Smart shirts embedded with optic fibers can monitor wearer's condition and transmit data wirelessly.
Published:
8 November 2001 y., Thursday
Long a dream of geeks and science fiction writers, the smart shirt -- a wearable computer -- will hit store shelves next year. Far from a novelty, the list of people with a practical reason to get one is much longer than you might think.
Funded by a grant from the US Navy -- which was looking for a garment to wirelessly report when its wearer had been wounded -- Georgia Tech has developed a smart shirt prototype. The shirt evolved from a rough-hewn military vest to a shirt with plastic-polymer optical fibers woven in as data buses. That makes the shirt into what its designers call a "wearable motherboard."
The garment comes with data disks, which are used as plug-in sensors to monitor the wearer's vital signs.
The developers foresee the shirt being used by soldiers, athletes, astronauts, airline pilots and anyone whose vital statistics are of critical importance. The data points connect to a proprietary wireless transmitter, which will be as small as a pager.
Šaltinis:
techtv.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
NOKIA: TheFeature.com launches new, innovative mobile information services at CeBIT 2003
more »
When impostors are arrested, victims get criminal records
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
Interbank payments network Swift is likely to be the primary beneficiary of FIX uptake by European securities firms, according to a survey conducted by London consultancy City IQ.
more »
Visa is to require merchants to display only the last four digits of a credit card number on receipts in a bid to combat a rising tide of financial identity crime
more »
A Norwegian court has approved prosecutors' appeal of a teenager's acquittal on charges that he created and circulated online a program that cracks the security codes on DVDs
more »
Fraudsters pose as employers to steal job-seekers' personal details
more »
IDC has estimated that just 5 percent of U.S. businesses in 2002 had completed a Web services project. But by 2008, the research firm said, 80 percent of firms will have such a project under way.
more »
The credit card industry focuses too much on reducing its own fraud costs and not enough on protecting consumers
more »
PC chipmakers Intel and Advanced Micro Devices this week enacted their first sweeping desktop processor price cuts of the year
more »