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To: carepedeum2000 who wrote (51331)5/7/2001 11:17:30 AM
From: Starlight  Respond to of 57584
 
Interesting news about XYBR:

Wearable computing: More than geek chic

By Carmen Nobel, eWEEK

Although widely considered geek chic, wearable computing systems are
steadily gaining ground in vertical and consumer arenas alike.

At the center of the movement is wearable
computing pioneer Xybernaut Corp.
(NasdaqNM:XYBR - news), which, at its
annual wearable computing conference in McLean, Va., at the end of the
month will announce its latest product, the Mobile Assistant V.

The lightweight computer, which will include built-in DSPs (digital-signal
processors) from Texas Instruments Inc. (NYSE:TXN - news), will sport
more processing power, a longer-lasting battery and lighter headgear.

The Mobile Assistant V bests its predecessors by including the on-board DSP, an enhanced flip-out
flat-panel display and a lithium-ion battery in te grated into the computer. Previous versions required a
separate battery pack that users had to strap on.

The head mounts available for Mobile Assistant V will weigh only a few ounces rather than a pound.
The unit will also feature enhanced speech recognition, a function vital to hands-free computing.

The Fairfax, Va., company also plans to release a developer's tool kit for the DSP this summer, when
the computer is due to ship in volume.

IBM will manufacture the system and has tentative plans to co-market the product as well.

Current customers include many companies that have large field forces, such as FedEx Corp., Bell
Canada, and the U.S. Army and Navy, to name a few.

Bell Canada, for one, has been testing the Mobile Assistant IV in various iterations, including some
with flat-panel displays and some with head mounts. The company said it expects a widespread
deployment later this year.

"With wearable technology, it doesn't matter if they're down in a manhole or up in a loft," said Brad
Chitty, general manager of mobile communications services at Bell Canada, in North York, Ontario.
"They always have access to customer information as opposed to having to go back to the office or the
truck."

Chitty acknowledged there are applications better suited for handheld PCs that enable remote access
to corporate applications as well. But he said that his company required more than a personal digital
assistant can handle.

"We run proprietary software that isn't available for those small, thin clients," he said. "We need a full,
robust system."

Xybernaut plans to extend its market focus in the coming months with a wearable machine that runs
Windows CE.

"You'll have to package that with a cellular service, an ISP [Internet service provider] service, a trading
service [and so on]," said Edward Newman, president and CEO of Xybernaut.

IBM was more cautious.

"The efforts of the wearable industry are going to be focused on the early adopters for a while," said
George Tatomyr, principal executive for wearable solutions at IBM's Purpose Optimized Network
Solutions Group, in Rochester, Minn. "The geek factor is an issue. In North America, especially, it will
take longer to figure out what people would and wouldn't wear."

Tatomyr added, though, that IBM still plans to release a low-end, Linux (news - web sites)-based,
Dick Tracy-like computer wristwatch at some point in the next couple of years. The watch will be on
display at the Xybernaut conference, he said.