New Haptic Wearable Device. Lechal is a haptic footwear and insoles which was driven to help the visually-impaired navigate their world better. In Hindi, Lechal means take me there. The footwear includes sensors, small actuators and electronic inside the soles that allows it to connect with smartphone via Bluetooth. The user interfaces with an application equipped with the local map on the phone via voice commands. http://www.store.lechal.com
Wednesday, 13 December 2017
What a City Bike Needs: Handlebars That Let You Know When to Turn
What a City Bike Needs: Handlebars That Let You Know When to Tun
Designers are transforming bikes with new tech to make it safer and easier to navigate city streets
Handlebars on the Blackline model let you know when to turn.
(Photo courtesy of MNML)
As someone who lives in a city, I often find myself watching people
driving cars and people riding bikes salute each other, and not in a
good way. Apparently, the “Share the Road” concept needs more work.
And yet, the number of urban cyclists keeps growing, including here
in Washington D.C., where just last week two new bike lanes opened up
in the middle of Pennsylvania Avenue, aka “America’s Main Street.” With
more Millennials gravitating toward city living and away from owning cars, the trend is only going to pick up speed.
But this raises some questions: What makes the ideal urban
bike? Yes, it should be solid and easy to maneuver, but what else should
it be able to do? How can a bike be re-imagined to make riding around
on city streets safer and less daunting for newbie urban bikers.
That’s pretty much the challenge taken on by design teams in five
different cities—San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Seattle and
Portland—competing in something known as the Oregon Manifest Bike Design Project. The
idea is to create a city-concept bike, but one that’s all about urban
utility and is street-practical—so practical that Fuji Bikes has agreed
to manufacture the winning model, as decided by online voters.
Catching a buzz
So what did the designers come up with?
For starters, smart handlebars. The team in Portland, Oregon, created a bike they named Solid,
and it includes handlebars that, in response to an app on the rider’s
smartphone, give him or her directions by buzzing. If a rider is
supposed to turn right, that side of the handlebars starts buzzing. The
buzz gets more insistent as they get closer to the turn. If they go past
it, both sides of the handlebar vibrate.
The Chicago design team followed a similar tack with its model, named the Blackline after one of the city’s elevated train lines. It uses smart handlebars designed by Helios Bars,
an outfit that raised more than $120,000 on Kickstarter last year. Your
smartphone is linked to the bike through Bluetooth and, once you input
your destination, the handlebars take over. But instead of buzzing when
you need to turn, colored LED lights at each end of the handlebar start
blinking, letting you know which way to go—not to mention giving
drivers around you a better idea of where you’re headed.
The handlebars can also be set to speedometer mode, which means the
lights change color in response to how fast you’re moving. And when you
get to where you’re going, but want to make sure you don’t forget where
you parked, you can shoot the bike a text and it responds by sending a
Google map to your phone, pinpointing the location.
The Seattle team—they named their bike Denny—took
the handlebar in a different direction. It can’t talk to a phone, but
it can detach and be converted into a U-shaped bike lock.
Coffee on board
Of course, if a bike is going to be your main mode of transit, it
better be able to carry stuff—a bag of groceries, coffee for you and
your office mates. The New York designers took on that challenge by
building an ingenious storage system in their model, which they dubbed Merge.
It actually fits inside the bike’s frame, but when you need to haul
something, you just pull a rear light and a spring-loaded tray pops into
place behind the seat. Should you need a bungee cord, it has that, too,
hidden inside another of the bike’s tubes.
The San Francisco team, meanwhile, has taken more of a plug-and-play approach. Their model, called Evo,
comes with all kinds of attachments—storage racks, baskets, baby
carriers—that easily connect to the front and back of the bike. When
you’re done hauling, you just de-accessorize.
There are plenty of other clever features in the five bikes in the
competition: A phone-charging port powered by the front wheel (Portland,
New York); an onboard computer that automatically shifts gears
(Seattle); and sensor-driven lights that get brighter or dimmer based on
natural conditions (Portland, Seattle).
To get a look at where urban bikes are headed, check out all the models on the Bike Design Project website. You have until Sunday at noon (PST) to vote for your favorite.
Remember when the coolest thing you could do with a bike was flap a balloon in the spokes?
Feet, don’t fail me now
But why stop with bikes? A company in India has developed a shoe
insole that buzzes to let you know which way to turn on whatever route
you’ve chosen. The device, called the Lechal—meaning
“take me along” in Hindi—connects to an app that syncs up with Google
Maps, allowing the wearer to take in the view instead of burying his
head in a map or hanging on Siri’s every word.
The insole, which can fit into almost any shoe you own, can also count steps and tally calories burned.
It was originally devised with the visually-impaired in mind, but
the Indian company that created the Lechal, Ducere Technologies, now
thinks it could have broader appeal. It’s expected to go on the
market next month at a cost somewhere between $69.99
Having a bike with smart handles to let you know when to turn sounds like a great idea. Recently, I came across with these glasses for visual disability that reads text from any surface and speaks the message to the user discreetly. More importantly, this blind assistive technology doesn't need a smartphone or an internet connection to function. It reads text, money notes, colors, products and even people's faces with a point of finger instantly.
Having a bike with smart handles to let you know when to turn sounds like a great idea. Recently, I came across with these glasses for visual disability that reads text from any surface and speaks the message to the user discreetly. More importantly, this blind assistive technology doesn't need a smartphone or an internet connection to function. It reads text, money notes, colors, products and even people's faces with a point of finger instantly.
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