May 16th 2004
NextFest shows off smart clothes, flying cars
By Peter Felsenfeld
CONTRA COSTA TIMES
SAN FRANCISCO - Some day in the rapidly approaching future, people will look
back on early 21st-century Homo sapiens and wonder how we managed to survive
with such primitive attire.
The
doltish clothing of 2004 doesn't alert the wearer she needs more deodorant
or a perfume touchup or more insect repellent. Diabetics cannot rely on
their underwear to alert them of dangerously low glucose levels.
But
those features and more are in the works. Wearing a white, two-piece undergarment
dotted with sensors and covered by a suit that looks like plastic cling
wrap, research assistant Kathryn Richardson of Arizona State University
modeled the futuristic Wellness Body Suit on Saturday.
After
more tests, she said, it will provide a variety of constant communications.
"These
are smart clothes that will detect what the body needs and give it right
away," she said.
Richardson was showing the prototype to the thousands
of people attending the WIRED NextFest at Fort
Mason's Festival Pavilion in San Francisco.
Sponsored by WIRED magazine, the event featured more than 100 hands-on
exhibits of a future where cars fly, robots do the dirty work and meditation
is a competitive sport.
Calmness
of mind is the goal of Brain Ball, created by the Interactive Institute
of Stockholm. Two players control a ball with their brain waves, as detected
by sensors wrapped around their heads.
Mental
serenity is the key to pushing the ball across the opposing goal line.
Merrill Gruver of Redwood City
and her son, Buck Greenwald, split two games.
"I
guess we don't know who the best meditator is," Gruver said.
WIRED
NextFest continues today from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Along
with gizmos and games, the event showcased health advancements, military
security technologies and the transport vehicles of tomorrow. The sporty
red SkyCar from Moller International summoned visions of the Jetsons whizzing
around their cartoon space world.
It
resembles a Corvette, but it's in the same technical category as a military
V22 Osprey, said Moller general manager Bruce Calkins.
The
first military use for the SkyCar is slated in 2006-07, Calkins said.
Two or three years after that, it may be available for private transit
companies. With cruise speeds of almost 300 miles per hour, the vehicle
could become a favorite for commuters.
"We
hope the price will eventually be about the same as a mid-priced luxury
car," he said.
Attendees
lined up for a chance to experience virtual reality. Donning high-tech
headgear, participants were mentally transported either to a college classroom
or a desert battle scene, depending on their preference.
The
technology could have several practical applications, said Rosanna Guadagno,
a social psychologist and researcher at UC Santa Barbara. Research has
found that witnesses may remember details of a crime if it is recreated
in a virtual environment, she said.
Whether judges will admit the information into evidence is a different
matter. "There's debate now about whether virtually reality can be
allowed in a courtroom," she said. "But the technology is there
now to make it happen."
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