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$5,000 AI Pants: This Company Wants to Rent Hikers an Exoskeleton

“Technical outerwear brand Arc’teryx and wearable technology startup Skip have teamed up to create exoskeleton hiking pants, powered by AI…” reports CNN.

After four years of collaboration and testing, the two companies plan to start selling the battery-powered pants in 2025 for $5,000 — but they’re also “available to rent and try out now,” according to CNN’s video report:

“You can think of it like an e-bike for walking…” says Skip’s co-founder and chief product officer Anna Roumiantseva. “On the way up, it really kind of offloads some of those big muscle groups that are working their hardest. We like to say it gives you about 40% more power in your legs on the way up with every step.” (“And then supports their knees on the way down,” says Cam Stuart, Arc’Teryx’s advanced concepts team manager for research and engineering.)

Kathryn Zealand, Skip Co-founder and CEO adds, “There’s a lot of artificial intelligence built into these pants,” with Roumiantseva explaining that technology “understands how you move, predicts how you’re going to want to move next — and then assists you in doing that, so that the assistant doesn’t feel like you’re walking to the beat of the robot or is moving independently…”

Stuart: I think when people think of what an exoskeleton is, they think of this big bionic frame or they think it’s like Avatar or something like that. The challenge for us really was how do we put that in a pair of pants…?”
Co-founder Roumiantseva: We’ve done a lot of work to make a lot of the complicated and sophisticated technology that goes into it look and feel as approachable and as similar to a garment as possible.
Co-founder Zealand: And so maybe you think about them like a pair of pants.

CNN points out it isn’t the only “recreational exoskeleton.” (Companies like Dnsys and Hypershell have even “developed their own lightweight exoskeletons — through Kickstarter campaigns.”)
But beyond recreation, this also has applications for people with disabilities. “Movement and mobility, it’s such a huge driver of quality of life, it’s such a huge driver of joy,” says Skip’s co-founder and chief product officer. “It does become a luxury — and that’s a huge part of why we’re building what we’re building. Is we don’t think it should be.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

“Technical outerwear brand Arc’teryx and wearable technology startup Skip have teamed up to create exoskeleton hiking pants, powered by AI…” reports CNN.

After four years of collaboration and testing, the two companies plan to start selling the battery-powered pants in 2025 for $5,000 — but they’re also “available to rent and try out now,” according to CNN’s video report:

“You can think of it like an e-bike for walking…” says Skip’s co-founder and chief product officer Anna Roumiantseva. “On the way up, it really kind of offloads some of those big muscle groups that are working their hardest. We like to say it gives you about 40% more power in your legs on the way up with every step.” (“And then supports their knees on the way down,” says Cam Stuart, Arc’Teryx’s advanced concepts team manager for research and engineering.)

Kathryn Zealand, Skip Co-founder and CEO adds, “There’s a lot of artificial intelligence built into these pants,” with Roumiantseva explaining that technology “understands how you move, predicts how you’re going to want to move next — and then assists you in doing that, so that the assistant doesn’t feel like you’re walking to the beat of the robot or is moving independently…”

Stuart: I think when people think of what an exoskeleton is, they think of this big bionic frame or they think it’s like Avatar or something like that. The challenge for us really was how do we put that in a pair of pants…?”
Co-founder Roumiantseva: We’ve done a lot of work to make a lot of the complicated and sophisticated technology that goes into it look and feel as approachable and as similar to a garment as possible.
Co-founder Zealand: And so maybe you think about them like a pair of pants.

CNN points out it isn’t the only “recreational exoskeleton.” (Companies like Dnsys and Hypershell have even “developed their own lightweight exoskeletons — through Kickstarter campaigns.”)
But beyond recreation, this also has applications for people with disabilities. “Movement and mobility, it’s such a huge driver of quality of life, it’s such a huge driver of joy,” says Skip’s co-founder and chief product officer. “It does become a luxury — and that’s a huge part of why we’re building what we’re building. Is we don’t think it should be.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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