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Apple’s Next Big Thing - Wearable Computing (Part 2)

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Apple’s Plans

Apple rarely gives anything away when it comes to its future plans. In fact, the company has a phrase ready for anyone who asks about such matters: “We do not comment on future products”. However, when it comes to the iWatch - a smart watch that Apple is said to be working on - the usual rules don’t appear to apply. At a recent shareholder event Apple CEO Tim Cook said: “Obviously we’re looking at new categories; we don’t talk about them, but we’re looking at them.”

Prior to this there’d been speculation that, in an attempt to prove it was innovating, Apple had leaked details about the iWatch to Bloomberg. Rumors normally originate from the company’s suppliers in Asia, but in this case it was Bloomberg sources that revealed Apple has a team of 100 designers working on the watch. It even had details of the Apple executives heading up the project.

Apple CEO Tim Cook said: “Obviously we’re looking at new categories”

Apple CEO Tim Cook said: “Obviously we’re looking at new categories”

Soon after, a report in the New York Times appeared, claiming Apple is experimenting with wristwatch-like devices made of curved glass. Coincidence?

In the same month, the US Patent & Trademark Office published an Apple patent application, describing a bracelet-style device with a flexible display that could snap around the wrist, adding further evidence that the company is interested in making an iWatch.

The patent describes a “wearable video device” or “slap bracelet”, that connects to a “portable electronic device” via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. It allows the consumer to “accomplish a number of different tasks including adjusting the order of a current playlist, or reviewing a list of recent phone calls,” states Apple.

“A response to a current text message can even be managed given a simple virtual keyboard configuration across the face of the flexible display.”

Power Up

The patent even reveals a way in which the battery could be divided into portions that are placed in disparate locations in the device. Apple suggests the device could be powered by a solar panel or a kinetic source that generates power from being worn on the wrist. The company notes that, in addition to managing texts and phone calls, and giving access to music playlists, the wearable video device could be used for viewing maps.

It’s difficult to read the patent description without concluding that the company is talking about a watch. This isn’t the only patent filed by Apple that could relate to the iWatch. Published at the end of January, and titled “Communicating location information between a portable device and an accessory,” a separate patent covers the process of exchanging GPS data from a portable media device, such as the iPhone or iPad, with an accessory.

The patent describes ways in which devices that lack GPS receivers could share location information with an iPhone or iPad.

Apple Patent Watch

Along with its patent application for a ‘snap bracelet’, Apple has filed patents in the wearable technology field including one that refers to smart running shoes. Another patent describes sensor equipped “personal items” including an accelerometer, humidity or temperature sensor, EKG sensing device, weight-sensing detector, and chemical detector. Apple’s patent suggests these sensors could be integrated into anything, to capture everything you do and changes in your environment.

Apple’s patent suggests these sensors could be integrated into anything, to capture everything you do and changes in your environment.

Apple’s patent suggests these sensors could be integrated into anything, to capture everything you do and changes in your environment.

The Competition

Not wanting to be left out (or accused of copying) a Samsung executive has jumped on the wearable technology bandwagon and claimed that the company is also working on its own smart watch product.

“We’ve been preparing the watch product for so long. We are working very hard to get ready for it. We are preparing products for the future, and the watch is definitely one of them,” enthused Lee Young Hee, executive vice president of Samsung’s mobile business.

Samsung and Apple will by no means have the smart watch market to themselves, though. There are already a number of players with smartphone-compatible watches, such as the Pebble (see below). Its developers have worked out how to present some of the useful functions of a phone through the watch’s face without requiring users to take their iPhone out of their pocket. The Pebble takes most of its data via Bluetooth from your iPhone or Android device, which means the watch doesn’t need a powerful processor, huge amounts of memory or a powerful battery.

Pebble isn’t worried about the heightened speculation surrounding the rumored iWatch, though. Company founder Eric Migicovsky believes all the talk about Apple’s smart watch is bringing the idea of wearable technology to the attention of consumers.

Anther explorer in the watch sector of wearable technology is Thalmic Labs, which recently introduced MYO ($149, getmyo.com), a wrist cuff that controls computers and other devices through gestures. Co-founder Stephen Lake noted that people don’t necessary want to speak instructions when in public, and he believes that gestures are a better means for input.

Professor Steve Mann developed the world’s first wearable technology systems equipped with video to augment daily life.

This Sporting Life

Sports and activity trackers account for the largest chunk (61 per cent) of wearable technologies shipping today. You can already get smart activity trackers, from companies such as Fitbit and Nike. There’s also sports gear, including Underarmour’s E39 T-shirt (www.underarmour.com), equipped with an accelerator, heart and breathing monitors.

BodyMedia, is making devices that monitor health data, while researchers from Orange Medical are involved in exploring the potential of diabetes, heart rate and other medical device monitors in an attempt to help doctors keep an eye on the health of their patients. Another firm, Sorin, offers heart monitoring systems that work with a smartphone to monitor patients equipped with a pacemaker

Wearable technology is also hitting fashion. International Fashion Machines has been developing an intelligent fabric capable of carrying electronic instruction; meanwhile Stamp Shoes offers a pair of GPS-enabled brogues, which could help heavy drinkers get home from the pub.

Wearable technology is, however, nothing new. University of Toronto professor, Steve Mann, is regarded as the father of the wearable computer.

He built systems in the 1970s and early 1980s, including personal sensing, biofeedback and multimedia devices.

In 1981, he designed and built a backpack-based multimedia computer system with a head-mounted display. Mann has worn some form of wearable computer every day ever since.

Recently published patents suggest Microsoft has also quietly been developing its own video glasses, while Olympus is also working to produce its own answer to Google Glass.

Pebble Watch

The Pebble smart watch hosts a 144 x 168-pixel black-and-white ePaper display, a vibrating motor, magnetometer, accelerometer and ambient light sensors. It communicates with your iPhone over Bluetooth and supports a range of apps. The watch also controls music playback, including support for track information, and alerts you to incoming calls, emails and messages, displaying messages or Caller ID information on its screen. Battery life is good too, with a claimed seven or more days between each charge.

The Pebble smart watch hosts a 144 x 168-pixel black-and-white ePaper display, a vibrating motor, magnetometer, accelerometer and ambient light sensors.

The Pebble smart watch hosts a 144 x 168-pixel black-and-white ePaper display, a vibrating motor, magnetometer, accelerometer and ambient light sensors.

 

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