Wearable in a sentence as a noun

Call it a professional environment and I think that's where we will see the first true impact of wearable computing.

Because Steve Mann is into wearable computers and google glass is not a wearable computer project.

"Forgetting" is a key part of human existence that most wearable applications tend to ignore.

Nobody is going to want to outlaw RC planes, or wearable cameras, or some sort of AI-augmented robotics.

Seems like hubris to me: this guy has been testing wearable systems for 20 years or so and knows more about the experience than anyone on the planet.

We're building and selling our own version of wearable computing, but driven by your biological rhythms.

Wearable in a sentence as an adjective

"People don't really use wearable computers now, at least not powerful enough to drive high-resolution displays.

One of the professors in my school, Steve Mann[1], is notorious for working on wearable computing devices for three decades now. There's a small group of niche hackers[2] who are into this kind of thing, but it's definitely not a new phenomenon.

They did not invent autonomous vehicles or wearable computers, though they have made strides in commoditizing the technology.

If wearable computers catch on that make it easier to check-in to the places you go and +1 the stuff you like, they'll make tons more money from useful targeted ads than units of hardware shipped, just as they do now.

The combination of solid gold and the obsolescence period of wearable electronics is uncharted territory.

Wearable definitions

noun

a covering designed to be worn on a person's body

See also: clothing vesture wear habiliment

adjective

suitable for wear or able to be worn; "wearable evening clothes"; "a wearable hearing aid"