The Phantom, a wireless wearable for tactile feedback, is seen during CES Unveiled, a pre-show for this week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas - Copyright AFP ...
When did athletic competition become a “CTRL+ALT+ELITE” experiment? The Tokyo Olympics showed us with 15,000 biometric sensors tracking athletes. This is a big change from Jesse Owens’ leather cleats.
Apple Watch on your wrist, Oura ring on your finger, Whoop band on your arm—when does it end?
Imagine a T-shirt that could monitor your heart rate or blood pressure. Or a pair of socks that could provide feedback on your running stride. It may be closer than you think, with new research ...
Materials and device advances within sports science hold great potential for enhancing injury prevention, improving performance, ensuring safety and comfort, and enabling long-term monitoring and ...
The lightweight and low-power PIQ sports wearable device for performance measurement and coaching, launched to golf and tennis communities during 2015, relies on key sense, control, and communication ...
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