Tag: wearable technology

Wearable technology for kids is coming soon from LeapFrog

The transition of wearables into a child’s model was nearly inevitable, and this device will launch in August.

As wearable technology just starts to take off among adult consumers in the form of smartwatches and fitness trackers, LeapFrog has now announced that it will be joining the wearables race by adding its own device, specifically for kids, to the available mix.

As kids are more comfortable with mobile devices than their parents, these wearables represent an opportunity.

Unlike in previous generations, for kids, mobile devices have been around for their entire lifetimes, making them an age group that is most likely to naturally accept and adopt the latest evolutions, such as wearable technology. LeapFrog is jumping – so to speak – on this opportunity and is betting that parents will be willing to spend $40 on a digital wristband for their kids. These new wearables will be released in August by the creator of the popular educational electronics brand for kids.

This new wearable technology device for children is meant to be worn as a form of health tracker.

The company is hoping that these wearables will take off and will help to breathe some life back into their drooping stock price. The device will be called the LeapBand, and it is meant to be worn by kids between the ages of 4 and 7. When it is turned on, it encourages children to become more active in a fun and engaging way.

While worn, the LeapBand tells children to “pop like popcorn” or it may tell them to “wiggle like a worm”. Once the activity is accomplished, the child is assigned points. Those points can later be used in order to unlock certain game features that are also available within this wristband. For example, after having accumulated a certain number of points, the wearer can use them to redeem a virtual pet. This can be a typical pet animal such as a dog or a cat, or something a bit less common like a donkey. It can even include a unicorn. As more points are built up by the children, the kids are given additional ways in which to interact with their virtual pets.

The wearable technology gamifies fitness for kids, but provides parents for parents who can track and monitor the activity levels of their kids and who can select from a list of physical challenges that they feel are appropriate.

Technology news from Korea includes body heat device charger

Giving wearable tech a whole new angle, this could allow a person to charge his or her own gadgets.

Recent technology news from Korea may seem quite futuristic, but that seems to be the case on an increasing basis when it comes to mobile devices and the many shapes, forms, functions, and styles in which they are being developed.

As though smartwatches and augmented reality glasses weren’t enough, now chargers could be powered by humans.

This technology news could mean that the day could one day arrive in which a person may be able to charge his or her smartphone or wearable technology device through the heat that is naturally produced by his or her body. This is an important discovery, as one of the main barriers to the evolution of the basic smartwatches and other wearables that we know today, is the fact that their charge simply doesn’t last long enough to allow them to provide a wide range of powerful features or function consistently for a long time between charges.

This technology news involves a new development in thermoelectric generating tech.

Should this solution, which is based on a thermoelectric generator made out of glass fabric, become successful, it could pave the way for a virtually endless range of small smart devices and gadgets.

technology news wearable chargerThe discovery has been made by a research team at KAIST University, which is located in South Korea. Under electrical engineering Professor Cho, the team has proposed a unique new solution to being able to keep wearable technology powered through the use of a glass fabric based thermoelectric generator. That device functions by collecting body heat and converting it into usable energy that can charge small mobile devices. It takes advantage of the temperature difference between the human skin and the outside air, so that it can be converted into electric energy.

In order to be able to power a small device, only a small temperature difference between the skin and air is required. This is an important part of this technology news as it ensures that even a slight difference in temperature will allow the charger to continue working, meaning that it won’t be dependent on a perfect air temperature to function at all.