Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Samsung Great S2 Round Smartwatch Goes on Sale Friday

Gear S2 3 Unit LockupWe’ve written before about the round Samsung Gear S2 smartwatch. The company announced today that the watch will go on sale October 2, but it may be a little hard to find. Although you’ll be able to get it at Samsung’s own site and Amazon, if you want to get hands on at launch, you’ll have to make the a pilgrimage to your local Best Buy or to Macy’s main store in Herald Square, New York City.

The Gear S2 is remarkable for several reasons. First of all, it runs the open-source Tizen operating system, not Android Wear and certainly not iOS. The watch has a round face, unusual (although increasingly common) for smartwatches. And, unlike previous Samsung connected watches, the Gear S2 will connect to most phones running Android, not just Samsung’s own phones.

The watch will cost $300 or $350 depending on trim and finish. A version that uses a SIM, connects directly to 3G networks and doesn’t require phone tethering will launch this fall, Samsung said. Pricing for that version was not announced.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Wearable Technology Is Fusion Of Industries

We are very happy to welcome Oxstren, as one of our exhibitors at our WT | Wearable Technologies Show 2015 ASIA in Hong Kong on October 12th. We talked to Pratik Saraogi, CEO of this innovative company which developed Smart Gym gloves – used for tracking your exercise.

1.  Why did you choose this particular form factor – a glove for your product

I’m not a big fan of jewellery or accessories, especially when I’m working out. All the existing smart wrist bands are intrusive from a comfort point of view. Besides no fitness trackers existed for gym or indoor workouts when we started building this and the estimated calorie burn and step counting is the least of the worries of a gym goer.

The first things any user going to the gym would look for is probably protein and gym gloves. Being a big fitness enthusiast and an early adaptor of fitness bands, I felt it’d only be logical that technology found its way into something as natural as a gym glove, something a user would wear regardless while working out. We wanted to make it as seamless and non- intrusive as possible, while still providing innovative, comprehensive functionalities, which made the difference.

2. What is the most important thing you have learned while being involved in the topic of wearables?

Wearable technology is fusion of industries. We’ve needed an amalgamation of skills and talent right from textiles, hardware, design, bio-medicals, mobile apps, embedded systems, fitness, and so much more. The complexity of the entire journey so far has been humbling, learning what goes into creating a product first hand – which has only brought us closer as a team. This industry is so nascent that finding directly relevant experienced talent is next to impossible. We’ve been lucky however, to have built a strong core team early on – which wasn’t just well qualified but also passionate enough about the idea.

3. How can your company help bring the world of fitness and the world of technology together? 

Nature has blessed us with amazing bodies. A majority of us want to exercise, yet only 3% of the global adult population is documented gym members and more than 50% of the gym members are not regular. Technology has started playing such a pivotal role in influencing our generation, right from having kids play Wii more than real sports, or most of us more active with friends on social media. Then why can’t we use some technology to get more users to go to the gym and more importantly go back for the next session. With changes happening all around us, the gym industry has relied on the simple underlying principle of our willpower to push and motivate ourselves to achieve our goals. If all our innovation, advanced tracking, auto logging, crucial alerts, analytic could come together jointly to help the user motivate and push oneself, to make their sessions more fun, safe and rewarding, I would say we’ve done our jobs and increased & improved the world of fitness by integrating it with tech.

4. What is your favourite wearable tech product (besides your own) and why?

I love when sports, tech and fitness are fused together. Not a big fan of any of the glorified pedometers (sorry!). I like more real data coming through. I tried some of the smart T-shirts that give real time heart rate and more, and they’d be my favourite if only their fitting wasn’t tight enough to actually use them. If I had to select I’d say Garmin watches since they don’t do a lot, but are good at what they do. As a user when I wear something, it has to comfortable & stylist first and then smart.

We like the fact that more and more companies are trying out different form factors to make it interesting for the consumer to use. WT team is always supporting innovative ideas and companies that are willing to try different things. If you want to know more about this interesting product please visit their website: http://oxstren.com/

Sunday, September 20, 2015

New technique bodes well for lung transplant success rate

The EVLP-treated lungs showed little signs of rejection, while the lungs transplanted without the treatment all showed signs of severe rejection

Our bodies have developed a particularly unforgiving immune response when a threat is posed to our lungs. This is great for warding off infections and illness, though is something of a double-edged sword regarding transplants, with the recipient's body often perceiving the incoming organ as a threat and seeking to destroy it. But a new approach promises to boost the success rate of such procedures, by both repairing unhealthy donor lungs that wouldn't otherwise make the grade and reducing the chances of rejection once it is implanted.

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Section: Medical

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Saturday, September 19, 2015

Vacheron Constantin creates world's most complicated watch

The Vacheron Constantin Reference 57260 features a record-breaking 57 complications

Swiss watchmaker Vacheron Constantin is claiming the title of the most complicated mechanical watch ever made with its Reference 57260. Boasting 57 complications (the previous record holder had 33) and a wide array of functions, the Reference 57260 contains over 2,800 components, each one hand-decorated by one Master Watchmaker using traditional techniques.

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Section: Wearable Electronics

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New invisibility cloak hides tiny three-dimensional objects of any shape

An ultra-thin invisibility cloak developed at UC Berkeley can wrap around objects of any shape and conceal them from sight

Scientists at UC Berkeley have developed a foldable, incredibly thin invisibility cloak that can wrap around microscopic objects of any shape and make them undetectable in the visible spectrum. In its current form, the technology could be useful in optical computing or in shrouding secret microelectronic components from prying eyes, but according to the researchers involved, it could also be scaled up in size with relative ease.

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Section: Science

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Thursday, September 10, 2015

TomTom Launches Spark GPS Fitness Watch (Updated)

TomTom_Spark_HeroTomTom is pretty well known among mapping geeks as one of the companies that powers car GPS systems and Apple Maps. The company has also had an unheralded line of sports watches dedicated to running, golf, and general training, and has now introduced a line devoted to what it calls the “any-day” athlete.

The Spark GPS Fitness Watch line comprises five models: a basic unit, a unit that holds 3GB of music, a music unit with Bluetooth headphones, a “cardio” unit, and a “cardio” unit with headphones. All of them include modes for several sports, GPS, and (by the end of the year) smartphone notifications. The “cardio” versions include a heart rate monitor. Engadget has a hands-on from the IFA trade show.

The Cardio version without Bluetooth headset will be available on October 1 for $249, the company said. The others will be available on October 15 at prices that were not disclosed.

GPS, Bluetooth, and heart monitors are tough on battery life. If you run all of them, expect only about 5 hours of battery, the company said. Activity tracking alone will let the battery run for 3 weeks; just as a watch, expect 6 weeks. Using GPS only, though, allows an 11-hour charge, which is notable and may speak to TomTom’s experience with GPS. For most trackers, GPS is the biggest power pig; here, the biggest drain is apparently Bluetooth.

The Spark watches charge via a USB cable; a desk dock is an optional accessory.

TomTom also sells a Multi-Sport Training Watch, which covers much of the same ground. The company says the Spark uses a newer and smaller heart-rate monitor, is more waterproof and less likely to be accidentally triggered, and has a redesigned interface.

[Updated to add product information from TomTom.]

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Lenovo Magic View Offers a New Way to Look at a Smartwatch

It would be easy to think that the smartwatch concept in general was getting a bit played out, that tech makers had gone just about as far as they could go with a wristband and an accompanying watch face that connects to a smartphone. But Lenovo may have just found a little something new in the form of the "Magic View" system.