元器件交易網(wǎng)訊 5月29日消息,據(jù)外媒報(bào)道,三星周三為可穿戴技術(shù)勾勒未來,并描繪出使用手機(jī)應(yīng)用、可穿戴設(shè)備及全新的可穿戴傳感器收集健康數(shù)據(jù)的情景。三星并沒有推出任何新的消費(fèi)類產(chǎn)品,但明確了一件事:三星將大張旗鼓的為健康和健身技術(shù)領(lǐng)域投資。
三星已經(jīng)建立了兩個(gè)平臺(tái):三星Simband設(shè)備及三星SAMI云服務(wù)。
Simband是一款尚不出售的健康腕帶,可以連接到三星的SAMI云平臺(tái),以供三星及其合作伙伴收集、分析這些健康數(shù)據(jù)。
Simband擁有光學(xué)及聲學(xué)傳感器,可有效收集佩戴者的心率、體溫等其他數(shù)據(jù),同時(shí)還有包括加速度傳感器、陀螺儀等在內(nèi)的標(biāo)準(zhǔn)傳感器。
目前Simband商用化時(shí)間尚不清晰,何時(shí)現(xiàn)有設(shè)備可以使用SAMI平臺(tái)也無定論。三星表示將舉辦一場(chǎng)開發(fā)者大賽并提供5000萬美元獎(jiǎng)金,主題是SAMI的構(gòu)建。(元器件交易網(wǎng)毛毛 摘譯)
以下為原文:
Samsung laid out its vision for the futureof wearable technology on Wednesday, outlining a scenario where it collectshealth data using phone apps, wearable devices and new wearable sensors. WhileSamsung didn’t announce any new consumer products, it did make one thing clear:It plans to invest in health and fitness technology in a major way.
“There is a tremendous opportunity at the intersection of health andtechnology,” said Young Sohn, president and chief strategy officer for SamsungElectronics’ Device Solutions. “This is the single greatest opportunity of ourgeneration.” Sohn said that
As Samsung sees it, it won’t be pushing itstake on the future of health tech on its own. “We want to bring the best talentfrom outside,” Sohn said at a San Francisco press event. “This is a big enoughchallenge—we cannot do it alone, we have to do it with partners.”
Still, Samsung wants to be in the driver’sseat, proposing others join its platform for sensor and wearable development.Samsung has created two platforms—the Samsung Simband device and the SamsungArchitecture Multimodal Interactions (SAMI) cloud service.
The Simband is an “investigational” fitnessband, not for sale, that Samsung’s Silicon Valley labs have been developing inconcert with health startups and researchers from IMEC, a Belgian biotechnologyresearch center, and the University of California San Francisco. It connects toSAMI, a cloud platform where Samsung and its partners can store and analyze thehealth data it collects.
The Simband uses optical and acousticsensors to effectively listen to a wearer’s pulse to gather heart rate data,body temperature and other diagnostics, as well as more standard sensors suchas accelerometers and gyroscopes. Simband also can be charged while a user iswearing it using a “shuttle battery”—a battery pack that can be charged upduring the day and snapped onto the band for charging over night.
Ram Fish, vice president of digital healthat Samsung Electronics, demos the prototype Simband smartwatch. NathanOlivarez-Giles/The Wall Street Journal
Both the Simband and SAMI are being builtas modular platforms, and development will be open, Sohn said. The vision is tobe compatible with apps and devices made by other companies—not the creation ofa closed ecosystem, he said.
“Just like your money would be in a bank, where the bank holds yourmoney but doesn’t own your money, your health data is your personal data,” Sohnsaid. Samsung stressed that the effort is in early stages and there are challengesaround building more capable and accurate seniors, power consumption,miniaturization and privacy and security.
“Power consumption is critical, people don’t want to have to changebatteries every day,” Sohn said, promising that Samsung is working on wearablesthat wouldn’t have to be removed as often as current fitness bands andsmartwatches. Sohn argues that advanced wearable sensors are the next logicalstep from smartphone apps and fitness bands.
Luc Julia, a Samsung vice president ofinnovation, said that SAMI APIs will be made available to developers by the endof the year, and that the APIs will be open for any company to access and buildcompatible apps.
“In the end it’s all about data,” Julia said. “SAMI is a data brokerthat makes it easy to collect any kind of data—it’s agnostic. Even data comingfrom devices and sensors we don’t know anything about today.” Currently, oursmartphones and fitness bands capture very simple data in separate own silos.The point of SAMI is to get everyone on the same page so health data can becollected along with all other sorts of data that phones and wearables collect,in the same single repository, Julia said.
It’s unclear how quickly Samsung wants tobring the modular hardware ideas into its actual products, or how soon existingor future products could work with SAMI. But the company does already havemultiple smartwatches on the market—some with a focus on functioning as awrist-worn phone and other that are dedicated to fitness—with more watchesplanned. Samsung said it will host a developer challenge with $50 million setaside to fund SAMI-compatible product ideas, and that more details on itsvision will come later this year in its own developer conference, to be held inSan Francisco.
Samsung’s Wednesday announcement can beseen as a preemptive move against AppleAAPL -0.26%, which is expected toannounce a new iOS fitness tracking app called Healthbook at the iPhone maker’sWorldwide Developer Conference next week. Healthbook would reportedly serve as oneplace where all sorts of health data could be collected from various other appsand the iPhone itself. FacebookFB +0.05% too is investing in the health andfitness space. In April, the world’s largest social network purchased Moves, alocation and fitness tracking app, for an undisclosed price.
Many Japanese technology firms have alsoramped up their investments in medical businesses as they pursue new growthdrivers to fill the gap left by declining sales of consumer electronicsproducts. Toshiba Corp.6502.TO +2.00% and Hitachi Ltd.6501.TO -0.58% are bothactively looking for acquisition targets and will aim to double their revenuefrom the health-care segment over the next few years. Even Nintendo Co.7974.TO-0.51% has said it will broaden its core business beyond games into healthcare
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