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Bitwalking Pays Digital Currency to Keep You Moving

Bitwalking Digital Currency Fitness Tracking 01

Money is a great incentive, there’s no denying about that, and in some cases, it’s the only thing that could motivate to lose weight or simply stay in shape. Bitwalking turns steps into digital currency, which can then be spent in real stores.

Obesity is affecting more and more people, and has become very difficult to fight in the recent years. The more weight people gain, the lower their self-esteem gets, and the lesser motivated they are to keep moving. Of course, you don’t need to be obese in order to workout, as physical exercises are essential for the healthy lifestyle of any person.

“We believe that everyone should have the freedom, and ability, to make money,” Bitwalking explained on their website. “A step is worth the same value for everyone — no matter who you are, or where you are. What matters is how much you walk.”

As for the Bitwalking dollar, the digital currency that can be earned for walking, it could have various applications. Each such dollar (BW$) is the equivalent of 10,000 steps (roughly 5 miles or 8km), and can either be converted into actual American dollars, or can be spent online. Needless to say, some people have already started comparing Bitwalking dollars with Nintendo’s 3DS “play coins.”

“It’s a currency that can be earned by anyone regardless of who they are and where they live,” explained co-founder Franky Imbesi in an interview with the BBC. “For some it will be a free cup of coffee a week perhaps offered by local businesses to encourage people to explore their local shops. For others it could be a game changer, transforming their lives by enabling them to earn and trade in the same way with the rest of the world. And all while encouraging us to protect the planet and stay healthy.”

In developing countries, where such an app could provide a source of revenue for people who are out of other options, Bitwalking could actually make the difference between surviving and not. Of course, we need to assume that the users of the app have money for a smartphone, in the first place, and for a data plan, be it prepay or not. The company included Kenya and Malawi in its initial launch, along with Kenya and Japan.

BBC explained that the Bitwalking dollar will be accepted by many partners: “Shoe manufacturers are poised to accept the currency, and a UK high street bank is in talks to partner with the project at one of the UK’s biggest music festivals next year.”

The Bitwalking app will be available on both Android and iOS, and Japanese electronics manufacturer Murata even plans to launch a smart wristband that replaces smartphones for the task of keep tracking of steps and Bitwalking dollars. Assuming that you leave in any of the countries included in the trial, head over to Bitwalking and get an invite so that you can install the app on your smartphone.

Be social! Follow Walyou on Facebook and Twitter, and read more related stories about the Vidonn X6 fitness and sleep tracker, or the KidFit Bracelet fitness tracker that keeps youngsters on the move.

[via Digital Trends]

Elliptic Labs releases ultrasound gesturing SDK for Android, will soon integrate into smartphones

Elliptic Labs releases ultrasound gesturing SDK for Android, will soon integrate into smartphones

Elliptic Labs has already spruced up a number of tablets by adding the ability to gesture instead of make contact with a touchpanel, and starting this week, it'll bring a similar source of wizardry to Android. The 20-member team is demoing a prototype here at CEATEC in Japan, showcasing the benefits of its ultrasound gesturing technology over the conventional camera-based magic that already ships in smartphones far and wide. In a nutshell, you need one or two inexpensive (under $1 a pop) chips from Murata baked into the phone; from there, Elliptic Labs' software handles the rest. It allows users to gesture in various directions with multiple hands without having to keep their hands in front of the camera... or atop the phone at all, actually. (To be clear, that box around the phone is only there for the demo; consumer-friendly versions will have the hardware bolted right onto the PCB within.)

The goal here is to make it easy for consumers to flip through slideshows and craft a new high score in Fruit Ninja without having to grease up their display. Company representatives told us that existing prototypes were already operating at sub-100ms latency, and for a bit of perspective, most touchscreens can only claim ~120ms response times. It's hoping to get its tech integrated into future phones from the major Android players (you can bet that Samsung, LG, HTC and the whole lot have at least heard the pitch), and while it won't ever be added to existing phones, devs with games that could benefit from a newfangled kind of gesturing can look for an Android SDK to land in the very near future.

Mat Smith contributed to this report. %Gallery-slideshow99597%

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Source: Elliptic Labs

Murata Walking Measurement System hands-on

Sure, Nike+ will track your gait and help you tell your friends just how that couch-to-2K training is working for ya, but wouldn't it be nice if it your shoes were smarter? That's partly what Murata is enabling with its Walking Measurement System, on display at CEATEC 2012. It's a piezoelectric sensor that sits in the sole of your shoe and detects pressure at different points. The readings from this sensor, transmitted over low-power Bluetooth 4.0, could enable a number of applications including precise shoe fitting for runners, posture detection for dancers and even golf swing analysis for duffers. Murata had this built into a lovely pink Asics sneaker that was a bit too small for us to try on, but we did try squeezing another sensor that fed its data in real-time to an app running on iPhone. Cool concept? For sure, but for now it's just that and nothing more.

Mat Smith contributed to this report.

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Murata Walking Measurement System hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Oct 2012 14:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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