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The Best in Gear, From Vollebak’s Mars Hoodie to a Thorens Turntable

Antimicrobial hoodie, check. De-stressing wristwear, check. Embossed chess board, checkmate.

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Thorens TD 124 DD 140th Anniversary (with Ortofon SPU 140th Anniversary Cartridge) Stefan Röhler

The Big Idea: Wearables Get Buzzy

Wearable technology dates back to the abacus rings of 17th-century China, early precursors to the modern digital iteration, the calculator watch, released by Pulsar in 1975. In 2009 the introduction of the Fitbit tracker ushered in an era of wearable machines—ones that could not only calculate but measure as well. In the intervening years, a host of competitors hit the market, from Whoop to Oura Ring to Apple Watch, and while the designs, interfaces, related apps, and target users differ slightly between each—some are more fitness-focused, others prioritize wellness or productivity—each remixes the same basic functionality: recording biometric data such as heart rate, blood-oxygen levels, sleep patterns, electrodermal activity, steps taken, UV exposure, and the like. Which is to say, all of these devices can provide concrete data related to how you’re feeling at any given moment, but none of them can actually do anything about it.

Enter the next generation of wearables, devices that can not only monitor your state of body and mind but also intervene. The Apollo, from Apollo Neuro, tracks everything your smartwatch does (and is roughly the same size) and also emits a range of audio-vibrational frequencies specially tuned to your central nervous system to help you calm down, wake up, recover from a workout, fall asleep, and more. It’s the only scientifically validated consumer wellness wearable on the market—its inventor, Dave Rabin, M.D., Ph.D., is both a neuroscientist and a board-certified psychiatrist—and was born out of research on treatment-resistant-trauma therapy. The effect feels similar to a cat purring on your chest.

Rabin describes the Apollo, and the others like it that are sure to follow, as “third-generation wearables” and notes how the screenless gadget (control comes via the app) is the rare piece of technology that can actually reduce stress. “Second-gen wearables give you all this really granular detail,” he tells Robb Report, “but if you’re not a doctor and can’t interpret the data, it can be more stressful than not having that information in the first place.” What really excites Rabin, though, is how the already cutting-edge technology is about to radically leapfrog again, thanks to artificial intelligence. “My wife would wake up every night at 3 a.m., so we trained Apollo to track her sleep quality and identify when she started to stir. We then leveraged predictive A.I. to anticipate when she was about to come awake—at which point the Apollo kicked in with a gentle wave that rocked her back to sleep, preventing the wake-up before it happened. And it totally worked! It was a problem she had for years, and we solved it.”

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