’s next wearable is a $350 vi’s jacket that controls music by brushing your sleeve

BY GreenBot Staff

Published 13 Mar 2017

Among the many announcements at I/O in 2015 was one that seemed like a fantasy: connected clothing that could control music lights, even interact with images on a nearby screen. Dubbed oject cquard, proved it was serious about the tech by partnering with vis to make a denim jacket that it showed off at last year’s I/O, now we finally know how much it’s going to cost.

And it’s not horribly expensive. though it is a couple hundred dollars more than the Commuter Trucker cket on which it is based, the $350 jacket is set to go on sale in the fall (pushed back from its original spring launch), is presumably the first in a full line of smart clothes.

demoed the jacket at SXS like a smartwatch, the technology is concentrated on the part of the sleeve near your wrist. The jacket tracks the motions you make transmits them back to your phone via a removable tag that neatly fits into the cuff.

levis jaquard jacket tag /vi’s

The smart jacket transmits your motions to your phone via a tag that inserts in the cuff.

Of course, there’s a companion app it all works over Bluetooth, so don’t think you can put on your jacket leave your phone at home. In its hs-on with the jacket, The Verge said users are able to “tap on any one of the three available gestures—a swipe in, a swipe out, a double tap— map a touch interaction to that gesture, like skipping a song or getting a Maps update.”

vi’s goes into a bit of depth on its oject quard website, explaining that the quard tech “allows you to stay connected without reaching for your phone. th a brush of your sleeve, you’ll be able to navigate the city, connect toy your surroundings, communicate with ease.” It also adds that “additional features will be added to further make this jacket your co-pilot for life, on or off your bike.” The product film shows a bike rider answering a call by brushing his sleeve, so clearly the technology is geared toward a niche market, at least for now.

Making a fashion statement: Smartwatches were supposed to be the thing that cut our reliance on our phones brought our eyes back to the world, but after several years of development they haven’t quite had the impact we thought they would. So we’re still waiting for wearables to take off. ile AR-powered glasses might not be ready to go mainstream, the technology in oject quard could be the wearable tech we’ve been waiting for.