The 10-Inch Screen Quietly Replacing the Fridge Calendar | Dwell | Efinity
Dwell · Stylish Living

The 10-Inch Screen Quietly Replacing the Fridge Calendar

One shared display, color-coded by person, synced to the calendars your family already uses. Dragon Touch's touchscreen organizer turns five scattered schedules into a single glance.

This Week M T W T F S S

Every household with more than one person in it eventually invents its own quiet logistics system. A calendar taped to the fridge that hasn't been updated since spring. A chore chart held up by a single magnet. A group text where someone asks "wait, is practice at 4 or 4:30" two hours after practice started.

None of that is really anyone's fault. The issue isn't that families are bad at scheduling — it's that everyone's schedule lives in a different place. One person's calendar is in their phone. Another's is mostly in their head. The chore chart is a piece of paper nobody's looked at since it went up.

Dragon Touch's 10-inch touchscreen family calendar is built around a simple fix: stop asking everyone to check a different app, and give the house one shared screen instead.

One Screen, Color-Coded by Person

The device syncs wirelessly with the calendars people already use — Google, Yahoo, and others — through a companion app, then displays everything on a single 10-inch touchscreen. Each family member gets assigned their own color, so a glance at the week tells you whose practice, meeting, or appointment is coming up without anyone having to ask. It switches between daily, weekly, and monthly views, and works equally well propped on a counter with the included desk stand or mounted on a wall.

A family doesn't need another app to download. It needs one screen everyone already glances at on the way out the door.

Built for the Parts That Actually Cause Friction

The chore chart is where this earns its keep. Instead of nagging, kids can see exactly what's expected of them and what they earn for doing it — tasks and goals are assigned through the touchscreen, and completing them unlocks a visible reward, turning responsibilities into something closer to a game than a lecture.

It's also built with some control over how much gets shared. You choose whether a given calendar stays private or syncs to the shared display, so a household screen doesn't have to mean everyone's whole life is suddenly visible to everyone else.

When nobody's actively adding an event, the screen doesn't just sit blank. With 32GB of onboard storage, it switches into a digital photo frame, cycling through family pictures, and a sleep function keeps it from running at full brightness around the clock.

Family Calendar
Dragon Touch · Office Products
10" Touchscreen Digital Calendar — Family Hub with Chore Chart, Task Rewards & Meal Planner
$76.27 $79.99
★★★★½ 4.4 out of 5 — 50 ratings
Display10" HD touchscreen
Storage32GB (photo frame mode)
SyncGoogle, Yahoo & more
MountDesk stand or wall
Shop on Amazon →

Price and availability accurate as of publish date and subject to change. Efinity may earn a commission from purchases made through links on this page.

Where It Actually Earns Counter Space

Kitchen Counter

It comes with a desk stand built in, so it sits naturally in the spot the old paper calendar used to occupy — except this one updates itself.

Entryway or Mudroom

Wall-mountable for the spot everyone passes on the way out. One look answers who needs to be where, and when.

Shared Office Nook

Useful anywhere a household needs to see overlapping schedules at a glance, without five people opening five different apps.

Idle Hours

When nobody's adding an event, it quietly becomes a photo frame — 32GB of family pictures cycling instead of a blank screen.

The One-Screen Principle

We've written before about how visual clutter functions as mental clutter — the same logic holds for schedules. A household running on five separate calendar apps and a paper chore chart is carrying that complexity around all day, even when nobody's actively looking at it. Consolidating it onto one shared screen doesn't make the week any less full. It just stops asking five different people to hold the same information separately, in five different places.

At $76, with a 4.4-star average across the reviews so far, this isn't trying to be a luxury object the way a marble tray is. It's solving a louder, more daily problem — and for a lot of households, that earns it more counter space than people expect to give a screen.