Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Health & Fitness
  4. Outdoors
  5. News

Run hard, breathe easy: Heated balaclava helps athletes in cold weather

Add as a preferred source on Google

Balaclavas may carry connotations of crime and concealment, but they are practical for anyone braving a frigid climate. And they just got warmer thanks to researchers from Nottingham Trent University in the United Kingdom and German knitting machine manufacturer Stoll who teamed up to develop a smart balaclava prototype that uses high-tech yarn to heat oxygen as the wearer breathes in.

“I’m personally a passionate runner and have had always bronchial issues when running in minus temperatures,” Stoll’s Head of Fashion and Technology Joerg Hartmann told Digital Trends. “This was the starting point for us to build into the mouth section a copper wire which heats up the inhaled air before entering the lungs.”

stollb
Stoll GmBH
Stoll GmBH
Recommended Videos

Looking something like a knitted ninja turtle’s mask your awesome grandma may make, the smart balaclava features a patch of electric-conductive yarn that rests over the nose and mouth. A cell battery pocket at the back of the headpiece provides steady power to the conductive wires, which heat the air as the wearer breathes. The headgear is accented by reflective threads and four-way stretch for a better fit. The balaclava earned the Gold Award at the 2016 Outdoor Industry Awards.

The Outdoor Industry Awards judges said, “This really is an innovation. The seamless construction is great — when we tried it on, the balaclava is really comfortable and the heating system around the mouth is a fine idea.”

As a prototype, the smart balaclava is intended to showcase the potential of the company’s sports garments while driving the technology forward. “I’m certain that the integration of conductive wires and other electronics like sensors will solve a lot of issues in an aging society,” Hartmann said.

Dyllan Furness
Former Contributor
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
Chrome is getting better at understanding the breaks and punctations you never say out loud
Voice typing in Chrome is about to feel much more natural
Google Chrome on Android Featured

Google is quietly making voice dictation in Chrome feel a lot more natural. With the latest Chrome 151 Beta, the company is introducing a new capability that allows the browser's speech recognition engine to automatically infer punctuation based on the way people speak, eliminating the need to explicitly say commands like "comma" or "full stop."

The update may sound minor at first glance, but it addresses one of the biggest frustrations with voice typing: speaking naturally often produces text that lacks punctuation unless users consciously dictate every punctuation mark. By teaching Chrome to understand pauses, rhythm, and speech patterns, Google is taking another step toward making conversations with computers feel more human.

Read more
Horror films play music to warn about danger. These headphones use the same trick to save you from robots
Spherephones replaces factory alarms with music that tells you what is coming and from where.
spherephones-georgia-tech

The ear has always processed what is coming before the eye does. In horror movies, the music always tells you something bad is coming. Now researchers at Georgia Tech are using the same idea in real life to keep factory workers safe around robots.

They have built a wearable headset called Spherephones that converts nearby robot movement into spatial music, giving you a warning before a machine gets too close. It helps the user stay aware without breaking their attention.

Read more
Elon Musk refutes report claiming that an AI device is in development at SpaceX
The billionair's two-word denial on X doesn't explain what part of the Wall Street Journal's report he's disputing.
Elon Musk speaking into a microphone with a blue background

Elon Musk has denied a Wall Street Journal report claiming SpaceX showed investors a prototype AI device before its recent IPO. "Utterly false," Musk wrote on X, responding to a post about the report that has since been deleted, offering no further explanation.

A denial that leaves more questions than it answers

Read more