• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Monday, October 13, 2025
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
iotindiana
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • Cloud Computing
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • Cloud Computing
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software
No Result
View All Result
iotindiana
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

Magnetic smart fabrics will store data in clothes

in Uncategorized
Magnetic smart fabrics will store data in clothes
0
SHARES
3
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

High-density data could one day be stored in fabric patches embedded in people’s clothing, say scientists at the University of Washington. Importantly, it wouldn’t require electricity, so the smart-fabric could be washed or ironed just like regular clothing. That could make it more convenient than other forms of memory.

Off-the-shelf conductive thread, which the scientists say they recently discovered can be magnetized, is being used in trials. The data is read using a simple magnometer. The conductive thread is used commercially now in gloves for operating touch screens, for example.

“You can think of the fabric as a hard disk,” said Shyam Gollakota, associate professor in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington, announcing the breakthrough on the school’s website at the end of last year. “You’re actually doing this data storage on the clothes you’re wearing.”

In tests, the engineers stored a secure-area door-passcode on conductive fabric sewn into a normal shirt sleeve like the kind one puts on every morning. Swiping the cuff over the door-mounted interface unlocked the door.

Electronic-free storage

We’ve seen e-textiles, or smart garments, before. They include performance-enhancing fabrics made for regulating body temperature or to control muscle movement for athletes, as well as fabrics that light up or change appearance for fun.

But those technologies have generally required some form of power to function — sometimes batteries or sometimes from the environment by harnessing body heat for example. Electricity, though, in clothing, is a problem in the rain and for washing. Waterproofing needs to be built in. That’s hard to do.

Gollakota, however, says those things won’t be an issue with his gear.

“This is a completely electronic-free design, which means you can iron the smart fabric or put it in the washer and dryer,” he says.

How data is stored in cloth

Data is encoded by polarizing single-bit cells created in a strip of embroidered, magnetized thread. The directions North and South are programmed with a magnet and correlate with a 1 and a 0 bit. The data is then read — in the experiments using a smartphone’s compass function.

Un-magnetized parts of the thread separate the symbols to stop interference. It’s a “passive approach,” Gollakota says in his paper co-written with Justin Chan (pdf).

Embedded tech

Interestingly, we’ve been hearing about on-body (or even in-body) interfaces. RFID microchips, of the kind used in pets to identify them when they get lost, are being embedded between the thumb and forefinger by enthusiastic employees at some companies keen to authenticate photocopiers without having to remember to carry a key card.

And Facebook is apparently working on technology called a transcutaneous language communication (TLC) that will let people feel incoming texts through their skin when they can’t get to their phone. Words are converted into vibrations.

Mailonline wrote last month of a standard 3-D printer that can print biological sensors onto hands.

In the case of University of Washington’s magnetic smart fabric memory — while being less intrusive for the squeamish — its future efforts are being geared towards creating more powerful magnetic fields that would be able to hold larger amounts of data.

Conceivably then, one day we might see the ultimate in a low-latency data — it being on an actual person. Now, that’s an edge data center.

Join the Network World communities on Facebook and LinkedIn to comment on topics that are top of mind.
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
Download WordPress Themes Free
Download WordPress Themes Free
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
free online course
download redmi firmware
Download Nulled WordPress Themes
udemy course download free
Tags: Magnetic smart fabrics will store data in clothes
Next Post
What the big four U.S. mobile ISPs are doing with IoT

What the big four U.S. mobile ISPs are doing with IoT

Recommended

The internet of useful things

Bluetooth Mesh networks: Is a standards body right for IoT innovation?

Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS

Newsletter

Subscribe our Newsletter for latest updates.

Loading

Category

  • AI
  • Careers
  • Cloud Computing
  • Connected Cars
  • Connected Vehicles
  • Data & Analytics
  • Data Center
  • Data Centers
  • Databases
  • Development
  • Enterprise
  • Hardware
  • Healthcare
  • IIoT
  • Infrastructure
  • Internet of Things
  • IoT
  • IT Leadership
  • Manufacturing
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Oil & Gas
  • Open Source
  • Security
  • Smart Cities
  • Smart Homes
  • Software
  • Software Development
  • Standards
  • Technology Industry
  • Uncategorized
  • Unified Communications
  • Virtualization
  • WAN
  • Wearables

About Us

Advance IOT information site of Indiana USA

© 2024 iotindiana.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Internet of Things
  • Security
  • WAN
  • IoT
  • Cloud Computing
  • Data Centers
  • Mobile
  • Networking
  • Software

© 2024 iotindiana.com.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In