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The week’s top hardware news.

March 18th, 2016

Products

Music Packed with Dopamine

One of the most anticipated wearables at CES this yearis now on IndieGogoand it promises divine pleasure. Here’s how it works: by sending a gentle electrical wave through the left ear canal, it stimulates the body’s Vagus nerve, while syncing with music. This elicits a calm, relaxed feeling by lighting up the brain’s pleasure center.Nervana!

Nirvana audio set
Nirvana audio set

Oombrella Knows When it Rains

Put some temperature, pressure, humidity and light sensors into an otherwise regular umbrella and you’ve got yourselfa personal weather man. It that tells you when it’s going to rain and communicates with otheroombrellasin the neighborhood to alert their owners.

Apple Watch Gets Medical

Medtech startupAliveCorreleasedthe first medical-grade EKG band for the Apple Watch. The product should help detect cardiac arrhythmia conditions that can cause stroke. The sensors in the device send data to an Apple Watch app and the band also allows the recording of voice memos to send along with the EKG to a doctor.

+ a wearable thattracks stress levels

Do You Speak Firefly?

This is the ultimate gadget no one knew they needed. TheFirefly Communicatoremits a specific flash code that allows you to light signal your way into a bug’s conversation world. As in, it allows you to communicate with and attract fireflies. Science-tested.

Firefly communicator

行业

Shoelace-Tying is a Bygone Skill

The future finally came for Nike with the release ofHyperAdapt 1.0, their first trulyMcFly-ishshoe. Instead of regular ol’ laces they have a battery-powered series of pulleys that cinch the throat of the shoe. Tiffany Beers of Nikeexplains how the system works: “When you step in, your heel will hit a sensor and the system will automatically tighten.”

+ Under Armour 3D-printed shoetested by Gizmodohttps://www.youtube.com/embed/z7Cyv3cvIxY

Google Backs Away From Boston Dynamics

Surely you remember theunsettling videoreleased by Boston Dynamics last month, where their latest robot, Atlas, wasbeing bulliedby a human. Looks like Google (now Alphabet) isn’t so confident in the commercial viability of this investment and isputting the robotics lab up for sale. Possible acquirers include Amazon and Toyota Research Institute.

+iRobot’s mopping robot

+ Pizza boys everywhere might be replacedby this robot

PlayStation VR Will Cost $399

Once again, Sony undercut the competition andrevealed a $399 price tagfor the PlayStation VR atGDCthis week. Thislooks far more affordablethan the roughly $600 price of the Oculus Rift and the $800 price of the HTC Vive. Of course, the real price is $500 – the oneannouncedfor the bundle, which includes the camera and the Move controllers.

+ Snapchat might be secretly buildingsmartglasses

A look at the landscape: theVR worldwe live in

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