class= "Post_content" itemprop= "Articlebody" >
Designers say the Spiderdress armor can provide users with detection and defense equipment.
Without the support of 3D printing technology, wearable technology cannot be the top of emerging technologies in the 2014. This year, regardless of price, variety, media attention and public acceptance of a new leap, we are ready to usher in the 2015 wearable technology storm. Dutch designer (engineer) Anouk Wipprecht plans to launch a wearable device in January this year to win the competition in the next year ...
The spiderdress of Wipprecht fully embodies the trend of wearable technology. This article is to say this armor can integrate robot technology and sensors on the user's wearable devices. In this case, relying on two kinds of sensors, the appearance of both charming and daunting spiderdress will provide users with security defense. The first sensor can analyze body language and behavior within a seven-metre range. The second sensor can track the user's breathing to determine if the wearer is nervous. If the wearer feels nervous, it stretches the plastic limb and keeps the guy at arm's length from breaking into private space.
The 3D-printed female tights are lightweight enough to even wear a single one, but cannot be worn for long periods. The extended defensive limbs look like spiders, and the sensor pods look like spiders ' eyes.
Spiderdress is still constantly improving the concept of self-defense, on the one hand to the development of small equipment, on the one hand they want to put this wearable equipment into the party.
This is not the first time Wipprecht has dabbled in weird scientific costumes, and his work looks like he's coming out of comic books. His other works include a skirt that is free from electrocution and clothing that can detect and display the wearer's emotions. Spiderdress will meet the public at the Las Vegas CES conference from January 6, 2015 to 9th.
3D Printed Self-Defense Armor