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Wearables Archive

Archives for January 2024

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Here’s how you know urine Eureka Park.

At CES, Eureka Park is where you’ll find a ton of smaller startups and tech companies working on next-gen ideas. It’s also where you’ll generally find a handful of companies trying to innovate the way we pee. Toilet humor aside, there’s a lot of valuable information stored in urine — which is why it’s an area of interest for the health tech community. Here’s a look at three urine-related tech startups that caught my eye.

MEDiLIGHT bladder monitor on a mannequin
Look at Yellowsis booth at Eureka Park
Urine Check-It machine
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MEDiLight is a wearable designed to help people who have a hard time gauging when it’s time to pee. It uses near-infrared light to monitor your bladder levels and will alert you when you need to empty the tank.
Photo by Victoria Song / The Verge
Sean Hollister
Sean Hollister
Walking, easier, with the WiRobotics WIM.

I’m not even a little embarrassed a robot helped me walk around CES 2024. I kind of want to do it more!

The WiRobotics WIM is a $2,500-ish belt pack with fold-out roboarms that gently lift your legs up and down as you walk. It made me feel lighter, and only weighs a few pounds itself. The company says it reduces walking energy by 20 percent. Maybe when I’m older.

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Would you wear one of these headbands to chill out?

Judging by what I saw at Unveiled, we’re all anxious, none of us are sleeping well, and the key is to hack your brain with a wearable. I found all three of these devices in the same aisle.

The Frenz Brainband reads your brainwaves and then uses bone conduction to play a personal soundscape into your skull. You stick the Mywave on your forehead for a night to generate custom sleep tracks based on your delta waves. Meanwhile, NeurGear’s ZenBud is a headset that stimulates your vagus nerve to help you chill.

Honestly could’ve used something to help me sleep last night.

Woman wearing purple Frenz Brainband.
mannequin head wearing MyWave wearable.
Mannequin wearing ZenBud
Woman wearing ZenBud.
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The Frenz Brainband supposedly works for sidesleepers too.
Photo by Victoria Song / The Verge
Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
Garmin Connect finally gets a “simplified design.”

The company’s fitness watches are unmatched in longevity, value over time, and their ability to track all the performance minutia athletes want to track. But Garmin Connect — which ties everything together — well... sucks, which was made all the more obvious after Apple started playing on Garmin’s turf. The new Connect app and website is currently beta-only for select customers, but is coming to everyone “later this year.”

Can. Not. Wait.

Mockups of Garmin Connect app redesign
ZOMG!
Image: Garmin
Victoria Song
Victoria Song
A wearable gaming glove for stroke patients.

I’m at CES Unveiled, and the Palmplug is a neat little wearable glove. There’s sensors on each finger for hand tracking, haptic feedback, and LED lights so you can have visual cues too.

There’s a lot of potential applications (VR is an obvious one) but the one I found most interesting is TheraPlay. It pairs the Palmplug’s hand tracking with a health tech game that helps stroke patients regain mobility. While the patient gets to play a game, their doctor gets metrics to see how recovery is going.

Person wearing Palmplug at CES Unveiled
The white parts light up too.
Photo by Victoria Song / The Verge
What to expect at CES 2024What to expect at CES 2024
Chris Welch, Allison Johnson and 5 more
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Peloton is bringing its classes to TikTok.

The fitness brand will show a mix of content in a new hub on the app, called #TikTokFitness Powered by Peloton, as the company shifts its focus to creating content instead of pricey workout equipment. In the hub, Peloton will show short-form classes, select live sessions, and collaborations between instructors and TikTok creators in an attempt to draw new users in.

Image: Peloton
Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Strava users are still hangin’ onto their old Garmins.

In the age of planned obsolescence, Strava’s annual Year in Sport Trend report has uncovered a surprising factoid: The most popular smartwatch among its users worldwide is the Garmin Forerunner 235 — a device that launched waaaaay back in 2015.

In the US, it’s the slightly newer Garmin Forerunner 245 Music. For reference, we’re now on the Forerunner 265.

Garmin users really weren’t kidding about wanting long battery life.