Glove One is a wearable mobile communications device created by Bryan Cera,[1] a student of the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. The prototype is a 3D-printed wearable "gauntlet", that also functions as a usable cell phone. Glove One was presented at the Peck School of the Arts MA/MFA Thesis Exhibition in April, 2012.[1]
Overview
editGlove One is a wearable cell phone that utilizes numbers on the inside of fingers to dial.[2] Cera says that the “wearable mobile communication device” is also art,[3] and describes it as "a cell phone which, in order to use, one must sacrifice their hand."[4] The parts for Glove One were entirely 3D printed, and used both recycled electronics as well as custom-made circuits.[5]
Cera states that plans for constructing a Glove One are in the future.[6]
References
edit- ^ a b Bryan Cera's 3D-Printed Glove Doubles as a Cellphone (Video) | Ecouterre
- ^ Wearable glove is a cell phone made from a 3D printer - AGBeat
- ^ Cellphone Glove Brings Us One Step Closer to Being Iron Man | PCWorld
- ^ gloveOne - BRYAN CERA
- ^ Glove One is a 3D printed glove that doubles as a cellphone | Ubergizmo
- ^ Glove One: Talk to the hand, ‘cos the Nokia ain’t listening - SlashGear
Further reading
edit- Trenholm, Rich (May 14, 2012). "Talk to the hand with a phone in a 3D-printed glove.". CNET News. Accessed May 2012.
- Gates, Sara (May 15, 2012). Wearable Tech: Bryan Cera's Glove One Works Like A Mobile Phone." Huffington Post. Accessed May 2012.