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Indiegogo

ThermalTech Indiegogo Solar Powered Jacket UV Heat Outerwear
Sports, Wearable Technology

Solar Powered Jacket Promises To Keep You 20º Warmer

ThermalTech Indiegogo Solar Powered Jacket UV Heat Outerwear

With most of the east coast suffering through record low temperatures, we were excited to find a jacket promising to keep us warmer longer! When the temperature is well below zero, only giant, bulky coats have a chance of keeping you warm. Unfortunately a large coat is less than ideal as you run around NYC or hit the slopes. Currently on Indiegogo, a new jacket from ThermalTech uses solar powered fabrics to keep you toasty, while shedding the bulk. Unlike Columbia’s (impressive but recalled) electric heating jacket, ThermalTech’s process of harnessing the sun’s energy is completely passive. A UV sensitive layer of the jacket captures and retains the light energy from the sun. This energy (unsurprisingly) is transferred to the fabric as heat. The name-sake ThermalTech layer then slowly releases the heat towards the inside of the jacket, raising the temperature by as much as 20º F versus a jacket without the special fabric. Even when the sun isn’t out, the lining of the outerwear works to keep you warm by absorbing and reflecting your body heat. According to ThermalTech, the jacket is also completely breathable to help keep you from over heating, a necessity if you are planning to hit the slopes with the coat! If all of this sounds perfect for the cold weather ahead, sadly the jacket is not shipping until you need it least – August. There are three different versions of the coat available, ranging from $139 to $169 and the crowdfunding campaign has already passed its goal.  

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ShiftWear Classic Indiegogo custom e-paper sneaker
Shoes

ShiftWear Sneakers Use E-Paper For Changeable Designs

ShiftWear Classic Indiegogo custom e-paper sneaker

Ever wish you could customize the look of your shoes whenever you wanted? ShiftWear’s Classic promises just that. The high tech sneakers feature a wrap around, flexible e-paper screen. Using a mobile app you can create and share static and animated designs and then load them onto your shoes. The concept is pretty exciting and reminds us a lot of the Sony FES Watch and Shift Sneakers. If customizing your kicks on the go sounds appealing, ShiftWear is currently offering the footwear through an Indiegogo campaign. The low-tops require a $150 pledge, the mid-tops $250, and the high-tops $350. ShiftWear believes they will have a shipping product in Fall of 2016.  

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Ion Belt Kickstarter Scrub Daddy Shark Tank
Wearable Technology

Ion Belt Promises To Discreetly Keep Your Phone Charged

Ion Belt Kickstarter Scrub Daddy Shark Tank

The inventor of the widely successful Scrub Daddy (from Shark Tank) is at it again. This time Scrub Daddy’s Aaron Krause has partnered with Piers Ridyard (of Nifty) to solve the nagging issue of portable devices running out of power. Together the two men have formed a new company, Ion Tech Wear, to bring to market a leather belt with an integrated battery. The Ion Belt promises to discreetly provide 3,000mAh of power via a hidden 2.1A, fast charging USB port. The belt, which is only available in black, is flexible and features slim battery packs dispersed along its length. On one end, the front buckle houses an integrated USB pin for recharging the belt. On the other end, the tail of the belt hides a slim USB port to plug in a device’s charging cable. Since it is USB based, the Ion Belt doesn’t care what you are charging; it can top off your phone, tablet, camera, or even a GoPro. Just behind the front belt loop is a (rather unsightly) power button and a set of battery indicator lights. These are the only visually techie aspects of the belt and, unfortunately, they stick out like a sore thumb. The Ion Belt is currently on Kickstarter for $89 with an expected June 2016 launch.

Interestingly, this is not Ridyard’s first attempt at a belt with an integrated battery. Last year he released the XOO Belt through a partnership with British designer Casely-Hayford. The belt was sold via Indiegogo and featured a fully flexible 2,100mAh integrated battery that ran the length of the belt. Instead of a traditional buckle design to hold the belt in place, the XOO Belt used a ratchet based system with an oversized front buckle housing all of the electronics. In all honestly, we are not sure what the motivation is for Ridyard to tackle this problem again, besides achieving a product more similar in design language to a traditional belt. The original design looks perfectly decent to us, and in some ways might be superior to the new Ion Belt. That said, it doesn’t seem to be for sale any longer – and that alone might be the motivation behind the new Ion Belt. So, if you are thinking that your belt just isn’t doing enough for you, you once again have a change to fix that thanks to the Ion Belt.

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AmpStrip FitLinxx Fitness Indiegogo Refund
Wearable Technology

“AmpStrip” Wearable Drastically Changes After Crowdfunding

AmpStrip FitLinxx Fitness Indiegogo Refund

It is no secret that pledging your support to a crowdfunding campaign carries risk. Typically the danger is that the product takes much, much longer to come to market than originally projected or that it doesn’t materialize at all; this year we have seen some very high profile Kickstarter and Indiegogo campaigns fail to produce a product with supporters left empty handed. What is more unusual, though, is to see the direction of a product completely shift after a successful crowdfunding campaign. But that is just what happened with AmpStrip.

AmpStrip made its debut this past January at CES and received a ton of extremely positive press. The Band-Aid like wearable device contained a thermometer, accelerometer, and heart rate sensor. The idea was to provide a wearable device for fitness that provided a comprehensive view of your body while being simple and barely-there. AmpStrip appeared to be a near ready-to-launch product at the time and the company behind it, FitLinxx, turned to Indiegogo to fund the launch. They raised over $530,000 with an initial goal of $50,000. Things appeared to be moving forward perfectly until March, at which point FitLinxx went silent for 3 months, not responding to emails or providing an update about the product. While never a good sign, when they did emerge from the shadows, FitLinxx claimed everything was still on track and that beta testing was proving successful. FitLinxx then crawled back into the darkness until this week, when it emerged to announce that AmpStrip would no longer exist in its current form and will no longer have any fitness focus. The only explanation provided was that the company didn’t have enough resources to focus on AmpStrip being a medical device and a fitness device.

Every inch of the Indiegogo page is covered with information about using the device for fitness, the product’s website still shows the tagline “Train To The Edge,” and it was being made by a company called ‘FitLinxx.’ AmpStrip was always first and foremost a fitness device. Clearly it was gathering health information but that was never an intended market for the wearable. Given that the product was already in beta testing, it is curious that FitLinxx would make such a drastic and sudden shift in the product. There really only seem to be two explanations behind this; either there were insurmountable issues related to the device when working out that were not found until widespread testing or the company signed an offer that could not be refused to focus on AmpStrip being a medical device. No matter the reason though, the way FitLinxx behaved was a disservice to its customers and disrespectful. With that level of consumer funding, companies owe it to their supporters to be more transparent. The good news at least is that FitLinxx is doing the right thing and offering to refund people’s money. If your money got caught up in all of this silliness, you can find a refund form on the company’s website.

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Clothing

Hexoskin Releases Smart Shirt To Monitor Your Workouts

Hexoskin

This week, Hexoskin announced the availability of their “smart shirt.” Originally funded on crowd-funding website Indiegogo, the $400 device is capable of providing information about heart-rate, breathing, activity, and sleeping. The Hexoskin shirt joins what is quickly becoming a crowded market segment, with products from Ralph Lauren and OMsignal. It appears that Hexoskin is trying to separate itself from the competition though with a more professional tool set. The iOS and Android app are able to track multiple shirts at once and the device is able to calculate things such as VO2max (generally regarded as a key base fitness measurement) and provide live raw data (which allows you to do such things as view your ECG on your phone). As with other “smart shirts”, the Hexoskin depends on a tight fit to get accurate measurements, so think carefully about your purchase if you don’t like to show off your body.

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