Rechargeable, Self-Heating Boots Keep Toes Toasty

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The name, Bugathermo, is truly awful, but the boot itself can be forgiven, mostly because it is so practical and useful, but also because it has switches and glowing LEDs on the side.

The men’s boot (soon the be joined by the equally badly named women’s Snow Hottie) has central heating inside. Powered by lithium polymer batteries, a charge will give you four to eight hours of toasty toes, depending on which of the three heat levels you pick.

The boots themselves have insulated soles and are waterproof (and breathable), meaning they’ll keep your soles dry and frost-free right down to -25ºF. Switches (and lights!) on the ankles let you control things and check battery levels, and a protected socket takes the recharge cable.

Our first thought upon hearing that these boots had batteries inside was that a regular lithium-ion cell would do the trick, fond as they are of bursting into flames, but this version should be safer, if a little less spectacular. $250.

Product page [Columbia via CNET]


Magnetic Bike Pedals Work With Any Shoes

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Three weeks ago we showed you Mavic’s magnetic shoe/bike pedal combo, which drew some interesting comments about their efficacy. Reader Reubennz:

If it’s strong enough to hold the foot in place through the second part of the rotation how do you ever release from the pedal? If the magnet is weak enough to release straight up then it could never allow any kind of power advantage.

We agree, and we see the exact same problem with this version from Proton Locks. While it has a big advantage over the Mavic EZ-Ride pedals in that it comes with magnetic plates to bolt onto your own shoes, rather than requiring you buy a specially made pair, it still suffers from a lack of locking. Toe clips and clip-less pedals are meant to keep you foot on the pedal however hard you pull, for maximum power transfer. As Reubennz points out, if the magnets could do that, you’d never be able to remove your feet.

The Proton pedals have another disadvantage. They cost $145 for the mini pedals and $165 for the full-sized, against just $60 for the Mavics. On the other hand, you don’t have to drop another $90 on the Mavic-compatible shoes. Me? I’ll stick with my regular sneakers and cheap cage/strap setup.

Product page [Proton Locks via Cyclelicious]

Magnetic Bike Pedals Stick to Your Feet


Hi-Tech Built In German World War II Bags

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To paraphrase Doc Brown, if you’re going to build a solar panel and iPod controls into a backpack, why not do it in style.

And that’s what Killa did, with the KILLA Vintage series #1 bags. The base bags are 50 year old backpacks and satchels from Germany — genuine WWII issue. Into these are incorporated touch-pad controls for iPods which communicate with the devices via Bluetooth, and on the back you’ll find a flexible solar-panel from German company Solarc.

The marriage of old and new works well, and the bags themselves have pretty much already proved that they can last, with 50 years on the clock already. If you wan’t one, though, it may just be easier to make your own. KILLA is only selling 20 a year, and right now you’ll need to pay a visit to the store in Vancouver, called ARChitect, where they will sell you all manner of wearable electronics along with, it would appear, some rather eccentric capitalization.

Rugged solar bags with iPod control from KILLA [Talk to My Shirt via RAW Feed]


After Office Tie With Built-In Bottle Opener

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An argument could, quite successfully, be made that everything should contain a bottle opener. Board-shorts come with on on an elastic cord for easy surf-and-suds. Bike wrenches are often notched with a lid-popping slot, and there are even bottle-opener/cigarette-lighter combos.

You may notice a trend. All of these tools are likely to be owned and used by already calm, relaxed people. The poor, stressed, cubicle-manacled office worker, the person who really needs a quick brew as soon as they get outside the building, will have to carry a regular opener and risk the suspicions of co-workers and supervisors. After all, have you ever seen a combined stapler and opener?

Those poor sheep now have a savior in the form of the After Office Tie, a necktie whose tip has been replaced with a steel slot for popping caps. A concept whose time has surely come, the After Office Tie also has the advantage of weighing the band of fabric down for a more sober angle of dangle.

This will of course be useless at the Wired.com HQ, filled as it is with tie-hating hippies who don’t have to work for more than five minutes before the Beer Robot serves them a mid-morning brewski. Not that I’m jealous, of course.

Product page [Sinapsis via Noquedanblogs]


Outlier Bike Pants: Hi-Tech That Looks Good

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Can pants be a gadget? And can any pants, ever, be better than jeans? It turns out that yes, they can, and they don’t even have to have any dorky cargo pockets to do it.

The new Workwear Pants from Outlier are designed for bike riding, and the Outlier folks (bike riders themselves) decided that they wanted something good looking, long lasting and, most important for cyclists, made from a breathing, quick-drying fabric:

We didn’t study some long dead miner’s trousers and then carefully distress the garment to match. We didn’t track down some antique loom and use it to make our fabric exactly the way it was back then. You don’t need to wear our pants for six months to break them in just right.

The result is a $190 pair of Cordura canvas (80% Nylon, 10% Polyester and 10% Spandex) pants which you can wear for weeks without washing (just like jeans) but that keep you dry when riding (not like jeans). Still not convinced that these trousers are a gadget? Try this: The fabric is treated with a self-cleaning nano-coating that mimics a lotus leaf. Spills just shake off, including red wine and coffee (lucky for me, as they’re the only things I drink). Finally, it has a “gusseted crotch”. Not particularly gadgety, but the schoolboy in me just likes to say “gusseted crotch”. Available now.

Product page [Outlier. Thanks, Tyler!]


Digital Contacts Will Keep an Eye on Your Vital Signs

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Forget about 20/20. “Perfect” vision could be redefined by gadgets that give you the eyes of a cyborg.

The tech industry calls the digital enrichment of the physical world “augmented reality.” Such technology is already appearing in smartphones and toys, and enthusiasts dream of a pair of glasses we could don to enhance our everyday perception. But why stop there?

Scientists, eye surgeons, professors and students at the University of Washington have been developing a contact lens containing one built-in LED, powered wirelessly with radio frequency waves.

Eventually, more advanced versions of the lens could be used to provide a wealth of information, such as virtual captions scrolling beneath every person or object you see. Significantly, it could also be used to monitor your own vital signs, such as body temperature and blood glucose level.

Why a contact lens? The surface of the eye contains enough data about the body to perform personal health monitoring, according to Babak Parvis, a University of Washington professor of bionanotechnology, who is working on the project.

“The eye is our little door into the body,” Parvis told Wired.com.

With gadgets becoming increasingly mobile and powerful, the technology industry is seeing a steady stream of applications devoted to health. A few examples include a cellphone microscope used to diagnose malaria, surgeons honing their skills with the Nintendo Wiimote, and an iPhone app made for diabetes patients to track their glucose levels.

A contact lens with augmented-reality powers would take personal health monitoring several steps further, Parvis said, because the surface of the eye can be used to measure much of the data you would read from your blood tests, including cholesterol, sodium, potassium and glucose levels.

And that’s just the beginning. Because this sort of real-time health monitoring has been impossible in the past, there’s likely more about the human eye we haven’t yet discovered, Parvis said. And beyond personal health monitoring, this finger-tip sized gadget could one day create a new interface for gaming, social networking and, well, interacting with reality in general.

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Parvis and his colleagues have been working on their multipurpose lens since 2004. They integrated miniature antennas, control circuits, an LED and radio chips into the lens using optoelectronic components they built from scratch. They hope these components will eventually include hundreds of LEDs to display images in front of the eye. Think words, charts and even photographs. (The illustration above is a concept image showing what it would look like with the lens displaying a digital overlay of the letter E.)

Sounds neat, doesn’t it? But the group faces a number of challenges before achieving true augmented eye vision.

rabbiteyeFirst and foremost, safety is a prime concern with a device that comes in contact with the eye. To ensure the lens is safe to wear, the group has been testing prototypes on live rabbits (pictured to the right), who have successfully worn the lenses for 20 minutes at a time with no adverse effects. However, the lens must undergo much more testing before gaining approval from the Food and Drug Administration.

A fundamental challenge this contact lens will face is the task of tracking the human eye, said Blair MacIntyre, an associate professor and director of the augmented environments lab at Georgia Tech College of Computing. MacIntyre is not involved in the contact lens product, but he helped develop an augmented-reality zombie shooter game.

“These developments are obviously very far from being usable, but very exciting,” MacIntyre said. “Using them for AR will be very hard. You need to know exactly where the user is looking if you want to render graphics that line up with the world, especially when their eyes saccade (jump around), which our eyes do at a very high rate.”

Given that obstacle, we’re more likely to see wearable augmented-reality eyeware in the form of glasses before a contact lens, MacIntyre said. With glasses, we’ll only need to track where the glasses are and where the eyes are relative to them as opposed to where the eyes are actually looking.

And with a contact lens, it will be difficult to cram heavy computational power into such a small device, even with today’s state-of-the-art technologies, Parvis admits. There are many advanced sensors that would amplify the lens’ abilities, but the difficulty lies in integrating them, which is why Parvis and his colleagues have had to engineer their own components. And when the contact lens evolves from personal health monitoring into more processor-intense augmented-reality applications, it’s more likely it will have to draw its powers from a companion device such as a smartphone, he said.

Layar, an Amsterdam-based startup focusing on augmented reality, shares University of Washington’s vision of an augmented-reality contact lens. However, Raimo van der Klein, CEO of Layar, said such a device’s vision would be limited if it did not work with an open platform supporting every type of data available via the web, such as mapping information, restaurant reviews or even Twitter feeds. Hence, his company has taken a first step by releasing an augmented-reality browser for Google Android smartphones, for which software developers can provide “layers” of data for various web services.

Van der Klein believes a consumer-oriented, multipurpose lens is just one example of where augmented-reality technology will take form in the near future. He said to expect these applications to move beyond augmenting vision and expand to other parts of the body.

“Imagine audio cues through an earpiece or sneakers vibrating wherever your friends are,” van der Klein said. “We need to keep an open eye for future possibilities, and I think a contact lens is just part of it.”

See Also:

Photos: University of Washington


Manliest Man-Bags Ever Resemble Gun-Holsters

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The hotness of the product is doused somewhat by the shots of bed-haired male models prancing in Wallpaper-style interiors, but in the end it triumphs. After all, what could be cooler than a leather gun-holster style case for your cellphone?

Sadly, the pitch is even lamer than the lifestyle photos:

It is not just a handbag for men but more a very special accessory for businessmen à la 007 and anyone else who values elegance.

The man-bags, from German company Koffski, are fashioned from calfskin leather and, with their angular shapes, resemble small pistols. The logo is burned into the leather, which is manly enough to make me beat my chest and roar.

Now, the trick lies in how you wear the bag. You can hook it onto a belt (please don’t) or sling it crosswise over your pumped-up pecs. But real men will go for the concealed holster-style strap which looks both comfortable and awesome. As a certain editor may have said on the Twitter, “If the Nazis had cell phone holsters, they’d probably look like this.”

Want one? Then you’d better brush up on your poker skills and win some cash. The bag is €350 ($500) and the strap another €100 ($140), or you can go downmarket for the No.2 bag and pay just €200 ($290) plus €60 ($85) for the holster strap.

Product page [Koffski]


Osloh Pants: Utility Wear for Cool Cyclists

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The Osloh Pants from Brooklyn, NYC, address a need which doesn’t really exist, but at least thay do it in style. Available as regular stretchy pants or as (stretchy) jeans, the pants are designed for fixed-gear riders. Sure, you could wear them to ride any bike, but the two-strap cinching on the right leg keeps the oily dirt from the exposed chain away from your trouser leg and the tabs above the rear pocket fit a Kryptonite Evo Mini perfectly (and allow it to drag the waistband down for the trademark hipster-crack).

Inside there are a few other tricks. The crotch is padded and incorporates a chamois, the waistband can be tightened, there’s a cellphone pocket on the side and a key pocket hidden within.

$100 to $130 depending on fabric (the denim costs more), or about the same price as a pair of skinny Levi’s. Also, if you read the label wrong, they appear to be “Door Resistant” (it turns out to be just “Odor Resistant” in all-caps).

Product page [Chari & Co via Pedal Consumption and Corpus Fixie]

See Also:


Fabric Horse Utility Belts: Just Don’t Use The F-Word

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Can a fanny-pack ever be cool? The answer is a resounding “no”, but try telling that to the worldwide tourist throngs that carry their valuables in one easy-to-snatch pouch on their waists. The only good thing about it is the name, which in British English means something quite different.

But the fanny pack is as useful as it is dorky. What if somebody came up with a hipper hip-bag? You’re ahead of me here. Fabric Horse make a whole range, only they’re not fanny packs. They’re utility belts. Like Batman wears. Awesome.

The packs, sorry, belts, are designed for cyclists, and are especially handy in the summer when heavy messenger bags or rucksacks make you sweat. They come in full and half sizes (more or less pockets), have clip or Velcro fastenings, metal loops for clipping carabiners and wrenches. They also have the Lock Holster, a loop at the back designed to carry a Kryptonite Evo Mini, apparently the bike messenger’s lock of choice. The holsters are “made from seat belts pulled from junk yards,” so they’ll last.

Could it be that Fabric Horse has finally made the fanny pack not just acceptable but actually desirable? Maybe. Packs run from $55 up to $120, and a standalone (hang-alone?) lock holster is just $10.

Product page [Fabric Horse. Thanks, Google!]


Flip-Flops Double as Drinks Trays

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I love flip-flops. My Havaianas hardly leave my feet from May through October. They’re comfortable, good for you, and cost almost nothing. So I’m quite interested in Tommaso Colia’s fLIP fLOP Aperitivi, a pair of slaps which double up as a seaside drink-holder.

The custom flip-flops have a small, recessed flat circle under the heel in which you can place your beverage. The problem, as you have no doubt already spotted, is that a flip-flop is already flat, and perfect for this beer-balancing trick unaided. That Colia’s concept has a sole woven from reeds is surely justification for a single flat patch, the edge of which may also be rather uncomfortable.

So, if this makes it to market, it probably isn’t worth buying. But look on the bright side: At least now you’ll remember that your own flip-flops are the ideal drinks tray.

Product page [Tommaso Colia via Book of Joe]