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No pain, no gain for this new breed of wearables

Published 10 March 2021

From Sam Edge, Ringwood, Hampshire, UK

You report on a backpack that, as it moves, converts some of the bag’s kinetic energy into 118 microjoules of electrical energy 13 February, p 20.

In terms of electrical power (a better indicator of its usefulness), it probably amounts to very little, as is the case with any biomechanical energy-harvesting device that doesn’t impose unacceptable extra effort on the wearer. This is just a rehash of the “power your lights/phone/body heater/whatever from your footsteps” nonsense.

Issue no. 3325 published 13 March 2021

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