Friday, 20 February 2015
After Google Glass, Apple Watch, Japan offers wearable tomatoes
As the world’s electronic companies scramble to set the
agenda for wearable devices, one Japanese vegetable
juice maker went one better Thursday, unveiling a
wearable tomato machine.
The “Tomatan” is a backpack that can be loaded with six
mid-sized tomatoes, enough, say the makers, to power
runners through this weekend’s Tokyo Marathon.
“Tomatoes have lots of nutrition that combats fatigue,”
said Shigenori Suzuki of maker Kagome.
The Tomatan looks like a small humanoid robot — with a
tomato for a head — and sits snugly on the athlete’s
shoulders.
Tugging a tiny lever in the foot moves the arms to catch a
tomato from the shooter. It then rotates the fruit over
the runner’s head and holds it in front of his mouth.
“We used about 100 tomatoes to complete this
machine,” said Nomichi Tosa of creator Meiwa Denki, a
company known for its off-the-wall devices and musical
instruments.
“We focused mostly on its visual design.”
Despite the eight-kilogramme (18 pound) weight,
Kagome’s Suzuki said he will don the device for a a five-
kilometre (three-mile) fun-run event on Saturday.
“I will run by his side carrying my tools, just like an F1
mechanic,” Tosa said.
In Sunday’s full Tokyo Marathon, a runner from Kagome
will participate with a lighter wearable tomato machine
— the Petit-Tomatan — which weighs only about three
kilogrammes, Suzuki said.
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