Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Google working with Levi Strauss to make smart clothes

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- Google announced t hat it is working with iconic US jean maker Levi Strauss to make clothing from specially woven fabric with touch-screen control capabiliti­es.

The Internet titan used its annual developers conference in San Francisco to reveal its so-called Project Jacquard and to spotlight Levi Strauss as its first partner.

Named after a Frenchman who invented a type of loom, Project Jacquard is in the hands of a small Google team called Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP), which is different from the Google (x) lab that developes big-vision innovation­s such as self-driving cars.

“We are enabling interactiv­e textiles,” Emre Karagozler of ATAP said as the smart with miniaturiz­ed electronic­s that can use algorithms to recognize touches or swipes, ATAP said.

The data can be sent wirelessly t o smartphone­s or other devices, enabling actions such as making phone calls or sending messages with brushes of fabric.

“In our hyper-digital world, people constantly struggle to be physically present in their environmen­t while maintainin­g a digital connection,” said Levi Straus’s head of global product innovation Paul Dillinger, who took part in a Google presentati­on at the gathering.

“The work that Google and Levi’s are embarking upon with Project Jacquard delivers an entirely new value to consumers with apparel that is emotional, aspiration­al and functional.”

AFP fabric was shown off in an area set up to look like cloth coming out of a loom.

“We do it by weaving conductive threads into fabric.” The special threads can be woven into a wide array of fabrics, and be made to visually stand out or go unnoticed depending on designers’ wishes.

Conductivi­ty can be limited to desired parts of fabric or spread across entire cloth.

“It is stretchabl­e; it is washable,” Karagozler said as people controlled lights or computer screens with finger strokes on a blue cloth covering a table in the display area behind him. “It is just like normal fabric.”

Project Jacquard makes it possible to weave touch and gesture interactiv­ity into any textile using standard, industrial looms, according to Google.

Anything involving fabric, from suits or dresses to furniture or carpet, could potentiall­y have computer touch-pad style control capabiliti­es woven.

Conductive yarn is connected to tiny circuits, no bigger than jacket buttons,

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