machine, which makes it feel familiar and non-invasive. And just like my coffee machine, I get access to great drinking water with just a few presses.
For apartment dwellers like me, that plug-and-play design is a huge win. I could be living in my current home for years, but will likely still need to move out at some point. That means I can take the M6H with me no matter where life takes me.
Compact is both good and bad
That small footprint is what makes it viable in a city kitchen, but it also introduces the biggest inconvenience.
Because the unit is compact, the water tank isn’t huge, and neither is the wastewater capacity. The built-in 135oz water tank capacity is large enough to get you through a good portion of the day.
In practice, that means you’ll be refilling clean water and emptying the waste tank regularly, sometimes more than two times a day depending on usage.
It’s not difficult, but it’s definitely more hands-on than a built-in system that runs continuously in the background.
Eats up precious counter space
Beyond just physically occupying counter space, the machine changed how I use my kitchen.
The spot it takes is often the same area I would use for prepping food, whether that’s chopping vegetables, rolling or kneading dough, and plating meals. It’s also the same spot I use for putting dirty dishes before they get washed.
So while it technically fits, it reduced my working surface in a noticeable way. In a New York kitchen, losing even a small section of prep space can have a huge impact on one’s daily routine.
Bottle compatibility can be hit or miss
Another noticeable drawback of its compact size is the height clearance under the spout. If you tend to use taller insulated bottles, especially the narrow ones, they won’t always fit comfortably underneath.
I have a combination of tall and short ones, and so that means having to tilt the taller ones or filling them in stages, which interrupts an otherwise convenient experience.
Well thought-out experience
Where the Waterdrop M6H really stands out is in how easy it is to use. The touchscreen is intuitive without feeling overdesigned, and the preset buttons for coffee and tea temperatures are more than welcome. Thanks to its instant heating, I’m never waiting around for hot water when I want a comforting cup of tea after a chilly day out.
One of my favorite features is the ability to customize how many ounces of water you want dispensed. You can set it, place your glass or bottle underneath — as long as it fits — and walk away while it fills because it stops on its own. It’s a small detail that makes drinking clean water convenient.
It’s just a bonus that I’m more conscious of the amount of water I’m drinking on a daily basis.
The detachable glass pitcher is another thoughtful touch. You can take it off and pour directly to your vessel of choice, store it in the fridge for cold water, or use it directly for cooking.
Better than a filter pitcher
If you’ve used a standard filter pitcher before, the difference is immediate.
With something like a Brita, you’re constantly refilling and waiting for water to slowly drip through the filter before you can use it. The Waterdrop M6H produces purified water much faster and on demand.
Even though I have to refill the tank daily, it’s still far less frequent, and far less tedious, than topping off a pitcher multiple times a day.
Cost-wise, it also evens out over time. Instead of repeatedly buying smaller filters, you’re replacing one larger filter less often, with a more advanced level of filtration to show for it.
Is the Waterdrop M6H your GadgetMatch?
Even in a city with excellent tap water, a reverse osmosis system like the Waterdrop M6H can be helpful. It makes the most sense if you’re renting but still want better-than-tap filtration without dealing with permanent changes.
While not as inconvenient as a Brita pitcher, it still requires daily maintenance. It is not the best fit if you’re already tight on counter space, cook frequently and rely heavily on your prep area.
A permanently installed reverse osmosis system will always win when it comes to pure convenience, and Waterdrop has great options for that. It runs continuously, requires less day-to-day interaction that you just forget about it, and it doesn’t take up precious counter space.
For my current setup, the Waterdrop M6H is a practical middle ground. It delivers many of the same benefits in a flexible, renter-friendly form.
The Waterdrop M6H retails for US$429 before tax. Maintenance is straightforward: the replacement filter costs $79.99 and lasts about 12 months or roughly 1,100 gallons of water.
It isn’t cheap, but you can think of it as a long-term investment in your health. Its benefits aren’t immediate or obvious day-to-day, but something you’ll likely appreciate over time and thank yourself for later.
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