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National Defense January 2015 Valerie Insinna |
New Smart Fabric Manufacturer Looking to Break Into Defense Market Unlike most other wearable sensors, which typically measure physiological data such as heart rate and respiration, the sensors in Bebop's fabric can also measure other kinds of contact between a person and his or her environment.  |
Wired January 18, 2008 Sally McGrane |
Ready to Ware: Clothes That Look Hip and Track Your Vital Signs, Too Smartex, cofounded by biomedical engineer Danilo De Rossi, aims to create clothing that not only provides cover, warmth, and style but also keeps its wearers healthy.  |
Chemistry World October 20, 2011 Rebecca Brodie |
New Power for Smart Garments Scientists in the US have taken the first steps towards designing a flexible and lightweight fabric that can act as a power supply for smart garments.  |
Fast Company February 2015 |
This super-powered onesie connects to wifi and cleans the air The BB.Suit is an odd-looking onesie made from a novel fabric custom-woven with microprocessors and a conductive copper yarn, which turn the garment into a GPS -- trackable, mobile Wi-Fi transmitter.  |
IEEE Spectrum January 2012 Neil Savage |
Electronic Cotton Circuits could be woven from conductive and semiconducting natural fibers  |
PC Magazine August 3, 2005 David Murphy |
Textile Technology You can wear your heart on your sleeve, and you can wear your digital music player there too.  |
Chemistry World February 10, 2014 Polly Wilson |
Putting the power in power-dressing Scientists in the UK developing wearable electronics have knitted a flexible fabric that delivers twice the power output of current energy harvesting textiles.  |
AskMen.com Michael A. Lubarsky |
Superhero Fabrics These superhero fabrics might help protect you from bullets, knives and blasts.  |
Chemistry World October 16, 2012 Ross McLaren |
The future of fashion Researchers from the Republic of Korea have developed an energy harvesting device that can be incorporated into clothing to allow the wearer to generate electricity as they move and from static build-up in their clothing.  |
PC Magazine March 10, 2004 Alexandra Robbins |
Beyond Sensible Shoes Smart Skin, still in development, is made of a flexible material embedded with microsensors that mimic the signal sending of nerve cells. The sensors, which wirelessly communicate with receiving devices, can already monitor temperature and infrared radiation and are expected to detect pressure, touch, and even vital signs.  |
Chemistry World September 15, 2013 Laura Howes |
Taking temperature with a temporary tattoo John Rogers of the University of Illinois, at Urbana-Champaign and his team have just published their latest advance - creating a flexible wearable thermometer.  |
Chemistry World December 12, 2014 Anthony King |
Smart skin for prosthetic limbs senses heat and touch This new stretchable prosthetic skin comes equipped with ultra-thin, single crystalline silicon nanoribbon sensors for strain, pressure and temperature, as well as humidity sensors, heaters and stretchable multi-electrode arrays for nerve stimulation.  |
Wired October 2001 Andrew Tilin |
Slick as Teflon! Tough as Kevlar! Limber as Lycra! Nonwoven polyethylene polymers like those from DuPont's startup Neotis Studio are ripping open the fabric of fashion reality...  |
National Defense January 2016 Yasmin Tadjdeh |
Garment Maker Touts New Hot Weather Uniform As the United States military eyes the Asia-Pacific region, one manufacturer has designed a new fabric that breathes in hot weather and jungle conditions.  |
Chemistry World June 2, 2011 Tamsin Phillips |
Swimming with sensors Sensors printed onto the sleeves of wetsuits could alert the wearer to contaminated water. Navy divers could also use the sensors to locate underwater explosives, such as mines.  |
PC Magazine July 13, 2004 Cade Metz |
Smart Skin The prototypeof this product has already demonstrated that it can monitor infrared radiation, which means it's also capable of tracking changes in body temperature. Future versions will respond to all sorts of other stimuli, such as touch and pressure.  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics February 2005 |
Dilemma: Databus or switched fabric? Board designers today face a new performance bottleneck: modern processors are so fast that traditional parallel databuses cannot keep them adequately supplied with data to take advantage of their blazing speed.  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2008 |
Defense and Aerospace Systems Designers Show Growing Interest in Microtca Investment in MicroTCA evaluation is growing in the defense and aerospace computing market, and closely resembles MicroTCA interest in the data and telecommunications markets.  |
Fast Company February 1, 2007 Paul Lukas |
Fashion Forward We've come a long way from the miracle of rayon. How new fabric technology is changing our duds.  |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2008 |
Military and aerospace applications rank last on list of top markets for power-management ICs The largest share of all power-management integrated circuits (ICs) shipped in 2007 were for consumer electronics.  |