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My "calm" petal was the one that troubled me. With frequent stress streaks, my calm numbers were in the 20 percent range. But Spire has a solution for that, too.
Spire started at Stanford University. I run a lab at Stanford called the Calming Technology Lab and the goal of the lab is to identify the technologies that help us reduce stress.
Called the Spire Health Tag, it’s a tiny device that adheres to your clothes and then — it claims — offers you real-time data relating to heart rate, sleep, stress, and other assorted daily ...
Spire’s technology is housed in a small, semi-soft granite body; clip it to your belt or bra and each breathe appears on your phone’s screen in real time. Inhale. Exhale. Inhale. Exhale.
The Spire Health Tag is a wearable that sticks onto your clothes and aims to help you sleep better, de-stress during the day and track your activity. It’s made by the same company that wanted to ...
The winner, chosen by public voting, was a fitness tracker called Spire, which claims to keep tabs on your overall well-being by measuring heart rate and breathing patterns to monitor stress.
Joy is a mouth breather and was wondering if she breathes irregularly. So she got one of those new $150 fitness trackers, Spire, to monitor her breathing and emotions -- stress levels -- as well ...
The Spire's textured surface resembles something between a pumice stone and a sponge. It's rough, but not hard or sharp. When you pinch it, there's some give. In normal daily wear, it was so snug ...
By Katherine Noyes June 18, 2014 5:00 AM PT Email Article ...
Spire on Tuesday kicked off preorders for its namesake new wearable device dedicated to promoting health by monitoring the wearer's breathing. Billed as "the first wearable that tracks both physical ...
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