---
product_id: 48844308
title: "LaMetric LM 37X8 Stationary Wi-Fi Clock with Apps"
brand: "lametric"
price: "฿24561"
currency: THB
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
category: "La Metric"
url: https://www.desertcart.co.th/products/48844308-lametric-lm-37x8-stationary-wi-fi-clock-with-apps
store_origin: TH
region: Thailand
---

# Pixelated customizable clock display 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi connectivity Internet radio & Spotify streaming LaMetric LM 37X8 Stationary Wi-Fi Clock with Apps

**Brand:** lametric
**Price:** ฿24561
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> ⏳ Don’t just tell time—own it with LaMetric Time, the smart clock that keeps you connected and ahead.

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** LaMetric LM 37X8 Stationary Wi-Fi Clock with Apps by lametric
- **How much does it cost?** ฿24561 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.th](https://www.desertcart.co.th/products/48844308-lametric-lm-37x8-stationary-wi-fi-clock-with-apps)

## Best For

- lametric enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted lametric brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Always In The Know:** Real-time weather, news, emails, and social updates right on your desk—no phone needed.
- • **Endless Customization:** Thousands of clockfaces & animated icons to match your unique style and mood.
- • **Smart Home Command Center:** Seamlessly control Philips Hue, Lifx, WeMo, and get notifications from top smart appliances.
- • **Voice-Controlled Convenience:** Hands-free operation with Alexa and Google Assistant integration for effortless multitasking.
- • **Vibrant Multimedia Experience:** Wake up to your favorite internet radio or Spotify playlists with a dynamic visual equalizer.

## Overview

LaMetric Time LM 37X8 is a sleek, pixel-art style Wi-Fi clock designed for the modern smart home. It offers thousands of customizable clockfaces, real-time weather and notifications, and integrates with popular smart home devices and voice assistants. Stream internet radio and Spotify, control smart lighting with a click, and stay updated with news and emails—all from a compact, visually striking display optimized for your desk or mantel.

## Description

From the manufacturer Productivity apps Increase your productivity by getting time, weather, news, meeting notifications, email subjects, eye-catching reminders — all with a quick glance at your clock. Get things done with the help of the Pomodoro timer. Social Media Counters Motivate yourself to be a better influencer with a growing number of social media followers, subscribers and likes. Get at a glance how many viewers you have on game streaming platforms and never miss when your favorite streamer is live. DIY apps Make apps to track important figures like sales, inventory, conversion or other important metrics. Create your own counter and count what matters to you. Discover more at apps.lametric.com

Review: Five stars, four if price taken into account - I've thought hard about whether to do a review for the LaMetric because of its very high price, but at the same time I think it's not nearly well selling as it deserves to be and I don't want to make that worse by giving it less than 5 stars. Elephant in the room first: it's _expensive_. Stupidly expensive for a clock, even a wifi one. I *would* be giving it four stars if I'd have had the slightest issue with it. It should be two thirds of that price at very most. Setup was easy for me, although your mileage may vary. You will need a free Android or iOS app for this, and strangely enough Android on tablet "isn't compatible", although it will work if you sideload it from a phone. I had no issues with wifi compatibility, but remember it isn't 5G. The LaMetric has a minimalist, retro, attractive look: it's a little chunk of matt obsidian with colourful, very noticable pixels (only the icon square to left of the device has coloured ones). The LEDs are vivid without flicker. The automatic brightness function works perfectly for however your room is currently lit, meaning you will still see it in bright sunshine; as does the "screensaver" option which dims the display to minimum when it's dark, so you won't get annoyed if you use it as a bedroom alarm clock. You can also switch that off and go with whatever brightness you prefer and time (or switch off) the screensaver instead. You can customise the function and appearance of the clock app, adding a coloured icon and time/date etc. if you wish. The alarm function is a little basic but functional (one alarm, with a snooze, or radio function). Radio is excellent and can play any internet radio channel with no switch-on delay, although not every station out there is built in to the app and you may need to add them manually. As a bluetooth speaker the clock isn't at all bad, but simply doesn't have the juice to be a party piece. It's good as a desktop radio and to attract your notice with notification chimes, not to replace your hifi system. I love the weather app as not only is it handy it looks pretty too. It'll tell you current weather, temperature, wind speed, humidity etc with colourful icons, but also today's (if it is before noon) and a forecast of tomorrow's. The app on display can be set to cycled in any order and with delays if this is what you need, but unless it is done as an office clock I'd find that distracting. I use it as a desk clock right next to me so prefer a fixed display and make heavy use of the buttons to cycle through apps, especially weather, radio and news. The functions I use it for most: - Clock (obviously), with time and date and day marker - Changing my LIFX lighting theme with a button press (IFTTT app) - Notifying me if it starts to snow or if the wind goes above 40 mph (IFTT app) - Notifying me and showing incoming gmails (gmail app) - Notifying me of any met office weather warnings (via RSS app) - Reading the news, traffic and met office weather feeds (via RSS app) There are plenty more apps that I don't use, including Twitter messaging (visit the website for full current list), and it has integral support for desertcart Alexa and NetAtmo. You can also make your own with a website-based builder; if you run a webserver at home then it'll be a sinch, if not then you probably won't be able to. What you can do is make your own icons (animated or otherwise) using the webpage designer, which is considerably easier; although there is already a very good selection. I haven't had any problems with the LaMetric and love it. Not only that, it's become a very handy tool for me and I don't regret spending so much on it at all. For that, I'm going to give it five stars purely to keep it from sliding into an undeserved obscurity - but if you're reading this it's just four if you factor in the price. Just keep it between you and me. ;)
Review: Good hardware and software and tech support - Very cool But a bit pricey. Decided to buy this for myself for Xmas, coz my wife was going to get me wallpaper as a Xmas gift. The apps for it are very good and the level of customisation is very good. The wifi is only 802.11n, so if it can't detect wifi, you'll need something on the 2.4GHz range. Going to the URL(once connected to the lametric) to download the iOS/android app is the only way I could find to download the program. There were no links to it on their website and [...] didn't work for me either. After checking this device using nmap, it seems as though port 22 and port 9001 are open. Port 22 I know what that is for, but I can't get access to the device (and their support team said they won't hand out credentials due to some BS security issue - it's my device, i want access to it!! Why the backdoor?!). TBH, it shouldn't be open in the first place!!! Why would you need it there? Port 9001 is a bit more insidious. From a quick google, port 9001 is for Tor traffic. Now why would that be open on a lametric device? I fortunately don't have any crap consumer router (I built my own linux firewall), but I suspect if I did it might use something like uPNP to open a port and forward traffic to the lametric to act as a Tor exit node. I am still awaiting a proper response from Smart Atoms customer service as to why that is open.... * Network wise, it pings developer.lametric.com (2 ICMP packets) every 10 seconds - not sure why though - this is fine though. * For NTP, it goes went to random servers, which I found odd. I would expect it to use pool.ntp.org, rather than a static address, but I didn't see a DNS lookup for pool.ntp.org (used tcpdump) - I think this is odd * It sends keepalive type data via MQTT to port 1883, so this is probably running an esp8266 with LUA so it's probably registering itself with their network to say "hey - i'm alive here's some data" - I think this is fine. * It also scans the local network (239.255.255.250 port 1900 for SSDP) - again - why does it do this?! This is uPNP/SSDP, but it seems as though port 5000 is not open on the lametric device, at least not during my nmap of it Port 9001 and scanning the local network scans are really dodgy on this sort of device.... why would you do that? I will update this review when I get more interesting info... ==================== UPDATE 2015-12-24 - smart atom customer support replied with this info: 1. Port 22 – SSH. We left that backdoor for support engineers to be able to help or find the problem in really difficult situations (via TeamViewer or similar software). But as we see our recovery mechanisms we have are sufficient and we will remove SSH access from our future firmwares. 2. Port 443 – HTTPS. Is used by a Web server on LaMetric that talks with LaMetric mobile clients (Android and iOS) over HTTPS. We also use client certificates, so no one except our clients can talk to LaMetric in the network. 3. Port 6001 – actually this is a default port for MPD (music player daemon). It is responsible for playing internet radio media streams. Actually this port is left open by mistake and will be closed in the next firmware versions. Thank you for finding that. 4. Port 9001. This is not TOR :). This port is used for communication between lighttpd (Web server) and fastcgi (interface between Web server and our software on the device). We should have been done this via linux socket, but we had troubles with that approach. And the funny thing is that the port had been chosen randomly :). In next versions we will try again to move to linux socket way of communication and close the port. 5. As for pings – this way LaMetric knows that there is no internet and can handle this case in more user friendly way by showing "no internet" messages. ==================== UPDATE 2016-01-03 They got back to me regarding SSDP: We use SSDP to find LaMetric devices on the network. In order to do that our client app sends (broadcasts) discovery packet to the network and LaMetric devices respond with some additional information, like IP address and device name. ==================== UPDATE 2016-10-25 They are on v 1.6.2 of the firmware, nmap shows the following ports open: 22/tcp open ssh 80/tcp open http 443/tcp open https 4343/tcp open unicall 8080/tcp open http-proxy 9001/tcp open tor-orport 9002/tcp open dynamid traffic seems to be a lot less 'chatty' and more inline with what i'd expect.

## Features

- Make your space unique with the pixelated clock, page-a-day calendar and thousands of clockfaces. Festive clockfaces come automatically to life on holidays.
- Track time, weather and timers. Emphasize up your desk setup with messages in Cinema-Light-Box style.
- Get smartphone notifications on the clock when your phone is not at hand.
- Get smart home notifications from Sonos, Netatmo Weather Station, Bosch, Siemens, Neff, Gaggenau and Thermador home appliances. Toggle Philips Hue, Lifx and WeMo with a click. Voice-control via desertcart Echo or Google Assistant.
- Wake up with your favorite Internet radio stations, listen to Spotify, stream your favorite songs to stereo speakers, enjoy the visual equalizer.
- Compatible with lots of apps by independent developers from LaMetric Market at apps.lametric.com: news, emails, daily agenda, tweets, countdown timer, Pomodoro timer, reminders. DIY your own apps to track important data. LaMetric supports 802. 11 b/g/n 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi networks

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B017N5FP0E |
| Alarm Clock | Yes |
| Batteries are Included | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 521,709 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) 142 in Mantel Clocks |
| Brand | LaMetric |
| Brand Name | LaMetric |
| Clock Form | Multi Display |
| Colour | Black |
| Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
| Country Of Origin | Germany |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 835 Reviews |
| Dial Colour | Black |
| Display Type | LED |
| Display type | LED |
| Frame Material | Plastic |
| Included Components | Power Adapter |
| Indoor Outdoor Usage | Indoor |
| Item Dimensions W x H | 20.1W x 6.1H centimetres |
| Item Shape | Rectangular |
| Item Type Name | Smart clock |
| Item Weight | 223 Grams |
| Manufacturer | Smart Atoms Limited |
| Manufacturer Part Number | LM 37X8 |
| Material Type | Plastic |
| Model Number | LM 37X8 |
| Mounting Type | Tabletop |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Operation Mode | Electrical |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Product dimensions | 20.1W x 6.1H centimetres |
| Room Type | Living Room |
| Size | 20.1 x 6.1 x 3.6 centimetres |
| Smart Home Compatibility | Smart Home Compatible |
| Special Features | Adjustable Brightness, Adjustable Volume, Alarm, Auto Dimmable, Calendar Display, Day Mode, Daylight Saving, Hourly Chime, Humidity Display, Large Display, Loud Alarm, Mood Light, Multiple Time Zone, Musical, Night Mode, Programmable, Radio, Snooze, Temperature Display, Timer |
| Special feature | Adjustable Brightness, Adjustable Volume, Alarm, Auto Dimmable, Calendar Display, Day Mode, Daylight Saving, Hourly Chime, Humidity Display, Large Display, Loud Alarm, Mood Light, Multiple Time Zone, Musical, Night Mode, Programmable, Radio, Snooze, Temperature Display, Timer Special feature Adjustable Brightness, Adjustable Volume, Alarm, Auto Dimmable, Calendar Display, Day Mode, Daylight Saving, Hourly Chime, Humidity Display, Large Display, Loud Alarm, Mood Light, Multiple Time Zone, Musical, Night Mode, Programmable, Radio, Snooze, Temperature Display, Timer See more |
| Style | Modern |
| Style Name | Modern |
| Theme | Plain |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
| Watch Movement | Digital |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** LaMetric
- **Colour:** Black
- **Display type:** LED
- **Indoor/Outdoor usage:** Indoor
- **Power source:** Corded Electric
- **Product dimensions:** 6.1W x 3.6H centimetres
- **Room type:** Living Room
- **Shape:** Rectangular
- **Style:** Modern

## Images

![LaMetric LM 37X8 Stationary Wi-Fi Clock with Apps - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81VpPscwhyL.jpg)
![LaMetric LM 37X8 Stationary Wi-Fi Clock with Apps - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71oMIfXfHaS.jpg)
![LaMetric LM 37X8 Stationary Wi-Fi Clock with Apps - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/516aAvYOHFS.jpg)

## Questions & Answers

**Q: I like the email and calendar integration, but does this only let you see Gmail emails and calendars? Will it show iCal events and work emails?**
A: iCal events can be easily shown on LaMetric Time via IFTTT

**Q: Does it show what song is playing on Spotify?**
A: There are some Spotify apps for Lametric Time, one specifically for displaying currently playing track (Displify), but I was not successful to make it work, some problems with authentication.

**Q: Do you need to have a connection to the app for the clock to work? Do you have to be connected to the internet for the clock to work?**
A: Yes, it gets the time from the internet.  The clock will still continue if internet connection is lost, but this is designed to work with an internet connection because it does a lot more than being a clock (e.g. streaming radio stations, etc.)

**Q: Can you change timezone remotely. i.e i work internationally and want it to show my local time to my partner.**
A: Don't think its currently user friendly possible. If you want to use provided app on the phone, you must be connected to the same network as Lametric Time. So you can, in theory, connect to the network through VPN. Or if you have some programming experience, there is maybe a way with Lametric cloud REST API.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Five stars, four if price taken into account
*by K***N on 9 March 2017*

I've thought hard about whether to do a review for the LaMetric because of its very high price, but at the same time I think it's not nearly well selling as it deserves to be and I don't want to make that worse by giving it less than 5 stars. Elephant in the room first: it's _expensive_. Stupidly expensive for a clock, even a wifi one. I *would* be giving it four stars if I'd have had the slightest issue with it. It should be two thirds of that price at very most. Setup was easy for me, although your mileage may vary. You will need a free Android or iOS app for this, and strangely enough Android on tablet "isn't compatible", although it will work if you sideload it from a phone. I had no issues with wifi compatibility, but remember it isn't 5G. The LaMetric has a minimalist, retro, attractive look: it's a little chunk of matt obsidian with colourful, very noticable pixels (only the icon square to left of the device has coloured ones). The LEDs are vivid without flicker. The automatic brightness function works perfectly for however your room is currently lit, meaning you will still see it in bright sunshine; as does the "screensaver" option which dims the display to minimum when it's dark, so you won't get annoyed if you use it as a bedroom alarm clock. You can also switch that off and go with whatever brightness you prefer and time (or switch off) the screensaver instead. You can customise the function and appearance of the clock app, adding a coloured icon and time/date etc. if you wish. The alarm function is a little basic but functional (one alarm, with a snooze, or radio function). Radio is excellent and can play any internet radio channel with no switch-on delay, although not every station out there is built in to the app and you may need to add them manually. As a bluetooth speaker the clock isn't at all bad, but simply doesn't have the juice to be a party piece. It's good as a desktop radio and to attract your notice with notification chimes, not to replace your hifi system. I love the weather app as not only is it handy it looks pretty too. It'll tell you current weather, temperature, wind speed, humidity etc with colourful icons, but also today's (if it is before noon) and a forecast of tomorrow's. The app on display can be set to cycled in any order and with delays if this is what you need, but unless it is done as an office clock I'd find that distracting. I use it as a desk clock right next to me so prefer a fixed display and make heavy use of the buttons to cycle through apps, especially weather, radio and news. The functions I use it for most: - Clock (obviously), with time and date and day marker - Changing my LIFX lighting theme with a button press (IFTTT app) - Notifying me if it starts to snow or if the wind goes above 40 mph (IFTT app) - Notifying me and showing incoming gmails (gmail app) - Notifying me of any met office weather warnings (via RSS app) - Reading the news, traffic and met office weather feeds (via RSS app) There are plenty more apps that I don't use, including Twitter messaging (visit the website for full current list), and it has integral support for Amazon Alexa and NetAtmo. You can also make your own with a website-based builder; if you run a webserver at home then it'll be a sinch, if not then you probably won't be able to. What you can do is make your own icons (animated or otherwise) using the webpage designer, which is considerably easier; although there is already a very good selection. I haven't had any problems with the LaMetric and love it. Not only that, it's become a very handy tool for me and I don't regret spending so much on it at all. For that, I'm going to give it five stars purely to keep it from sliding into an undeserved obscurity - but if you're reading this it's just four if you factor in the price. Just keep it between you and me. ;)

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good hardware and software and tech support
*by W***A on 19 December 2015*

Very cool But a bit pricey. Decided to buy this for myself for Xmas, coz my wife was going to get me wallpaper as a Xmas gift. The apps for it are very good and the level of customisation is very good. The wifi is only 802.11n, so if it can't detect wifi, you'll need something on the 2.4GHz range. Going to the URL(once connected to the lametric) to download the iOS/android app is the only way I could find to download the program. There were no links to it on their website and [...] didn't work for me either. After checking this device using nmap, it seems as though port 22 and port 9001 are open. Port 22 I know what that is for, but I can't get access to the device (and their support team said they won't hand out credentials due to some BS security issue - it's my device, i want access to it!! Why the backdoor?!). TBH, it shouldn't be open in the first place!!! Why would you need it there? Port 9001 is a bit more insidious. From a quick google, port 9001 is for Tor traffic. Now why would that be open on a lametric device? I fortunately don't have any crap consumer router (I built my own linux firewall), but I suspect if I did it might use something like uPNP to open a port and forward traffic to the lametric to act as a Tor exit node. I am still awaiting a proper response from Smart Atoms customer service as to why that is open.... * Network wise, it pings developer.lametric.com (2 ICMP packets) every 10 seconds - not sure why though - this is fine though. * For NTP, it goes went to random servers, which I found odd. I would expect it to use pool.ntp.org, rather than a static address, but I didn't see a DNS lookup for pool.ntp.org (used tcpdump) - I think this is odd * It sends keepalive type data via MQTT to port 1883, so this is probably running an esp8266 with LUA so it's probably registering itself with their network to say "hey - i'm alive here's some data" - I think this is fine. * It also scans the local network (239.255.255.250 port 1900 for SSDP) - again - why does it do this?! This is uPNP/SSDP, but it seems as though port 5000 is not open on the lametric device, at least not during my nmap of it Port 9001 and scanning the local network scans are really dodgy on this sort of device.... why would you do that? I will update this review when I get more interesting info... ==================== UPDATE 2015-12-24 - smart atom customer support replied with this info: 1. Port 22 – SSH. We left that backdoor for support engineers to be able to help or find the problem in really difficult situations (via TeamViewer or similar software). But as we see our recovery mechanisms we have are sufficient and we will remove SSH access from our future firmwares. 2. Port 443 – HTTPS. Is used by a Web server on LaMetric that talks with LaMetric mobile clients (Android and iOS) over HTTPS. We also use client certificates, so no one except our clients can talk to LaMetric in the network. 3. Port 6001 – actually this is a default port for MPD (music player daemon). It is responsible for playing internet radio media streams. Actually this port is left open by mistake and will be closed in the next firmware versions. Thank you for finding that. 4. Port 9001. This is not TOR :). This port is used for communication between lighttpd (Web server) and fastcgi (interface between Web server and our software on the device). We should have been done this via linux socket, but we had troubles with that approach. And the funny thing is that the port had been chosen randomly :). In next versions we will try again to move to linux socket way of communication and close the port. 5. As for pings – this way LaMetric knows that there is no internet and can handle this case in more user friendly way by showing "no internet" messages. ==================== UPDATE 2016-01-03 They got back to me regarding SSDP: We use SSDP to find LaMetric devices on the network. In order to do that our client app sends (broadcasts) discovery packet to the network and LaMetric devices respond with some additional information, like IP address and device name. ==================== UPDATE 2016-10-25 They are on v 1.6.2 of the firmware, nmap shows the following ports open: 22/tcp open ssh 80/tcp open http 443/tcp open https 4343/tcp open unicall 8080/tcp open http-proxy 9001/tcp open tor-orport 9002/tcp open dynamid traffic seems to be a lot less 'chatty' and more inline with what i'd expect.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Excellent clock to keep track of notifications.
*by J***N on 27 June 2020*

If you have several smart home gadgets this is a excellent piece of technology to keep track of all the notifications. As other reviewers have said it is a expensive gadget made of plastic and with a retro look, but If you can buy it while on offer well worth the spend. When I bought it I thought: A- Why did I spent so much on a desk clock and B- this is going to be one of those things that sounds good in paper but then disappoint once you start using them. Well... I was wrong, I do actually like it very much and don’t regret buying it! I use it every single day without even realising that I’m using it! It is so easy to look at it and get the information you need at glance (specially notifications!). I use mine to keep track of different smart devices around home. I enabled different apps and automatically change between them to display the following: - Time and date (obviously!) - Weather (you can customise what information you want the clock to display) - Temperature and humidity at home (from Nest thermostat). Also notifies if the temperature is too high or too low - name of the song and artist of the song currently playing in my Sonos system (Which automatically displays it as soon as a new track starts) - Exchange Rate - RSS News (which I’ve configured to notify and give me the 5 headlines very hour) - Mirror the notifications on my phone (I really like this feature as I can see and read text or WhatsApp messages and email subject lines without having to pick up my phone) - Notifies and shows who is calling (again, this is great so you don’t need to grab the phone to see who is calling) - Notifies me when someone is at the front door (Ring Doorbell integration via IFTTT). - Set date and time reminders (I.e.: Put the bins out Tuesday evening! - You can even choose different wheelie bin icons!) I have the LaMetric time for over a year and only had a couple of issues with it so far. Both times an installed app was causing the device to freeze and just displaying a black screen. The technical support is great. Both times I had the issues I contacted support and sent them the logs. The display is quite bright and you can enable auto brightness so it changes based on the light in the room. You can configure a ‘Do Not disturb’ (they call it screensaver) so the screen turns off (or displays a dimmed clock) during the specified time period. I enabled this at night to stop notifications coming through. It has 3 large buttons at the top which they allow you to manually scroll between the enabled apps and make selections. The button on the right side turns off the device and on the left side there are two small buttons to increase or decrease the volume. If you are thinking to purchase this to listen to the music, don’t! You can play the radio or Spotify on it but the sound quality is terrible. To summarise, if you are looking for a smart display to keep track of notifications and other gadgets around the house, go for it - you won’t regret it.

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*Last updated: 2026-05-25*