Sleep and sitting With G-Series wearable tracks sports



The language on Movea's site can be a bit broad and tough to parse at times when trying to figure out exactly what the company produces. The simple answer is motion tracking, particularly as it pertains to things like
sports and physical therapy.

 It makes sense, then, that the company was eager to jump on the activity-tracking wearable bandwagon, celebrating CES by teaming up with Texas Instruments for the G-Series.

 The wristband monitors a pretty broad spectrum of activities and, well, non-activities, counting your steps, tracking running/hiking, analyzing sleep activity and even detecting your posture (whether you're, say, sitting or standing).

 The wearable promises a greater than 95 percent accuracy rate when it comes to activity classification and the lowest error rates when it comes to counting steps.

 Maybe we'll try it out -- we've got a few more steps to walk around the Las Vegas Convention Center this week.

VIA Engadget

Related

This is the thinnest LED that anyone can make

µCompanies have been racing to slim down LED backlights as devices get ever thinner, but the University of Washington may have just beaten everyone to the finish line. Its scientists have develo...

" Google " plans to launch a version of the system "Android " hardware-specific wearable

A company " Google " Sunday it is working to develop a version of its operating system "Android " devices intended for wearable , and it will launch soon . This came on the lips of company's ...

Google Glass Emotient app tells you how others feel

It's not always easy to read someone's emotions -- and that's a problem for retailers, which can't easily tell if their products intrigue you or simply confuse you. They may not have to gue...

Newer PostWalkprod
Older PostWalkprod

Post a Comment

Follow Us On YouTube

Follow Us On YouTube

Hot Products in Week

Hot Products in Month

item