Geek Chic

Published: 28 March 2001 y., Wednesday
IBM in the jewelry business? Dutch electronics maker Philips selling street wear jackets? American high-tech start-ups creating space-age shades? Yes, yes and yes. AT THIS YEAR’S CeBIT, IBM is showing studies of wearable computer add-ons such as a silver necklace with a hidden microphone, a lady’s display watch, earrings with speakers, and a ring whose elegant turquoise stone doubles as a nifty scroll-point mouse. Last year, Philips got together with jeans maker Levi Strauss for a limited edition of “wearable electronics garments” — jackets with a GSM mobile and an MP3 player in special pockets, with a small remote control on the front flap of the jacket and a microphone in the collar. The two devices work together, with the music turning itself off when you talk on the phone. (Available only in Europe, all 800 jackets quickly sold out). And about half a dozen companies are working on special glasses that use sophisticated optics to create screen-size images in front of your eyes. One of the more intriguing developments in the industry is the push by some of the biggest companies into what’s become known as “wearables” — computers and accessories we can use on the go, while we’re busy doing other things. Wearables are already widespread in industry, where workers often need access to information but also need to keep their hands free. Workers building aircraft use head-mounted displays and speech-input devices for complex assembly tasks, which frees them from referring to lengthy manuals. British Airways in experimenting with a crew of roaming check-in attendants at Heathrow’s Terminal 4, outfitted with keyboards on their forearms and a mini-display on a headset. Bell Canada sends its service technicians out to fix phone lines wearing a small computer in their pocket, a keyboard or touch-screen strapped to their wrist, and a helmet equipped with an optical display and a digital camera that beams pictures of trouble spots back to the maintenance center, wirelessly. Having quick access to precise instructions while they’re up on some telephone pole lets workers do more work in less time, says Daniel Butler, an executive at Fairfax, Virginia-based Xybernaut, maker of the wearable system BA and Bell Canada use.
Šaltinis: NEWSWEEK
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The Presidential Referendum

OSCE SAYS BELARUSIAN ELECTIONS 'SIGNIFICANTLY SHORT' OF DEMOCRATIC STANDARDS... more »

Belarusians Protest Referendum Results

More than 1,000 people, many of them students, gathered in central Minsk tonight to protest against the referendum more »

Belarusians Approve End to Term Limits

Belarusians overwhelmingly approved a referendum on scrapping presidential term limits, the Central Elections Comission announced Monday more »

A constitutional referendum

Belarus votes on whether Lukashenko can stand for third term, amid Western concerns more »

The last dictator in Europe

Belarus goes to the polls tomorrow, but the President's opponents have a nasty habit of disappearing more »

Zarqawi group claims Baghdad's Green Zone attack

The group of Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi, Iraq`s most wanted man, claimed responsibility for the attacks in Baghdad`s Green Zone more »

Diaspora support plan gets cabinet approval

A five-year plan to bolster Latvian communities abroad and to provide information about opportunities in the homeland has been approved by the Cabinet of Ministers in Rīga more »

A Preliminary Results

Lithuania's Labor Party, led by Viktor Uspaskich, won general election more »

Police officers arrested over Russian school siege

Russian authorities have arrested senior police officers from the southern republic of Ingushetia, in relation to the school siege in the North Ossetian town of Beslan last month more »

A Referendum in Poland

Poland's President Recommends EU Referendum in 2005 more »