Wave of wearable gadgets expected at CES event

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — Will 2014 be remembered as the year wearable computing took off?
Upstart entrepreneurs and major manufacturers such as Samsung, Qualcomm and Sony certainly hope so.
Gadgets
that you snap, buckle or fasten to your body are already marketed to
fitness freaks obsessed with tracking every possible metric their bodies
produce. There are countless smartwatches for tech nerds who’d rather
glance at their wrists to check messages than reach for their
smartphones. And thousands of people are already seeing the world
differently with the help of the Internet-connected eyewear, Google
Glass.
Even with the possibilities these devices offer today,
gadget lovers can expect technology companies to stretch the wearable
concept further this week in Las Vegas at the International CES event,
the industry’s annual trade show.
Several companies are expected
to unveil wearable devices that are easier to use, extend battery life,
and tap into the power of gestures, social networks and cloud computing.
The
wearables wave is still in its early phases. Many of the technologies
on display will offer a glimpse of the future —not necessarily products
that are ready for the mainstream consumer.
These new gadgets are
"like the first generation of the iPod," says Gary Shapiro, chief
executive of the Consumer Electronics Association, the group that has
hosted the trade show since 1967. "It was bulky and it wasn’t that
pretty. Look what happened. It got slimmer. It got better."
Industry
analysts’ estimates for the growth of wearables are rosy. Research firm
IHS says the global wearables market — which also includes health
products like hearing aids and heart-rate monitors — could top $30
billion in 2018, up from nearly $10 billion at the end of 2013.
While
some of the growth will come from an aging population that requires
more health-related monitoring at home, devices like the Fitbit Force
activity band — which tracks a wearer’s steps, calories burned, sleeping
patterns and progress toward fitness goals — are also expected to gain
popularity as deskbound workers look for new ways to watch their
waistlines.
At this week’s show, companies are likely to introduce
improvements in wearable screens and battery life, says Shane Walker,
an IHS analyst. The two are linked because the more a device tries to
do, the more battery power it consumes. This creates demand for
innovative low-power screens, but also for ways to interact with devices
that don’t rely on the screen, such as using hand gestures and voice.
"With wearable technology, it’s all about battery consumption," Walker says.
What’s
driving the boom in wearable device innovation is the recent widespread
availability of inexpensive sensors known as microelectromechanical
systems (MEMS). These are tiny components like accelerometers and
gyroscopes that, for instance, make it possible for smartphones to
respond to shaking and for tablets to double as steering wheels in video
games.
There are also sensors that respond to pressure,
temperature and even blood sugar. Toronto-based Bionym Inc. will show
off its Nymi wristband at CES. The gadget verifies a user’s identity by
determining his or her unique heartbeat. The technology could one day
supplant the need for passwords, car keys and wallets.
Waterloo,
Ont.-based Thalmic Labs Inc. plans to show off how its MYO armband can
be used as a remote control device to operate a quadricopter drone. The
band responds to electricity generated in forearm muscles as well as arm
motions and finger gestures.
Co-founder Stephen Lake says the MYO
is more akin to a mouse or keyboard that controls activities than the
latest line of smart wristbands that simply track them.
"We’ve
seen this shift away from traditional computers to mobile devices," Lake
says. "Our belief is that trend will continue and we’ll merge closer
with technology and computers. New computer-human interfaces are what
can drive these changes."
Wearables may not gain broad acceptance
until sensors advance to a point where they can track more sophisticated
bodily functions than heart rate, says Henry Samueli, co-founder of
Broadcom Corp., the company that makes wireless connectivity chips for
everything from iPhones to refrigerators. Monitors that measure blood
sugar, for instance, still require test strips and pin-pricks.
"If
you can monitor your blood chemistry with a wearable, now there we’re
talking about something pretty compelling," Samueli says. "Then I think
the market will take off in a big way."
Companies are also
expected to tweak the business models for wearable gadgetry as the
devices become more mainstream. Fitness-focused wearables could one day
help lower your health-care premiums if your insurer can verify your
exercise regime. Always-on wristbands that know who you’re with —and
their preferences— could become vehicles for location-based restaurant
advertising.
"I think you’re going to see a lot of maturity in
2014 in the way companies think about their business," says J.P.
Gownder, an analyst with Forrester Research.
Right now, the market is a swirling cauldron of ideas and products. Eventually, a winner may emerge.
Josh
Flood, an analyst with ABI Research, says "the killer app" for a
wearable product with the right mix of form, function and price "hasn’t
been identified yet."
Forrester’s Gownder concurs. "It’s a bit of a hype bubble," he says. "But so was the
Internet in 1999."
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