#wearable-protective-gear

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Wearables
fromMail Online
6 years ago

Amazon is selling a bracelet that give you an electric ZAP

The Pavlok wrist strap uses electric shocks to help users break bad habits like smoking and overeating.
#wearable-technology
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago
US politics

Abuse involving smartwatches and rings rising at alarming' rate, charity warns

Wearable technology is increasingly used by abusers to stalk, surveil, and control survivors, causing a 62% rise in referrals to Refuge's tech-abuse team.
Artificial intelligence
fromZDNET
3 days ago

Prolonged AI use can be hazardous to your health and work: 4 ways to stay safe

AI excels at small tasks but struggles with long-form analysis and prolonged interactions can lead to misinformation and serious consequences.
#workwear
fromBusiness Matters
2 months ago
Marketing

Why Workwear Deserves a Place in Your 2026 Business Strategy

Strategic workwear planning improves professionalism, safety, onboarding speed, role clarity, and consistency for SMEs facing fluctuating staffing and customer-facing operations.
fromBusiness Insider
2 months ago
Fashion & style

'Dress for the job you want' is dead. Now, it's 'dress for the job you want to keep.'

Workwear is shifting from pandemic casualness toward smarter, polished styles as employees dress to signal competence and protect job security amid tighter job markets.
Fashion & style
fromwww.dw.com
5 days ago

Women's workwear: When proper fit becomes a safety issue

Workwear for women in industrial settings must be functional, safe, and designed to fit properly to prevent workplace accidents.
Bicycling
fromThe Verge
6 days ago

A sleek, wearable airbag for cyclists is nearly here

A new airbag system integrated into a skinsuit for cyclists aims to enhance rider safety during high-speed races.
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
5 days ago

AQUA HUMAN Is a Dive Suit Concept Built Around the Body, Not the Tank - Yanko Design

The central idea is integration rather than addition. AQUA HUMAN ditches the external tanks and brings breathing, temperature regulation, and mobility into the suit's structure itself, functioning as a single synchronized system.
UX design
#smartwatches
Wearables
fromMail Online
18 hours ago

Running London Marathon? Ditch the watch! Wearables HINDER performance

Smartwatches can hinder athletic performance by distracting runners from tuning into their bodies during races.
Wearables
fromMail Online
18 hours ago

Running London Marathon? Ditch the watch! Wearables HINDER performance

Smartwatches can hinder athletic performance by distracting runners from tuning into their bodies during races.
Wearables
fromMail Online
18 hours ago

Running London Marathon? Ditch the watch! Wearables HINDER performance

Smartwatches can hinder athletic performance by distracting runners from tuning into their bodies during races.
Wearables
fromMail Online
18 hours ago

Running London Marathon? Ditch the watch! Wearables HINDER performance

Smartwatches can hinder athletic performance by distracting runners from tuning into their bodies during races.
SF politics
fromKqed
1 week ago

Countertop Fabricator Spends Big to Better Protect Workers | KQED

Crystalline silica from quartz is highly toxic, necessitating strict safety measures, while a proposed data center faces community opposition over environmental concerns.
#cycling-safety
fromTNW | Startups-Technology
2 weeks ago

Wearable Robotics raises 5M to expand its arm exoskeleton

The ALEX RS is a bilateral upper-limb exoskeleton designed for post-stroke rehabilitation, covering 92% of the human arm's natural range of motion and is CE certified as a Class IIa medical device.
European startups
#meta
Wearables
fromWIRED
1 day ago

Meta Glasses Are Comfortable, Functional, and Make My Spouse Recoil in Fear

Meta's AI-enabled glasses are popular and stylish, but concerns about privacy and social acceptance persist.
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
1 month ago
Gadgets

Meta Wants to Put an AI Health Tracker on Your Wrist in 2026. What Could Go Wrong?? - Yanko Design

Meta's Malibu 2 smartwatch aims to deliver competent health tracking and AI features, but privacy and trust concerns stem from Meta's history with user data.
Wearables
fromWIRED
1 day ago

Meta Glasses Are Comfortable, Functional, and Make My Spouse Recoil in Fear

Meta's AI-enabled glasses are popular and stylish, but concerns about privacy and social acceptance persist.
Gadgets
fromZDNET
2 weeks ago

This Android camera accessory helped me spot a hidden electrical hazard just in time

Thermal cameras are essential tools for detecting overheating and preventing potential disasters in various settings, including commercial kitchens.
Wearables
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Iron Woman! I tested an exoskeleton - can it turn me into an athlete?

The Ascentiz H+K exoskeleton enhances physical performance for active users, providing support for activities like running and climbing.
Snowboarding
fromSnowBrains
3 weeks ago

More Than Just a Sticker: How Mips Is Changing Helmet Safety in Skiing - SnowBrains

Mips technology enhances helmet safety by addressing rotational forces that traditional helmets do not protect against, reducing the risk of brain injuries.
fromGSMArena.com
3 weeks ago

The Ultrahuman Ring Pro is now available for pre-order in the US, here's how to get a 10% discount

The Ultrahuman Ring Pro builds on the Ultrahuman Ring Air's features with several key improvements, including an impressive battery life of up to 15 days, which is more than twice as long as the Air.
Mobile UX
fromBikerumor
2 weeks ago

Upstart PIKIO LABS' New Si Road Helmet with OBLIK Technology Tops Virginia Tech Ratings - By a Lot

The new PIKIO LABS Si helmet's score of 4.61 is 2.21 points lower than the #2 rated helmet, the Canyon Deflectr RLS at 6.82, marking a significant leap in performance.
Bicycling
#digital-eye-strain
fromEmployee Benefit News
1 month ago
Health

Screen time surges for desk workers, straining eyes and productivity

Desk workers average 99.2 hours of screen time weekly, causing eye strain that reduces productivity by nearly one full day per week, prompting employers to reassess health and benefits strategies.
fromFast Company
1 month ago
Remote teams

Your employees aren't disengaged. They've got screen fatigue

Desk workers spend nearly 100 hours weekly on screens, causing visual exhaustion that reduces productivity by a full workday per week, not disengagement or burnout.
Health
fromEmployee Benefit News
1 month ago

Screen time surges for desk workers, straining eyes and productivity

Desk workers average 99.2 hours of screen time weekly, causing eye strain that reduces productivity by nearly one full day per week, prompting employers to reassess health and benefits strategies.
Remote teams
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Your employees aren't disengaged. They've got screen fatigue

Desk workers spend nearly 100 hours weekly on screens, causing visual exhaustion that reduces productivity by a full workday per week, not disengagement or burnout.
Women in technology
fromFuturism
1 month ago

This Video of a Humanoid Robot Playing Perfect Tennis Is Extremely Impressive

Chinese company Galbot developed software enabling a Unitree G1 humanoid robot to play tennis with sustained rallies, millisecond reactions, and precise ball striking against human opponents.
Bicycling
fromBikerumor
4 weeks ago

Three Sweet Protection Full Face Helmets Earn 5-Star Virginia Tech Ratings

Three Sweet Protection full-face mountain bike helmets earned Virginia Tech's 5-Star safety rating, ranking 1st, 2nd, and 3rd in their category.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 weeks ago

body agency and the ways wearable devices let people regain control of their physical forms

Body agency is a power returned after an incident took it away from the user's physical form, and some wearable devices and technologies have this exact goal in mind.
Wearables
Artificial intelligence
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Factory Paying Human Worker to Watch Robot Worker All Day

Humanoid robots like Digit are being deployed in factories with human supervisors, with costs expected to drop from $10-$25 per hour to $2-$3 per hour, potentially displacing workers earning $20 per hour.
Fashion & style
fromFast Company
1 month ago

How diamond nanoparticles could be the trick for clothes that keep you cool in extreme heat

Nanodiamond-coated fabric releases body heat effectively, lowering skin temperature by 4-5°F and reducing air-conditioning energy consumption.
Snowboarding
fromFast Company
1 month ago

This genius helmet sticker helps protect athletes' brains

The Crash Patch, a helmet sticker technology developed by Klick Health and The Snow League, detects major head impacts and could make head injury detection accessible to athletes across all helmet-based sports.
Medicine
fromMail Online
1 month ago

'Smart T-shirt' could detect hidden heart conditions and save lives

A sensor-stitched smart T-shirt worn up to a week can detect inherited heart conditions and use AI analysis to flag risks to doctors.
fromWIRED
2 months ago

We Strapped on Exoskeletons and Raced. There's One Clear Winner

An exoskeleton is a relatively new class of wearable device designed to enhance, support, or assist human movement, strength, posture, or even physical activity. The main piece goes around your waist like a belt, and from it, a pair of hinged, mechanized splints extend down over the hips to strap onto each thigh, where they provide some robotic assistance to normal movements like walking, running, or squatting.
Environment
fromEarth911
1 month ago

How to Recycle Nitrile, Latex, and Vinyl Sterile Gloves

Disposable gloves cannot go in curbside recycling due to equipment tangling and contamination risks; mail-in programs and manufacturer recycling offer proper alternatives for turning gloves into downcycled products.
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

The physics of squeaking sneakers

Tuning frictional behavior on the fly has been a long-standing engineering dream. This new insight into how surface geometry governs slip pulses paves the way for tunable frictional metamaterials that can transition from low-friction to high-grip states on demand.
Science
Wellness
fromMail Online
1 month ago

You're washing gym clothes wrong! NEVER put them straight in machine

Air sweaty gym clothes for a few hours before washing, turn garments inside out, and wash similar fabrics together to reduce bacteria and persistent odours.
fromFuturism
1 month ago

New App Detects the Radio Fingerprint of Smart Glasses and Warns You When Someone Is Using Them Nearby

Covert recording is a lot about power. So, I was worried from the very beginning when Meta announced they were going to revive the Google Glass idea. That might be influenced by my study subject very well, but it might as well be influenced by every report and story I read on digital abuse and hate speech in the last twenty to thirty years.
Privacy technologies
fromTravel + Leisure
2 months ago

Snow Experts Share Their Favorite Ski Helmets-Including Tips for Getting the Right One

Ski helmets weren't a thing when I graduated from ski school 30 years ago. But these days? My helmet is the first thing I pack, whether I'm skiing at my home ski resort in Montana or traveling to the Dolomites to carve fresh tracks in the Alps. Ski helmets, or as I call them, "brain buckets," protect our most important organ. They also keep your head warm. Finally, they're a
Skiing
Running
fromInsideHook
2 months ago

Why There's Nothing Wrong With Running in Cotton

Cotton running T-shirts absorb sweat, become damp and heavy, but retain nostalgic appeal and remain comfortable for short, casual runs.
Agriculture
fromRealagriculture
2 months ago

Watch your step! Injury stats point to first aid, training needs as priorities

Farmers aged 45–50 had the most grain farm injuries; foot injuries (sprains, fractures) dominate—keep first-aid kits stocked, carry splints, and provide first-aid and safety training.
Startup companies
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Should people be taking shoes off at work?

A growing number of startups and tech offices are adopting no-shoes policies, trading formal footwear for comfort and branded slides while prompting mixed hygiene and professionalism concerns.
Relationships
fromSlate Magazine
2 months ago

My Employee's Clothing This Winter Is Deeply Concerning. I'm Not Sure I Can Ask the Obvious.

A manager notices an employee never wears a coat during severe cold, suspects financial hardship, and wonders how to ask or offer help discreetly.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Green time over screen time': how to really look after your eyes

Blindness is a very scary disability, says Prof Lauren Ayton, deputy director of the Centre for Eye Research Australia at the University of Melbourne. But people don't realise actually about 90% of vision loss can be prevented or treated. And like many other problems, keeping the eyes healthy so often comes down to good diet, keeping active, and regular check-ups.
Public health
#smart-ring-technology
Science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 months ago

Smart underwear' could help unlock secrets of human flatulence

Wearable sensors show healthy adults pass gas about 32 times daily on average, with wide individual variation and hydrogen from gut microbes detectable.
Health
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Larry Magid: Avoiding tech neck' and other tech-related aches and pains

Position devices and furniture to maintain a neutral posture; adjust chair, desk, monitor height, and text size to reduce eye, neck, shoulder, and wrist strain.
fromUnofficial Networks
2 months ago

The Future Of Boot Fitting Has Arrived

Rather than waiting until you arrive in a ski village or going out of your way to drive into the mountains, Boot Solutions is introducing a process in which you simply scan your feet and they do all the fitting remotely. Overall it seems pretty simple. You use the Boot Solutions app on on your phone to take a medical grade 3D scan of both feet and the company offers you plans from there.
Snowboarding
fromForbes
1 month ago

How To Improve Your Employees' Focus In The Office

Workplace noise isn't just a nuisance. It's also a stressor and productivity killer, according to a Jabra study from 2024. As someone who likes working in quiet zones, I understand. That's why I recommend leaders spend time considering how their workspace design affects the noise level for their employees.
Remote teams
fromZDNET
1 month ago

Why most touchscreen gloves fail during the cold winter - but these don't

On the outside is a wind- and wear-resistant knitted nylon/spandex/lycra layer, and on the inside is a soft, moisture-wicking acrylic/polyester layer. Lastly, a waterproof and breathable Artex membrane is sandwiched between, keeping your hands dry no matter what. This creates a thin yet warm glove that's ideal for milder winters. I've worn these down to about 23°F in hail and winds hitting 50 miles per hour, and my hands were warm enough.
Gadgets
fromTheregister
2 months ago

Future AI jobs will come with a hardhat and boots: tech CEOs

One good test on the AI bubble is to recognize that Nvidia has now millions of Nvidia GPUs in every cloud. We're everywhere and if you try to rent an Nvidia GPU these days, it's so incredibly hard. The spot price of rentals is going up. Not just the latest generation, but two-generation-old GPUs,
Artificial intelligence
fromWIRED
1 month ago

The Fort Strength Training Wearable Tracks Your Sets

We use the IMU sensors to detect which exercise the user is performing and identify the period engaging in concentric, eccentric, or isometric hold. These are the three main types of lifting exercises; you might know them as contracting, lengthening, or static exercises. The Fort uses the wrist as a proxy for bar velocity, and the company is seeking FDA clearance and will also be pursuing large, third-party studies from independent labs.
Wearables
Medicine
fromInsideHook
2 months ago

What Years of Typing and Texting Do to Your Hands

Frequent, prolonged typing and phone use can strain flexor tendons, increasing risk of carpal tunnel and other repetitive-use nerve injuries.
fromNature
1 month ago

The surprising science of squeaky sneakers

Squeaking occurs across various contexts including shoes, bike brakes, rubber tires, and biomedical implants when soft and hard surfaces contact each other. Researchers used high-speed photography to study a rubber block sliding across hard acrylic to identify the source of these sounds. The investigation revealed that pulses similar to earthquake dynamics drive the squeaking phenomenon.
Science
fromZDNET
2 months ago

This tracker fits inside your bra to measure blood flow - and lasts longer than your smartwatch

Petal is a bra insert that uses bio-impedance sensors and electrical measurements to monitor blood flow near the heart. Because wearers position the insert right next to the heart, the device can capture more accurate readings than your typical smartwatch, Petal says. The device comes in one size and fits snug against each breast. It's made with biocompatible materials, including a soft European fabric and a polyurethane-coated interior.
Health
fromBikerumor
1 month ago

Giant & Liv Expand Race Helmet & Performace Sunglass Lineup

The new Giant and Liv eyewear lineup revolves around a simple goal: clearer vision at speed. The glasses are designed to improve focus, contrast, and visual clarity across a wide range of riding environments, from high-speed road riding to gravel and trail use. The core of that system is a mix of premium lens technologies, paired with lightweight TR90 frames and extensive ventilation.
Bicycling
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
2 months ago

This Kevlar Medical Brace Folds Flat Like Origami and Might Finally Kill the Plaster Cast - Yanko Design

Bracesys sidesteps all these limitations with an adjustable framework of segmented units, articulating connectors, and tension dials. The entire system weighs just 150 grams and folds flat into an envelope, yet provides rigid support comparable to traditional casts. More remarkably, clinicians can customize it to each patient's anatomy in real time, adjusting the fit as swelling decreases and healing progresses.
Medicine
Science
fromNature
2 months ago

Flexible joints: robot morphs into a range of cyborg species

A 3D-printed four-legged robot uses interchangeable, customizable limbs to change its morphology and mimic the anatomies and gaits of multiple animals.
fromFast Company
2 months ago

6 tech-infused items under $30 to keep you warm this winter

February is here. The "New Year, New Me" energy has officially worn off, replaced by a much more realistic "New Year, Same Me, But Freezing" thanks to a very disrespectful wind chill a heating bill that's starting to look like a phone number.
Gadgets
Gadgets
fromThe Verge
2 months ago

This fanny pack robot helped me walk miles

The Wirobotics Wim S is a $2,000, fanny-pack-style exoskeleton that front-mounts motors to reduce exertion by up to 20 percent and extend walking endurance.
fromBikerumor
2 months ago

Shifting Gear: Affordable Wireless Shifting, Shoes, Lights, and More Fresh Products

Try as we might, it's not always easy to keep up with it all, and sometimes, it can be a challenge to give everything the attention it deserves. In our new Shifting Gear series (see what we did there?), we'll be highlighting products that have just arrived, we're excited to try out, or that we're particularly stoked to tell you about but haven't had a chance to review yet.
Bicycling
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
1 month ago

This Designer Concept Is the First Portable Charger You'd Wear - Yanko Design

EDC used to mean something very specific. Ask any survival enthusiast and they'll tell you it stands for EveryDay Carry, the essential tools you keep on hand at all times. A Swiss Army knife. A multi-tool. A compact flashlight. Things built for the unpredictable, the inconvenient, and the emergency. The whole point was physical survival, and the design language to match: rugged, matte, built to last.
Gadgets
fromEngadget
1 month ago

Ultrahuman's new Pro ring comes with 15 days battery life

If there's one thing that stops people using their smart rings over the long term, it's the battery life. After all, they're so unobtrusive, it's easy to forget to drop it on the charging plate every few days. It doesn't take long for your pricey gadget to become little more than a very expensive piece of jewelry.
Wearables
fromNature
2 months ago

Self-powered vibration sensor for wearable health care and voice detection

When people breathe, speak, sing or clear their throats, their bodies are in constant motion. Air flowing through the lungs, the oscillation of vocal folds in the throat and the rhythmic expansion of the chest all produce tiny vibrations that carry valuable information about physiology and health. However, constructing a device that can capture all of these physiological signals has remained a challenge.
Wearables
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
2 months ago

Wearable tech sparks a stir at the Australian Open - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

A tennis match usually starts with rituals you can set your watch by. A towel tug, a ball bounce, a glance at the strings. This year, a different ritual stole the first spotlight, because officials asked top players to take off a wrist wearable before they played, and the moment landed like a plot twist you did not order. This piece walks you through what happened, why it happened, and what it says about where tennis sits with athlete data right now.
Wearables
Wearables
fromTechCrunch
1 month ago

A new app alerts you if someone nearby is wearing smart glasses | TechCrunch

Nearby Glasses is an Android app that detects Bluetooth signals from smart glasses and alerts users when recording devices are nearby, addressing privacy concerns about non-consensual surveillance.
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