Album art for Contemplation by Frequency

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Album art for Contemplation by Frequency
Finally getting around to testing how Rinzler's electronics hold up while wearing them! While they diffuse nicely, flex well, and are bright as hell; the ones in the hands/thigh pieces did NOT hold up.
Other than that? Corset and armor pieces are structural (deffo redoing the chestpiece/pauldrons though, they sit kinda weird)
For those of you that also want to make gridsuits (I think that's the term?): all the armored plating (aside from the corset) are 2-4mm EVA that's been layered with strech pleather on top and the LEDs used are a standard 5v COB LED strip (hooked up to a powerbank on my back), and Adafruit n00ds (smaller circuits on the corset) that are hooked up to coin cell batteries. Hope that helps! ^^
Why this $10 spectrometer chip could bring real-time chemical sensing to wearables
Researchers from the University of Cambridge and GlitterinTech, a startup founded by the same research group, have unveiled a fundamentally new type of optical spectrometer that delivers laboratory-grade precision in a device small enough to be embedded in portable and wearable technologies. By rethinking how spectra are measured and processed, the team has demonstrated a spectrometer costing only around $10, operating at a centimeter scale, and capable of applications ranging from industrial quality control to real-time health care monitoring. Optical spectrometers underpin countless technologies, from chemical analysis and manufacturing to environmental sensing and medicine. Yet shrinking these instruments has historically involved painful trade-offs: Miniaturized devices typically sacrifice bandwidth, resolution or accuracy, limiting them to rough identification rather than true metrological measurements. The newly reported convolutional spectrometer overcomes these barriers by introducing a conceptually elegant operating principle grounded in the convolution theorem, offering unprecedented performance metrics compared with existing dispersive, Fourier-transform and reconstructive spectrometers.
Read more.
The Heart Spark by Eric Boyd
Why Everyday Technology Is Becoming More Personal Than Ever
There was a time when technology felt distant. It was something you learned, set up, and occasionally struggled with. Today, that relationship has completely changed. Modern consumer technology has quietly integrated into our daily lives, focusing more on comfort, familiarity, and personal convenience.
Instead of asking users to change, technology now changes for the user.
This shift didn’t happen overnight. It resulted from shifting lifestyles, increased mobility, and a growing desire for tools that simply work without needing constant attention.
From Power Users to Everyday Users
Not long ago, technology mainly targeted power users—those who enjoyed tweaking settings and exploring features. But as digital tools became vital for everyone, the focus naturally shifted.
Now, technology is designed for:
Busy professionals juggling multiple tasks
Students balancing study and digital life
Travelers needing lightweight, reliable devices
Everyday users who value simplicity
This change has made smart devices more approachable and inclusive. You don’t need to be tech-savvy to enjoy the benefits of modern gadgets.
Convenience Is the Real Innovation
When people discuss innovation, they often think of groundbreaking features. However, today's real innovation lies in convenience. Devices are getting smaller, smarter, and easier to use—not because technology is minimal, but because user expectations are clearer.
People want tools that:
Save time
Reduce effort
Fit easily into daily routines
Work consistently without constant updates or troubleshooting
That’s why compact consumer devices and practical smart accessories are gaining popularity. They don’t impress with complexity; they succeed by being reliable.
Technology That Moves With You
Mobility is now a key part of modern life. Work, communication, and entertainment are no longer tied to one place. As a result, people prefer technology that moves with them rather than holds them back.
Portable and lightweight devices support:
Remote work and flexible schedules
On-the-go communication
Casual content consumption
Quick task completion without setup hassle
This trend has sparked a new wave of consumer technology focused on portability and efficiency. Platforms such as Flexnova reflect this shift by curating devices made for everyday movement rather than fixed settings.
Smarter Choices, Not More Devices
Another noticeable change is how people choose technology. Instead of buying more devices, users are becoming selective. The goal is no longer simply ownership; it’s usefulness.
Before picking a gadget, users now ask:
Will this simplify my routine?
Is it easy to use daily?
Does it replace or complement what I already have?
Will it still be useful a year from now?
This mindset encourages thoughtful choices and reduces unnecessary digital clutter. It also explains why informational content and real-world examples matter more than promotional messages.
The Quiet Role of Online Platforms
Online technology platforms have evolved as well. They’re no longer just product listings; they act as guides. When done right, they help users understand why a device exists, not just what it does.
Educational platforms that highlight practical benefits—rather than exaggerated claims—build trust. Users appreciate clarity, honesty, and realistic expectations.
That’s why curated technology platforms like everyday consumer tech websites focus on explaining how devices fit into real lifestyles instead of pushing technical jargon.
Technology and Digital Well-Being
As technology becomes more personal, digital well-being has gained importance. Users are becoming mindful of how devices affect their attention, productivity, and balance.
Modern consumer technology supports this shift by:
Reducing unnecessary notifications
Simplifying interfaces
Encouraging focused usage
Offering tools that assist rather than distract
This balance helps users stay connected without feeling overwhelmed, emphasizing that technology should support life—not dominate it.
Looking Ahead: Subtle, Supportive Technology
The future of consumer technology isn’t flashy; it’s subtle. Devices will continue to become:
More intuitive
More energy-efficient
Better integrated into daily routines
Easier for all age groups to use
Instead of demanding attention, future gadgets will quietly enhance everyday experiences. That’s the direction users want, and it’s the direction the industry is moving toward.
Final Thoughts
Technology today feels less like a tool and more like a companion—there when needed and invisible when not. As consumer expectations evolve, the most successful devices will be those that respect time, attention, and lifestyle.
In a world full of digital noise, simplicity has become the most powerful feature of all.
a zine about this article I read! I habitually click through on pinterest links you see, even if the title is cringe
Growing up, my mom would take me and my siblings to the library once a week. When I graduated past Curious George and Boxcar Children books,
When are smartwatch companies going to stop pretending we all want a tamagotchi with less cute creatures and more fitness features and start giving us the cool stuff?
I don't want fitness I want gadgets. Besides nobody's trying to hide the fact that their watch is a smartwatch, it's a statement piece so u might as well make it chunky and cool
Hey, what do you think about the concept/ idea of using the human body as a renewable energy in solarpunk?
Hope you're doing good 🍀
Sorry I did not get around to answering this before, I kinda forgot yesterday!
It depends of course of how you would want to implement it. Like, nobody should bike that generator, I would say. But I think that this kind of energy for personal devices is a neat concept.
About 10 years ago I did an internship at a technology museum that at the time just so happened to have a special exhibition on wearables. And while the exhibition mostly had focused on the kinda stuff where you can switch colors and what not via your smart device, they also had some fabrics there, that generated electricity through muscle movement.
Looking into it now, we still are not very effective with the muscle movement tech, but have instead also found a way to generate electricity through body heat. And while this kinda technology is very much still in its infancy, I think it definitely is worth a look. Give it 10 or 20 more years and we could get somewhere.
And it would definitely be an interesting idea to explore within Solarpunk fiction especially. Something I funnily have not seen at all within the genre so far (only have seen wearables within Cybrpunk). So it would definitely be a super fun thing to explore!