Samsung SmartSuit for Olympic Winter Games 2018

Samsung created a SmartSuit to help improve training for Dutch short track speed skaters.

Samsung continues its long association with the Olympics as the worldwide Olympic partner of the 2018 Winter Games that take place in PyeongChang, South Korea next month. Samsung Netherlands is sponsoring Sjinkie Knegt and Suzanne Schulting, two Dutch short track racers, and it has created a SmartSuit for them to help improve their training.

By Adnan Farooqui, SAM Mobile January 3, 2018

The Samsung SmartSuit was tailor-made for both short track racers and it features five integrated sensors. The suit was developed in collaboration with national coach Jeroen Otter and movement scientist Bjorn de Laat. The sensors transmit data via a wireless connection to the national coach’s Galaxy S8 who then adjusts the training regimen accordingly.

Samsung Benelux sponsors Sjinkie Knegt and Suzanne Schulting in the run-up to the Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang 2018. They have therefore developed the special Samsung SmartSuit and the associated application in collaboration with the Dutch KNSB (Royal Dutch Skaters Association).

Samsung SmartSuit for short trackers

Short track speed skating is a form of ice speed skating. Multiple skaters skate on an oval ice track that’s 111.111 meters long in a rink that’s the size of an international ice hockey rink.

The skaters have to estimate how deep they need to get in the corners and on the straights to achieve optimum performance. Samsung’s SmartSuit relies on technology to provide accurate data down to the millimeter during the training sessions.

Since the suits were tailor-made, the system knows the upper and lower leg lengths of both Sjinkie Knegt and Suzanne Schulting. The app can thus calculate the exact body position immediately and let the coach how what the exact distance between the skater’s hips to the ice is in the bends and on the straights.

Exact body posture. The Samsung SmartSuit is a custom made short track suit with 5 integrated sensors. Because we know the lengths of the lower and upper legs of both Sjinkie Knegt and Suzanne Schulting, we can use the application to calculate the exact body position immediately. So we know what the distance from the hips to the ice is. In the bend and at the straight.

The coach can use the data to make adjustments accordingly. If the skaters are not bending enough, he can notify them at the touch of a button in the app which causes a vibration on the wrist.

“The Samsung SmartSuit makes you even more aware of how deep you are or not and you can immediately indicate whether you need to sit deeper. This keeps you alert and the improvement process will eventually go faster,” Schulting said.

The 2018 Winter Olympic Games will take place in Pyeongchang, South Korea starting February 9, 2018. Let’s see if Samsung’s high tech suit helps these Dutch competitors win big at the games. They won’t be able to use it during the actual games, obviously, but the training sessions with the SmartSuit should help improve their skills.

Samsung SmartSuit. The Samsung SmartSuit is the first short track suit that measures down to the millimeter how deep the skater is. Is this the secret weapon for Sjinkie Knegt and Suzanne Schulting on the way to Olympic gold. SamsungMobileNL. Youtube Jan 3, 2018

Source SAM Mobile via Samsung and Engadget

Also see
Samsung’s smart clothes are wearables you’d actually wear Mashable
Samsung’s weird wearables include a smart suit and solar purse Engadget

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