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If you hate wearing a helmet then Hovding may be just the thing for you. Hovding is advertised as an ‘invisible helmet’ but is actually more of airbag that you wear around your neck like a scarf....
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Introduction I developed my EEG visualising pendant for use in social situations; the pendant uses EEG (Electroencephalography) signals, which are gleaned from a NeuroSky MindWave Mobile headset. T...
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Ilpox collection of leather straps and buckles by Marina Hoermanseder presented at Graduate Fashion Week 2013.
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What are the most disruptive health technologies for the next 10 years? MIT Technology Review and McKinsey are guessing next-generation DNA sequencing.
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Wearable devices are set to disrupt the computer industry. Concerns over privacy are becoming more prominent but will hold little power against market demand.
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(Phys.org) —New technology under development at The Ohio State University is paving the way for low-cost electronic devices that work in direct contact with living tissue inside the body.
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In the past we have talked about how consumers in the United States were feeling about the world of wearable technology. But what about consumers outside of the US? There are big markets and big poss...
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A team of Australian industrial designers and scientists have unveiled their prototype for the world's first bionic eye.
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At the D11 conference, the tech elite buzzed about the promise of microcomputers that attach onto humans. But how that future will go mainstream is still out of focus.
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*I don't buy the premise of this piece -- all you have to do is join the military to see that wearable tech could give a damn about the fashion biz. The h
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Coinciding with our 'SHOWcabinet: Prosthetics' exhibition, SHOWstudio engages in the discussions and debates surrounding disability by offering artists, models and thinkers an open forum to communicate their views and research.
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Beyond the razzle-dazzle keynotes, it’s rare that we get a peek inside the mind of Apple.
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Wearable devices will offer practical, novel and fun usefulness but will also be able to influence our behavior in ways good and bad, creating ethical dilemmas for designers.
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Researchers create a sensitive, flexible mechanosensor with possible applications in biomedical sensing and artificial skin technology.
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Talk about hot pants! Vodafone's power-generating shorts promise to keep your cellphone charged while it's parked in your back pocket.
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A silicon circuit, coated with a protective layer and immersed in fluid that mimicks human body chemistry. Photo courtesy of Ohio State University. Bio
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Summertime and the living is easy. But why let it be so easy? Get out there and sweat! Summer, while the weather is nice, is the perfect time to go outside and run, jog, walk or do whatever else you ...
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It's hard to find a publication at all devoted to wearable technology that doesn't spend a significant amount of coverage on Google and their infamous Glass eyewear display. It's to see why, of cours...
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Motorola's Regina Dugan is working to fix "the mechanical mismatch between humans and electronics" by bringing the computers onto and into the body.
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A group of French researchers believe that the sensors and transmitters we wear will route and relay data, not just collect it. We won’t just be connected to the network. We’ll be the network.
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Svenja John Kunststoffschmuck Jewelery Schmuck Berlin Makrolon reddot syntetic art autorenschmuck contemporary jewellery "Since 1994 Svenja John has been making jewellery. In Berlin. Since then she has been using macrofol, a polycarbonate processed to create foil. And since the very beginning, her jewellery has been pieced together. Using ingenious techniques she invents form modules which she then joins up and suspends one within the other, forms nestling within forms, stacked one on top of the other. She thus creates semi-opaque clusters and structures that remind one of scientific models, of crystalline and organic structures. The model of an atom, perhaps? An attempt at representing heavenly bodies in orbit? Stylised blossom or allusions to polished precious stones?"
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Technology is helping the medical field in leaps and bounds as new startups and companies are introducing new products to the market. The latest of these products is called the Zio. Many of todays ca...
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Wearble technology is predicted to become a $50 billion industry in a matter of years, but unless these technologies converge with the fashion industry they may fail to popularise and reach their potential...
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Coinciding with our 'SHOWcabinet: Prosthetics' exhibition, SHOWstudio engages in the discussions and debates surrounding disability by offering artists, models and thinkers an open forum to communicate their views and research. "Artificial limb makers were sometimes likened to fashionable hairdressers and wigmakers (perhaps reflecting the origins of both in barber-surgery), recasting the body in fantastic and fashionable forms, using artificial means to supplement natural deficiencies."
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interesting way to perceive the world, through a technological reproduction.