Photos: Sneak Peek at New Running Music & Wearable Tech Gear

Wearable tech remains a white hot category in running. The massive Aug. 3-6 Outdoor Retailer Summer Market trade show in Salt Lake City showed off a lot of new and improved trackers, watches, music accessories and tech apparel, but it also coincided with a big week of announcements and releases of wearable fitness tech for the upcoming holiday season. Click through the photos below for a look at some of the new wearable tech gear you’ll see in stores this fall and winter.


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Stryd


Stryd, the first running-specific power meter, has smartly been switched from a chest heart rate strap device to a shoe-clip sensor. From its inception, Stryd ($199) has tracked a variety of data, delivering heart rate, cadence, impact, movement, form, altitude and power values to its smartphone app and several smartwatch brands. The Stryd system offers power value in real time, with no data lags like most heart-rate monitors. It serves up both audio feedback on the run and post-workout feedback for long-term improvement. Added to the 12 metrics that Stryd quantifies into run power is leg spring stiffness, which has been correlated to running efficiency by scientific studies, but never before available in a wearable. Leg spring stiffness can be increased by form changes and conditioning. (Available in September.)









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Nike+ Run Club App


Nike released a completely redesigned, updated version and renamed version of its popular Nike+Running app. Run Club, as the name implies, increases ways to sticker and share runs, be inspired and motivated through hashtag-based challenges, leaderboards and by following the run tips, Nike+ music mixes, and community elements in a colorful feed. Run with a Garmin, Wahoo, or Tom Tom device? You can now bring that data into Nike+Run Club. The app now incorporates an adaptive coaching system that starts with your goals and run volume, builds a plan, and then is supposed to respond to your performance and needs as you use it. Tested with Nike’s global coaches and elites, the app will adapt to your plan based on your actual run performances along with short, timed, audio coached benchmark runs. (Available now)









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PopSockets


These colorful, ingenious, collapsible stick-on disks ($10-$15) immediately caught our eye at the trade show. Pop them out to one of two positions and slip your fingers against the soft ridged bellows below the disk to securely hand carry your phone. Run app stats are a turn of the wrist away and fast pictures or texts on the go are a breeze. Reusable for multiple times, they also become a video view stand and headphone cord wrap. (Available now.)









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Lumo Run


Lumo Run offers two ways to track running data and improve running form and efficiency through a clip-on sensor pod ($100) or sensor-integrated apparel—running shorts for men ($199) and running capris for women ($199). Lumo’s
sensors capture accurate running biomechanics
through core body movements. The Lumo system tracks five key running metrics—cadence, bounce, braking, rotation and drop—and offers audible real-time performance feedback for each one, as well as post-run summaries and coaching tips. The in-run tips and audio coaching are easy to do and effective, with post-run exercises addressing the areas that need improvement spot on.









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Suunto Spartan Ultra


We have been trail and road running with Sunnto’s new top of the line, multisport, mountain-focused GPS watch, and we liked it for a lot of reasons. A beautiful, light and easy on the wrist “big” watch, the Spartan Ultra ($699 to $799) has a sapphire touch screen. The wide viewing angle, high-resolution, color screen with classy modern analog and digital watch faces sets a new standard for on-the-run bright light multi-data field legibility and even navigation. It's much more user friendly than most high-end smartwatches we've tested, thanks to a much more intuitive functionality. (Available now; a slightly thinner triathlon-focused Spartan Sport will arrive later this year.)









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Strava Beacon


Strava Premium users were upgraded in mid-August with Beacon, a safety and race tracking feature which allows up to three contacts to get a text when you start a run, follows you on a map, and finally receives a text when you stop recording or have a low battery. The free version recently received an upgrade to the large, super clear display format formerly reserved for Premium.









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Polar M600 Smart Watch


Heart rate monitoring pioneer Polar’s first wrist-based heart rate GPS watch, the sleek, color screen M600 ($330) is based on Google Android Wear. You get Polar’s excellent training watch features and platform along with the open Android Wear operating system, dramatically extending the 24/7 utility and customizability of the watch, particularly for Android phone users. They can access the 4000 Android Wear apps and even turn the watch into a standalone music player. In our initial testing we loved the small size, very high-resolution screen and phone connectivity. We noticed all-day battery life is shorter than conventional GPS “smartwatches” when phone connected, about two days Android, one day iPhone or from a full charge up to eight hours in training mode. (Available now.)









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Tune Sensor Insoles and App


New from Portugal-based Kinematix, Tune ($200) is a sensor and app package that seeks to reduce your overall ground contact time and how much of your contact is at the heels, both seen as keys to running efficiency by some studies. Data comes from a pair of very thin (2mm) insoles embedded with force sensors and accelerometers that slip under your usual shoe sock liner. The GPS app provides in-run audio cues. The insoles can also be paired to Android smartwatches with GPS to go phone free. After the run, performance can be reviewed in detail augmented by the incorporated GPS tracking. Exercises based on crunching the data, complete with video demos, are provided, and then personalized after a period of data capture. (Available in late September.)









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Under Armour JBL Wireless Heart Rate Monitoring Headphones


These tiny, comfortable Bluetooth earphones ($200) incorporate a military-grade heart rate optical sensor, used in fighter pilot helmets. Swipe on an ear bud and hear an audible read out of your heart rate. It pairs with most run apps, and we tried it with both Under Armour’s MapMy Run and Strava. (Available in October.)









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Timex Ironman GPS Watch


Billed as “the Simplest GPS Watch, Ever,” the latest sport watch from Timex ($99) has intuitive, one-button functionality, a 12-hour battery life (even in full GPS mode) and charges with a micro USB port—meaning no proprietary connection cords—to download workouts (no app) and there is an optional color strap ($14.99). Powered by the latest fast acquisition GPS chip, this watch does all the basics of distance, average pace and time. It has a simple triathlon mode of run, swim, ride, but it will only capture time in the water. (Available now.)









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Whoop


The Whoop system seeks to help athletes understand how well they are sleeping and responding to stressors of workouts, and life, so as to better inform what level of effort (or any stress) may be advisable for the day. It samples heart rate 24/7 and more frequently than other bands at up to 100 times per second. Whoop captures and interprets the difficulty in capturing key metric of Heart Rate Variability (HRV). Studies have shown HRV occurs in the last 5 minutes of slow wave sleep and is key to understanding just how ready you are for a planned workout or any stressors that day. Originally developed for and only offered to pro and elite athletes, Whoop band and system are available to the public on a pre-order basis. (Available in December.)






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Published on August 24, 2016 02:15
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