Smartphones, smartwatches, and other wearable technology continue to be incorporated into medicine. In cardiology, screening for atrial fibrillation with use of an in-office electrocardiogram has been replaced by wearable external recorders and, increasingly, by smartwatches and implanted loop recorders. Similarly, in orthopaedic surgery, "there's an app for that" is becoming an increasingly popular refrain 1 .In their study, Benedict et al. used a smartphone app to document depressive symptoms multiple times a day before scheduled spine surgery and compared the performance of the app with validated questionnaires for depressive symptoms (a 9item Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ-9]) and psychological distress (Psychache Scale) and the presence of a depressive disorder diagnosis in the electronic medical record.A total of 144,518 articles were published in 86 international orthopaedic journals from 2012 to 2021 2 , and, each year, the number of published musculoskeletal articles has increased. The United States had the largest number of published orthopaedic research articles (39,017 articles).Given the limited amount of time that a surgeon can spend with current literature and the rate of increase in musculoskeletal article publication, surgeons are interested in quick takeaways from each article that they scan. e40(1)