A smartwatch984 Archivesbe a really handy gadget, but oh, the battery life! Most only last a day, and charging -- typically with proprietary magnetic chargers -- can be a pain.
Well, there's a new smartwatch in town, and it's ready to make charging a complete non-concern.
SEE ALSO: Pet wearables are here to help you spy on your four-legged friendsThe PowerWatch is a smartwatch that gets energy from body heat. It's launching on Indiegogo from the startup Matrix with a planned ship date of July 2017. Once it's on your wrist, your body heat powers the timekeeping and some neat other functions. The minimum donation to get a PowerWatch when it ships is $170.
Besides using heat to power the device, the PowerWatch can use the biometric information to tell you how much power you're generating and how many calories you've burned in a day.
It works by utilizing Matrix's thermoelectric technology, which harvests the energy created in a temperature change to generate electricity.
So, if the PowerWatch works as advertised, it will really, truly, never need to be charged. That is, as long as you're generating body heat.
According to Matrix, the PowerWatch also, "wirelessly syncs with your smartphone, automatically adjusts to the current time zone, and has changeable watch faces.... It stores up to a year’s worth of data. [And] when you take off the watch, it automatically goes into sleep mode, keeping all the data in memory; it turns on after a few seconds when you put it back on."
CalTech buddies Akram Boukai and Douglas Tham developed this technology in Akram's basement in Ann Arbor. It's been five years since they've gotten this technology to work, and now that they're breaking out with their first commercial product, they're hoping the demand for their thermoelectric tech will expand.
There are many other contexts in which this sort of technology would be extremely useful, they explain. From manufacturing a whole new class of devices that never need to be charged (hearing aids, medical alert devices, etc.), to creating smart refrigerators (both personal and industrial), the two friends/business partners are hoping their creation will serve many markets.
As to why they got into the smartwatch game first, Akram told Mashable, "After talking to potential consumers we realized it was the most obvious market to tap into."
"We wanted to do something for consumers that increases battery life, but also works more intimately." He continues. With that, the PowerWatch has possibly the most apt tagline it could get: "powered by you."
Previous:Pulp Nonfiction
Whiting Awards 2021: Joshua Bennett, Poetry and NonfictionWhiting Awards 2021: Donnetta Lavinia Grays, DramaStaff Picks: Raisins, Rhythm, and Reality by The Paris ReviewAt Home among the Birds: An Interview with Jonathan Meiburg by John Jeremiah SullivanTouched by a Virgin by Kirstin Valdez QuadeSamsung Galaxy Unpacked: What to expect from the January livestreamA Kind of Packaged Aging Process by Jan MorrisSyracuse vs. UNC basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming deals, and moreKentucky vs. TAMU basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming deals, and moreStaff Picks: Language, Liberation, and LaserJet by The Paris ReviewCES 2024: This countertop ice cream maker actually makes good softOn Memory and Motorcycles: An Interview with Rachel Kushner by Cornelia ChanningCES 2024: This countertop ice cream maker actually makes good soft3 best TVs at CES 2024 besides the LG transparent TV, including a rollable displayBest mesh router deal: Get the Google Nest WiFi Pro for $119.99How is 'Killers of the Flower Moon' different from the book?Isn’t That So by Friederike MayröckerAnnouncing The Winners of the 2017 Whiting AwardsYear on TikTok 2024: All the trends from brat summer to a Moo Deng in finance3 best TVs at CES 2024 besides the LG transparent TV, including a rollable display The Poetry of Icebergs “The Ecstatic, The Hermetic, and the Strange” Blue Shores: On the Photography of Stephen Shore “Would You Like to Write Something for My Magazine?” Poland vs. Georgia 2025 livestream: Watch U21 Euro 2025 for free Go Stand in the Corner (And Notice How Powerful It Is Over There) The Bookness of Not The Designs of the Jazz Age (It Wasn’t All Cocktail Shakers and Dresses) Deborah Turbeville’s Anti On the Shelf: the Final Edition Paleoart: Visions of a Prehistoric Past The Case of the Purloined Portrait Flatulence and Language in Yasujiro Ozu’s ‘Good Morning’ Satellites Are Spinning: Notes on a Sun Ra Poem Pour One Out for Branwell Brontë—the Guy Gets No Respect Howard’s Way: An Oral History of Richard Howard Charles and Ray Eames’ Films Shine a Light on Their Design Philosophy Tales of the Unexpected: A Ghost Story When Your Art’s Just Not Instagrammable Enough A Letter from Sam Shepard to Johnny Dark
2.181s , 10124.8828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1984 Archives】,Miracle Information Network