Entries in Nike HyperAdapt 1.0 (2)

Friday
Dec212018

Nike plans to release a more affordable version of its self-lacing sneakers in 2019

Nike first debuted its take on the Back to the Future self-lacing sneaker with a rather steep US$720 price tag. Now, the company is gearing up to release a second generation version of the high-tech HyperAdapt sneaker and one that costs significantly less. This time, gen two will come in at around US$350. Nike confirmed the news at its most recent earnings call. The company confirmed it’s coming in the spring of 2019 and will be designed for use on the basketball court. Nike also said it’s “just one better fit solution amongst many” that the company will release throughout the year.

Source: The Verge

Friday
Mar182016

Nike unveils production version of its self-tying shoes

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Sorry to disappoint Back to the Future fans but the self-tying shoes Nike outs for mass production isn’t like the 2015 Air Mag (a.k.a. the literal incarnation of Marty McFly’s famous sneakers). What the sports brand introduced is a more practical (and yes, we have to admit a bit boring) version of it. Called the HyperAdapt 1.0, these new running sneakers, as advertised, will tie the laces on its own once you put them on. While it seems like we’re taking away an important rite of passage for kids (learning to tie laces), these shoes are meant to take the worry away from runners of loosening laces while they pound the pavement. You will need to charge the sneakers though every two weeks.

Tiffany Beers, a Nike senior innovator who worked as the lead on the sneaker, said they started working on the shoe’s technology about 10 years ago but fellow designer Tinker Hatfield had the idea or “vision” for it when he worked on it for Back to the Future II. But they had to wait for the technology to evolve and for motors to become small enough. Their team sourced servo motors, which is similar to the ones used in small train engines and helicopter wings, and studied the transportation industry’s engineering feats to develop their motor. To adjust the fit of the shoes or release the foot, there’s a small plus-minus buttons on the side. And while it has been tested in water, Beers doesn’t recommend these be taken out in a rainstorm. The HyperAdapt will be available to Nike+ app members in three colorways starting in the 2016 holiday season. There’s no retail price for it yet.

Source: HuffPost Sports