back to article Panasonic wants you to wear Li-Ion batteries. The ones that explode

Panasonic says it's built a bendy Lithium-Ion battery safe enough to be built into “Card devices, devices attached to the human body, smart clothing [and] wristband wearable devices.” The Japanese company may not have picked the best month in which to launch the device, given the spontaneous combustion of numerous Galaxy Note …

  1. wolfetone Silver badge

    It'd keep you warm I suppose.

  2. Blergh
    Mushroom

    Safety

    "both safe to use and capable of retaining 99 per cent of its initial capacity even after “1,000 bends with a radius of 25mm, or after twisted 1,000 times with an angle ±25°/100mm”.

    And what about if you snap it in half and then put it in a washing machine?

    1. Richard Jones 1
      Coat

      Re: Safety

      Well you use the cold water fill option.

    2. Captain DaFt

      Re: Safety

      "And what about if you snap it in half and then put it in a washing machine?"

      No need to snap it in half. Most of those 'safe' parameters will be exceeded by most washing machines.

      Safety tip: Wash 'smart garments' separately in a laundromat far from your home.

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Re. Bendy batteries

    I can see these being handy, stacked up for "user reconfigurable" battery packs where capacity can be added simply by slotting the cells into a pre-available card similar to a server backplane and assembling them into a 3-D printed case.

    Or am I over-thinking this?

    AC/DC

  4. David Roberts

    Code generator

    For 2 factor authentication?

    Or just an update on current stuff like credit card sized LED torches?

  5. paulf
    Happy

    PCMCIA

    *While we're remembering PCMCIA cards, let's remember the acronym describing the venerable peripherals-for-laptops standards was often satirised as “People Can't Memorise Computer Industry Acronyms.”

    Wow - PCMCIA and yes I do remember the snarky expansion of the acronym you mention!

    Many years ago I had a Panasonic CF-41 laptop (The first to have a double speed CD-ROM drive built in!). I think the CF-41 still works and I have a PCMCIA modem and joystick adaptor for it somewhere in the big box of antique computer gubbins.

    1. Allan George Dyer
      Windows

      Re: PCMCIA

      Hold on, I've got a PCMCIA ISDN (I Still Don't Know) card around here somewhere...

      1. Paul Woodhouse

        Re: PCMCIA

        I always had ISDN as "It Still Does Nothing"

    2. Peter X

      Re: PCMCIA

      I have an ancient, but still working, Packard Bell laptop with a still functioning Netgear PCMCIA Wifi card. All completely useless now of course!

      I seem to recall my Amiga 1200 had a PCMCIA slot on it. No idea if there were any peripherals that used it... I'm guess that must have been one of the earliest devices to sport such a port?

      1. Z80

        Re: PCMCIA

        I had an A1200 but never used the PCMCIA slot.

        I know there were external hard drives available with cases that matched the profile of the computer. My mate at school had one and it sounded like he had no end of Guru Meditation crashes with it. I stuck to internal IDE drives.

        There was also a PCMCIA SCSI adapter branded Squirrel I think.

      2. Stu J

        Re: PCMCIA

        I had a PCMCIA CD-ROM drive for my A1200...

    3. allthecoolshortnamesweretaken

      Re: PCMCIA

      TWAIN - Thing Without An Interesting Name. No, really. Engineers do have a sense of humour.

    4. 45RPM Silver badge

      Re: PCMCIA

      Rummaging through my drawers (fnarr fnarr) this weekend, I found:

      • 2MB PCMCIA Card

      • 8MB PCMCIA Card

      • Modem PCMCIA Card

      • Ethernet PCMCIA Card

      • Wifi PCMCIA Card

      • Wifi Cardbus Card (Cardbus being the compatible successor to PCMCIA)

      • USB 2 and Firewire Cardbus Card

      • Titanium Powerbook with Cardbus slot

      Oh, and the realisation that I should sell / throw away some of this old rubbish.

      On a different note, aren’t many of us already wearing Li-Ion batteries in our smartwatches? Imagine the agony if one of those goes on the fritz? I can take my coat off faster than I can take my watch off (in my case, a Seiko Chronograph - so not very smart, and not very likely to explode - but still, lots of people have smart watches) - and a watch battery is pressed quite close to the skin.

      So no, I don’t particularly have a problem with this. I don’t want one - and I certainly wouldn’t advise smart pants (what are pants called in the US? Or does everyone in the US go commando?) - but I don’t imagine that clothing related problems will be all that common.

      1. quxinot

        Re: PCMCIA

        Until two weeks ago, I could have said that I have very much a similar collection of PCMCIA cards in the pile, including their manuals, packaging, and driver CD's (and in two cases, driver floppys!).

        Gotta admit, having the shelf space back feels awfully good.

        The primary issue I remember with PCMCIA was that if you used a wireless card in your wife's laptop and she dropped it down a flight of stairs (truly!), not only would the card get bent in an unusual fashion, but it would rip the header apart internally within the laptop. And this would happen despite you getting it all set up not even a week prior.

        Not that I'm bitter.

  6. james 68

    We do already.

    Considering peoples current attachment to their phones, It is totally fair to say that we currently do "wear" such batteries. In that they are always carried upon our person much as we do with clothing or jewelry.

  7. Pen-y-gors

    Acronym

    Actually I rather like 'FLIB' - sounds soft and bendy and cuddly, like Flibbertigibbet. Doesn't seem to have any serious contenders for prior art (I think we can ignore the Fachverband Luftdichtheit im Bauwesen (German: Association for Airtightness in Buildings; Kassel, Germany)

    And it's pretty language neutral - works well in many languages without any embarassing meanings (remember the Polish 'Fart' bar?)

    Wo ist mein flibie?

    Ou est mon flib?

    Donde es mi flib?

    Ble mae fy fflib?

    The flib of my uncle is in the fire-bucket of my aunt.

    1. Swarthy
      Coat

      Re: Acronym

      I was thinking FLi-on - But that would be better as a wall-mount.

  8. ACMTIX

    What about all the lithium cells in pace maker batteries? that is a worry...

  9. ACMTIX

    What about lithium cell batteries in pace makers? That is a worry...

    1. d3vy

      Severe case of heart burn?

      I can recommend the chew-able peppermint rennies.

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Cue Arthur Brown

    "I am the god of hell fire and I bring you, Fire"

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    "Safe Enough"

    Well, alright then.

  12. Francis Boyle Silver badge

    Oh Gawd

    El Reg linking to itself 18 years ago. I feel old.

    1. Neil Barnes Silver badge

      Re: Oh Gawd

      *You* feel old. I *had* a Rex...

    2. Steven Roper

      Re: Oh Gawd

      "El Reg linking to itself 18 years ago. I feel old."

      They also keep every comment you ever posted, even rejected ones (although only you and presumably the Reg admins can read those.) It can be quite an eye-opener to click a page near the end of the list and read stuff you posted a decade ago and had long since forgotten. Some of it will bring back fond memories of the good old days.

      Just also be prepared that at some point you're going to facepalm and groan, "What the hell was I on when I posted that!?!"

      1. ssharwood

        Re: Oh Gawd

        That's just what the NSA is asking too!

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    make it difficult to cause leakage

    Panasonic-difficult or Samsung-difficult?

    1. Sgt_Oddball

      Re: make it difficult to cause leakage

      Seepage in the trouser department? Now that's a concern without the added batteries...

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