click here to get to the front page if you aren't there already
   
 

12/4/2005

Body based technology

Newsweek Magazine files in a report about the potential of body based technology that allows the human body to act as a wireless networking tool. This very technology is central to Docomo’s concept wristwatch-phone that transfers the voice signal through your body:

In his gadget-filled office at Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Prof. Kohji Mitsubayashi tells a visitor to touch a transmitter with one hand and a receiver with another. Voila! A jaunty TV jingle blares from a pair of attached speakers. Surprised, the visitor releases both gadgets, and the music stops. The simplicity and strangeness of becoming a human circuit—with electrical signals coursing through one’s body from fingertip to fingertip—is so fascinating that visitors usually repeat the act. “Fun, isn’t it?” says Mitsubayashi, grinning.

Not just fun. Japan is abuzz over the potential of such body-based technology as the ultimate wireless networking tool. A string of Japanese companies are experimenting with systems that use the human body to conduct electricity—some manipulating weak currents that pass through the skin itself (as body-fat scales do), others taking advantage of electrical fields on the surface of the body. Associated products are on the way. The question is whether this represents a paradigm shift in the way we think about wires.

related links:

Newsweek: Getting Your Body (And Soul) Wired

“>Wf: Finger Whisper

Filed under: Adnan @ 2:44 pm , Comments (1)

8/13/2005

The rise of the Care Bracelets

As time telling becomes more ubiquitous thanks to personal technologies like the cell phone, it makes it easy to see why naysayers predict the death of the wrist watch as a utilitarian object but what they don’t realise is that as technology takes us over the next curve, watches might just begin to tell us more than just time. Below are some of the “Care” bracelets that have been announced recently:

- Radio frequency wristwear for runaway autistic children (Gm News)

- A wristwatch-like device that can monitor whether patients have been complying with their treatment regimen (This Business Gazette)

- And of course heart-rate montiors - Julie Deardorff of Chicago Times writes: “The fascination with heart-rate monitors reached new heights after the Outdoor Life Network showed the pulse of some riders in the Tour de France in July. It’s like having a cockpit view of an auto racer’s instrument panel.” (Baltimore Sun)

Filed under: Adnan @ 5:00 pm , Comments (0)

8/4/2005

Hello Photon! The Optically Driven Watch

Move over Quartz. Physicists at the California Institute of Technology have created an alternative to the quartz movement - a disk (made of silica and the size of less than the width of a human hair) that vibrates steadily like a tuning fork (vibrates about 80 million times per second) when it is pumped with laser light (photon), which is very similar to the quartz crystal’s vibration from electrical current that helps regulate a battery powered wristwatch.

However, the only clear difference between the optically driven movement and the electric quartz is the design element that could provide new electro-optic functions withint the context of integrated circuits. This is the first micro-mechanical device that has been operated at a steady frequency by the actions of photons alone.

The race is on for someone to commercialize it.

related links

PhysOrg: Caltech Scientists Create Tiny Photon Clock
Optics Express: Radition Pressure driven Micro mechanical oscillator

Filed under: Adnan @ 9:03 am , Comments (4)

6/16/2005

Rearview Mirror


While we’ve previously mentioned the emergence of a fashion contender to the watch - the cellphone, a new report titled “Fashion and Style in the Mobile Handset Industry” by an independent research firm, ARCchart, points out some interesting trends:

- Fashion boutiques have already started taking on handsets. So far we’ve had the Vertu, Siemens/ESCADA, Nokia/Versace and the now defunct Xelibri. In addition, fashion designers such as Kimora Lee Simmons, Diane Von Furstenberg, Anna Sui and Vivienne Westwood have readily extended their design expertise onto handsets from Motorola and Samsung.

- Currently the fashion and style strategies employed by major handsets are: the incorporation of fashion and styling elements across a handset portfolio; co-branding collaborations with fashion brands; formation of a handset sub-portfolio geared specifically at the fashion and style conscious market; and the establishment of independent, fashion focused handset subsidiaries. Nokia is the only vendor adopting all four strategies, while Sony Ericsson employs just one.

- Finally, here’s a clue on how much cellphone companies are placeing their bets on phones over taking the wrist watch market, ArcCharts based its forcast of 23 million fashion handsets by 2010 by mapping consumer purchasing behaviour in the wrist watch market onto a future, mature handset market.

Looks like I might be covering more than wrists in the future.

related links

ARC Chart: Fashion and Style in the Mobile Handset Industry
Nokia Limited Edition Phone By Versace

Filed under: Adnan @ 12:17 pm , Comments (1)

5/11/2005

Hand Engraved Artisan Watch

Time Zone’s Ron De Corte went behind the scene to take a look at how Kees Engelbart creates his watches using intricate hand engraving and mokume gane techniques, like the one pictured above.

related links

Kees Engelbart’s Artisan Watches

Filed under: Adnan @ 1:00 pm , Comments (3)

3/27/2005

Wrist pod


If there is one thing you’ve got to admire about the Apple Ipod, it’s how it has captured everyone’s imagination. Do a web search and you’re likely to find a few hundred wishlist prototypes by amateurs and professionals alike, like the five commissioned by Business 2.0 for their magazine, which includes a wrist-worn model that would wirelessly beam tunes to your earbuds or headphones via bluetooth.

And yes, it tells time.

related links

Business 2.0 : Re-Imagining Apple: Apple Gear We Hope to See

Filed under: Adnan @ 3:44 pm , Comments (7)

1/4/2005

Using Bone Tissue as Material

Using new materials has always been encouraged in the watch industry i.e. Tissot’s Wood Watch (A watch entirely made of wood made in the eighties) So, I wouldn’t be surprised if someone drugs Nicholas Hayek, the swiss watch baron (AKA Mr. Swatch) and steals a sample of his bone cells, only to harvest it in a lab and grow a limited edition watch out of his bone.

Of course, such a scenario has only been made possible by Tobie Kerridge and Nikki Stott, who have combined biotech and jewelry to give us the first “Bio-ring”. Atleast its less painful than a tattoo.

Also, spotted on Mr. Kerridge’s website is something that would be more at home as one of Mr. Jones’ watches that we covered earlier:

Cuckoo IP is a mischievous messaging system. Use your mobile to leave an announcement, then choose any time in the future for cuckoo to emerge and replay your rant.

related links

Si: Using Lab Grown Human Tissue for Jewelry
Bio Jewelry (via We make money not art)

Filed under: Adnan @ 3:50 pm , Comments (1)

 
    
     
e3  
     

Subscribe

Subscribe to the
RSS Feed

Advertisements

Advertise on
Wrist Fashion