HAPIfork: The smart fork that monitors your eating
habits
January 10, 2013
HAPIfork and the HAPILABS Suite
One of the quirkier innovations
Gizmag has clapped eyes on at this year's CES, the
HAPIfork is an electronic eating
utensil that monitors the extent and rate of your eating. The
HAPIfork was originally developed for clinical use to encourage slower eating,
with the aim of combating weight gain from hurried eating that some research
suggests doesn't give the body the time it needs to feel full from more
moderate food intake. Additionally, HAPILABS claims that its HAPIfork will
reduce digestive problems and gastric reflux associated with rapid ingestion
In essence this is a fork with an
engorged handle, containing a host of electronics, including a Micro US
connector, capacitive detection, a vibration pack, two LEDs, all of which are
powered by a 3.7 V lithium polymer battery. Together these make a fork that
times not only how long it takes you to eat a meal, and, by knowing when the
fork is lifted to the mouth, the rate at which food is eaten. Apparently an LED
will blink at you disparagingly if the HAPIfork thinks you're eating too fast.
Soup eaters take note: when demonstrated
at CES, Gizmag saw the HAPIfork also fitted with a spoon attachment, so upon
its release the HAPIfork my prove more versatile than the name implies.
The HAPIfork will also talk to the
HAPILABS Suite, an online dashboard and mobile app that logs data pertaining to
meals, sleep and exercise and reports data over time in the form of stats and
graphs. Apparently one call also share "HAPImoments," or pictures and
videos to you and me, bringing social networking features to the Suite (albeit
with an awful awful awful name).
While I quite like the idea of a
"smart fork" that can quietly monitor my eating habits and, through
accompanying software, show my data in, er, easy to digest form, I'm less keen
on the idea of uppity cutlery telling me what to do. The benefits of eating
slower won't be news to anyone that keeps an eye on the health and science
press, or to anyone that has tried it for themselves. Having an LED indicator
flash at you to tell you to slow down suggests this device could actually reinforce
mentally-disengaged, eating in front of the TV, say. But perhaps I'm a luddite
uncomfortable with outsourcing self-restraint to a piece of garish plastic
(though the black and white options are fine, in fairness).
The Verge reports that a USB version
of the HAPIfork will launch in Q2 of this year for US$99.99. A
Bluetooth-equipped edition which can be paired with a mobile device is
apparently set for Q3.
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