There is a shirt company that is making sensors that go into your clothing. They will watch how you sit, run or ski and give data on that information.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The Nike Fuel Band is interesting - it measures your movements and how far you've walked and how hard you've worked that day. I prefer using when I travel. It's a fun way to see how far I've walked - how many steps I've taken when I'm walking around different cities.
I model irregular clothing.
I wear a pedometer, aiming for five miles a day - don't be too impressed; that includes walking around my house and food shopping.
For fitness, I've just bought a watch which keeps a track of how many calories I burn, what's my heart rate, which is very fascinating.
Millions of us track ourselves all the time. We step on a scale and record our weight. We balance a checkbook. We count calories. But when the familiar pen-and-paper methods of self-analysis are enhanced by sensors that monitor our behavior automatically, the process of self-tracking becomes both more alluring and more meaningful.
A watch is a fashion statement, and it says something about the person wearing it.
Like a tracer running through the veins of the city, networks of air quality sensors attached to bikes can help measure an individual's exposure to pollution and draw a dynamic map of the urban air on a human scale, as in the case of the Copenhagen Wheel developed by new startup Superpedestrian.
With the advent of wearable technology, companies will soon be able to better provide ads to customers based on their real-time activity.
Finding things to wear is what the Internet's for.
I have to wear clothes but I don't like to give an idea of what I am with clothes.