Why Wristwatches Are Still Worth Watching

The kids may be ditching wristwatches for time-telling smartphones, but manufacturers and designers still have some tricks just-barely-up-their-long-sleeves. The trick seems to be making watches more like smartphones by packing in extra functions or forgoing utility altogether for pure aesthetics or prestige.

Now, I can’t really read the spiral watch in the video above, but I appreciate the beauty and concept of the thing. The designer, Denis Guidone, says “I don’t like to design watches, what I really like is to design time.” This really puts us on another plane. If Marcel Duchamp were alive today, I’m sure he’d be making timepieces. (Dali, definitely.)

The “architecture you can wear” web magazine/design store Yanko Design has been highlighting clever takes on the wristwatch like this all summer, including design firm o.d.m.’s digital watch that puts the screen on the sides and the buttons in the middle, and a really gorgeous and surprisingly affordable piece by Daniel Will-Harris that lights up the numbers showing hours and minutes in color:

Image from Yanko Design


Let’s suppose, though, that you want your watch to DO stuff. Computerworld reports on watch manufacturers who are stoked about using the new Bluetooth spec, which makes it easier to hold connections on low-power devices, to pair your wristwatch with a computer the same way you would a mouse, keyboard or phone:

That means a watch or other device with a standard coin-cell or “button” battery that is worn on a wrist, kept in a pocket or worn on a necklace could communicate with a person’s smartphone or laptop. Using the wireless connection, the watch could display data received from the larger device, Bluetooth Special Interest Group Executive Director Michael Foley said Wednesday…

“The specification opens up new categories of Bluetooth devices,” he said. “You could replicate your phone on your watch for caller ID information or [to activate] a music player.”

These watches are probably still over a year away, though, as nobody’s made an announcement just yet. The ones with virus-templated nanobatteries that last forever are a long ways off.

Rolex

Image from Rolex

Finally, there’s the classic non-timekeeping function of a wristwatch — showing neither utility nor idiosyncratic taste but socially recognized status and power. Luckily for high-end watchmakers, the psychosocial cachet of their products doesn’t seem to be trailing off.

In “Why Do We Care About Luxury Brands?” Jonah Lehrer writes about what our continued desire for genuine Rolex watches, Hermes Bags and real (not sure ’nuff) iPhones has in common with our childhood objects of affection:

Although we outgrow stuffed animals, we never get beyond the irrational logic of authenticity and essentialism. There are certain things whose value depends largely on their legitimacy. While I might listen to bootleg music on my iPhone, I want the phone to be genuine. I want that Apple logo to be real. Why? Because the brand has effectively woven itself into my emotional brain. Because when I see that logo, I don’t see a functional object. Instead, I’ve learned to respond to everything that isn’t functional, all those subtle connotations conveyed in the glossy ads. There are many blankets in the world. But there is only one blankie. The best brands are blankies.

Sometimes it’s nice to look at your watch, not even to check the time, but just to remind yourself that it’s there.

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Nike Patents Marty McFly’s Self-Lacing Sneaker

Remember the McFly 2015s, the Official Shoes of Gadget Lab? They were a fairly faithful rendition of Marty McFly’s amazing self-lacing sneakers from Back to the Future 2, forced to the market by the tireless work of the Maloof brothers who spent years badgering Nike into making them.

They looked great, but lacked the flashing lights and auto-lacing functions of the “real” thing. Now, Nike has actually patented a self-lacing sneaker. This, you are no doubt just realizing, is completely frickin’ amazing: It’s entirely possibly that these shoes could actually be in stores in the year 2015, just like in the movie. This would be a weird, time-warping paradox so perfectly mimicking those in the Back to the Future movies that the world might possibly end.

That Nike has filed a patent for these things is mind-bending enough, but pretty much everything has made it in. The shoes will of course fasten themselves, but there are also LEDs a-glowing and a detailed breakdown of the batteries, circuits and control-systems. There is even a charging stand.

One problem Nike might have to face, though, is the existence of prior-art. Not only did the sneakers already show up in the movie, but just last month we saw that an enterprising hacker had made his own self-lacing shoes.

McFly 2015 patent application [WIPO via Nice KicksThakns, Matt!]

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Timbuk2 Tool-Shed Tool-Bag

The roll-up tool-bag is probably only hours younger than the invention of tools themselves: Soon after whacking away at a monolith with a femur, or cutting his thumb on a sharpened flint, the handy caveman would have needed a place to stow his kit. One dead, skinned woolly mammoth later – thunk! shik-shak! – and the tool-roll was born, complete with a furry surface on which our inventive neanderthal friend could wipe his greasy hands.

My poor knowledge of history aside, the tool roll is a great invention. And Timbukt2’s Tool Shed tool-roll (say that five times quickly) is now on my shopping list. The $35 tarp bag has pockets for your bike tools with an elastic strip at the top to keep long wrenches in place, and a netting pocket for small spares, chain-ring bolts and so on. The roll lies flat in use and once you’re done, you cinch it up and toss it in your bag.

Importantly, it’s also greaseproof. The Tool Shed comes in at a half-kilo (1.1-pounds): not the lightest roll, but it looks like it might last long enough to be your only roll.

I have a couple Timbukt2 bags already, and I love them. Just one thing, Timbukt2 designers: the strap on my mini-messenger bag is way too stiff. It’s nice that it’ll outlast me, but does it have to cut into my neck every time I wear it, too?

Tool Shed [Timbukt2 via Uncrate]

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Tiny, Cute Pocket Mirror is Wallet-Friendly

Unless you’re a musician from a 1980s new-romantic pop-group, or a girl, it’s unlikely that you’ll find Pavel Sidorenko’s tiny Pocket Mirror very useful. But for those who need to constantly reapply lipstick on-the-go, the flexible, wallet-friendly mirror is ideal.

The shiny steel back of my iPad Touch is getting too scratched to be useful when the Lady steals it to touch-up her make-up, so I may consider this €4 ($5) mirror as a generous birthday gift. The plastic mirror echoes the shape of a classic looking-glass, and being bendy, it won’t shatter when you sit down with it in your back pocket. The little handle also doubles as a tab that peeks out from the pockets of your billfold for quick, chivalrous removal.

The $5 price applies to customers in Estonia, from where it will be sent. Those in the rest of Europe will pay €5.50 ($7) and everyone else will have to come up with €6.50 ($8.40). Available now, not that you need any makeup, you handsome/beautiful thing, you.

Pocket Mirror [Pavel Sidorenko]

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Back to the Future: Hacker Makes Self-Lacing Sneakers

Oh man! If I had a pair of those great Nike Hyperdunk 2015 sneakers (aka. The Official Shoes of Gadget Lab, aka. Marty McFly’s self-lacing shoes from Back to the Future 2 and 3), then I’d be hacking them with this amazing lace-tying mod on Instructables.

The project, by Blake Bevin, uses an Arduino-controlled sensor to detect when you put your foot into the sneaker. Then, it fires a motor which tensions the laces. That’s it, although because of time and money constraints Bevin only modified one shoe.

In addition to the essential parts, Bevin also added some electronic “bells and whistles” in the form of redundant circuit-boards and LEDs. The project, which you can follow step-by-step, is rather complex, but if you are an experienced Arduino hacker, then probably the hardest part is finding sneakers with enough 1980s style-cues to be worthy of the job.

In practical terms, though, you’d probably want to stick with your fingers, as the whole array adds a startling amount of bulky circuitry to the heel. Also, if you’re planning a trip, either pack these in your hold baggage or just jump in the DeLorean.

Power Laces- the Auto lacing shoe [Instructables via Gear Fuse]

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Axe Sling: The Most Awesome Accessory You’ll See Today

Sure, you could spend your $165 on testosterone and Old Spice, and it might make you look (and smell) like a man. But to really show off your Y-chromosome, you need this awesome handmade leather axe-sling, fashioned by Rilleau Leather of Vermont. You should also grow a bushy mustache.

Forget those little-girls’ guns, with their easy-to-squeeze triggers and their purse-friendly dimensions. Real men use real tools to get the job done, and if stylish murder is on your mind, this brass-buckled chopper-holster will get you through it in elegant comfort. Fakerjacks need not apply.

$165, available now. Axe not included.

THE AXE SLING [Best Made via Twitter]


USB Cufflinks Are Surprisingly Classy

Sometimes a dumb gimmick can actually be a great idea, too. Let’s test that theory. When I say to you “USB flash-drive cufflinks,” what do your think of? Novelty nonsense? That guy in your office who insists on wearing the Donald Duck tie? If you’re like me, you are cringing right now, imagining some dime-store monstrosity.

But a look at the photo shows a pair of pretty classy cufflinks, two squared-off metal boxes which would look very handsome on the sleeves of your Italian hand-tailored shirt. The extra utility is only revealed when you pop off the lids and the tiny 2GB drives within are revealed, giving 4GB total.

There’s something a little bit James Bond about these, and the usefulness of always having some storage to hand (literally) is clear. But then, given the fact that none of my cufflinks are pairs anymore but a collection of lonely singles, it might not be quite so secure. If you set them up as a mirrored RAID-array, though, you could lose an arm and still keep all your data, making you a kind of a cross between James Bond and Bruce Schneier.

Available now for a shocking $195 per pair.

2GB USB Flash Drive Cufflinks [Cufflinks.com (awesome domain name, by the way) via Uncrate]


$750 Folding Hermès Travel-Belt Features Multiple Flaws

hermes-ceinture-bricolo-belt-selectism

File under “first-world problems”. This travel belt from Hermès concertinas, zig-zag, like a folding ruler and ends up short enough to fit into a carry-on bag. It is made of metal and leather and costs €580, or $725. I hate it.

Are you ready for the rant? First, a well made leather belt is probably the least likely item of clothing to malfunction on any length of trip. But second, a belt – by its very nature – is a flexible strip that will bend, twist and roll into any shape, adopting the form of any nook or cranny in your suitcase. The Hermès belt turns into an inflexible block of hide and metal, demanding its own space in your luggage and managing to fail utterly in its purpose.

It doesn’t end there. Take a look at the design, and imagine pulling it through the belt-loops in your pants. The joints are set the wrong way, so every one of them will catch on each and every belt-loop. And remember, these riveted-together offcuts are priced at $750. Classy work as ever, Hermès. I still haven’t forgiven you for buying Leica and turning it into a fashion brand all those years ago.

Hermès Folding Travel Belt [Selectism via Oh Gizmo! Not available on Hermès web-store]


IWatch, a Tiny, Wrist-Mounted iPhone

iwatch2

The iWatch is as fanciful a design as you could wish for. The concept timepiece is a wrist-sized iPhony, a tiny iPod Touch on a strap. It’s also gorgeous.

The design is from the Italian ADR Studio, and exists only in the world of Photoshop. The main screen, seen above, shows the time, date and weather (Rome’s looking very inviting this month). The gallery goes on to show the Bluetooth syncing options (to iPad and iPhone but not a computer, oddly) and a picture of the iWatch throwing a projected movie onto a wall (hell, it’s a concept design: why not dream a little?) Read the specs and you learn that there will also be an RSS reader, Wi-Fi and 16GB memory.

I would buy one in a second, like Cult of Mac’s resident deviant John Brownlee (who also – curiously – claims the iWatch makes his “heart flutter”, despite the fact that he demonstrably has no heart in his dry, rattling cage of a chest). Sadly, it will never be so, and instead I shall be forced to strap an iPod Touch to my forearm like some giant, lottery-winner’s Rolex.

iWatch [ADR Studio via John “Dee” Brownlee]


Video: Gadgety Shoes Give Your Gait More Gusto

We love shoes. We wear them every day. But not these shoes: Sometimes, footgear that comes into the Wired offices is just too strange for everyday use.

In this video we visit three new shoes whose function beats the holy hell out of form.

From fishing shoes with replaceable soles to sandals with frickin’ flashlights on them to shoes that barely have a sole at all, we make a lighthearted visit to the weird world of highly alternative foot covering.

Here’s a little more information on each of these shoes.

The first wading boot with interchangeable soles, the Korkers Guide is designed to adapt to almost any fishing situation. Wading on slimy riverbed? The felt soles will keep you from slipping. Long hike between honey pots? The lugged soles get a grip on dry land just like a hiking boot. And with Boa’s stainless steel lacing system replacing the standard cat’s cradle of nylon string, these boots are the easiest we’ve ever put on. The only drawback — and it’s a pretty big one — is that the soles are seriously tricky to swap out. You need a special lever-type key to set the new bottoms into the boot — a key which we lost before we even hit the water. Good thing we had a flat-head screwdriver in the trunk: It did the job OK. $180, korkers.com

The Teva Illum takes almost the opposite approach to outdoor fun: stripped-down and minimal. A standard flip-flop in design, the Illum adds a small LED light, mounted on top of the strap, to help illuminate your path in the darkness. Teva touts this as an aid to surfers on dawn patrol, but we think it would work pretty well for dog owners on poop patrol, too. $60, teva.com

The Terra Plana EVO is the latest installment in the company’s line of nearly-barefoot shoes. Like the company’s Vivo Barefoot, the EVO has a flexible, minimal sole designed to protect your feet while encouraging a more natural, barefoot-like gait. The EVO is a comfortable, if slightly odd-looking shoe, and it does work well for barefoot-like running, in our tests — it’s much like a running flat. It’s also much less unusual-looking than the Vibram FiveFingers, a glove-like foot covering with individual pockets for each toe. If you want a flexible sole but don’t want to call attention to yourself, the EVO is a good bet. $160, www.terraplana.com/the-evo

Note: We’ve examined the science of barefoot running before, and found mixed evidence for the claim that running barefoot — or nearly so — is actually better for your body than wearing the kind of running shoes that have big, cushioned, wedge-like heels. That’s because, with a shoe like this, you’ve got to land more on the front or middle of your foot, instead of pounding your heel down. But be careful: Most people’s feet and legs aren’t accustomed to running this way, so build up very, very slowly or you’ll run the risk of injuring yourself, as Wired.com senior editor Dylan Tweney did. Start slow, with quarter-mile runs at most, and build up very, very gradually.

Written by Joe Brown and Dylan Tweney; video produced by Annaliza Savage, with camera work and editing by Michael Lennon and Fernando Cardoso. Guest appearance by former Wired.com science editor Kristen Philipkoski.