New Bluetooth-Enabled Smart Shoes Vibrate to Give You Directions
New Bluetooth-Enabled Smart Shoes Vibrate to Give You
Directions
Nifty!
By Jordyn Taylor 7/25 11:41am
We can’t tell if these are better or worse than those
godforsaken Vibram toe shoes.
Indian startup Ducere Technologies is about to bestow a
new form of high-tech footwear unto the world, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Called Lechal shoes, the Bluetooth-enabled smart footwear will sync up with an
app on the user’s phone, which is connected to Google Maps. Once a user inputs
their destination, the app will command the left and right shoes to vibrate,
telling the user which way to turn to reach their destination.
“The shoes are a natural extension of the human body,”
Ducere Technologies cofounder and CEO Krispian Lawrence told the WSJ. “You will
leave your house without your watch or wristband, but you will never leave your
house without your shoes.”
If you’re not a fan of the shoes’ look — can we all admit
they resemble dorky water shoes? — users can remove the shoes’
Bluetooth-enabled insoles and insert them into a more stylish pair of kicks.
The smart shoes were originally conceived as away to help
blind people find their way around more easily, but the company reportedly soon
realized that with Lechal shoes, “joggers, mountain bikers or even tourists can
plug in their destinations and not have to stop to check their phones as they
move because the buzzing in their shoes will let them know when to turn.”
Also, lazy people who don’t feel like consulting their
phone to find their way to their friend’s new apartment.
The shoes will reportedly become available in “select
stores” in September, for $100 to $150. Mr. Lawrence told the WSJ he already
has 25,000 pre-orders.
We have to admit, wearable tech that doesn’t hurt your
eyes or get you kicked out of movie theaters sounds pretty good to us.
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