SurfSens Brings Surfing Into the Computer Age 42
cylonlover writes "In an activity that for many of its participants is akin to a religion, the merging of surfing and technology might seem a bit like blasphemy. But while surfing is still about lifestyle for many of us, these days it's also a competitive sport offering huge amounts of prize money, so it's no surprise to see the emergence of boards packing more than just polyurethane within their fiberglass shells. With the aim of 'turning feelings into facts and figures,' research company Tecnalia and Spanish surfboard manufacturer Pukas have teamed up to create a surfboard that packs a gyroscope, accelerometer, GPS compass, pressure sensors and strain gauges to measure the flex of the board."
Surfing in the age of wimps (Score:1)
No need for skill anymore. Slap some speakers on it and call it Surf Hero.
Re: (Score:1)
No need for skill anymore. Slap some speakers on it and call it Surf Hero.
Call me when they fix a motor as well.
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, because data logging somehow surfs for you. WTF?
Re: (Score:2)
Slap some speakers on it and call it Surf Hero.
Cowabunga dude!
Surprising (Score:2)
In hindsight, it seems quite an obvious thing to do.
Re: (Score:2)
You are obviously not a surfer. What is obvious or useful about this?
You are obviously not a nerd. What is NOT obvious or useful about more data.
I skimmed the article just far enough to figure out I NEED to put a GPS on my surf board. I've got a few theoretical models about paddle speed, wave speed, velocity along the face and height changes that partially work out with videos. But to get real data? I'm already thinking about how you could incorporate your top paddle speed on various boards against an expert system to choose a board based on needed speed in various condition
Unacceptable. (Score:3, Funny)
As an Amish gentleman, I find this product quite wicked, and I shall not purchase one.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
LOL (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Well just add a winch and tell them you're fishing for lost satellites.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, right. Take one of these foo-foo boards out and get the **** beaten out of you by "locals only" townies.
One of my brothers was a Santa Cruz surfer and another friend still is and it doesn't matter what kind of board you have, if you're not there with a local and/or you're not everything they think you should be then you're getting that ass-kicking.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, right. Take one of these foo-foo boards out and get the **** beaten out of you by "locals only" townies.
One of my brothers was a Santa Cruz surfer and another friend still is and it doesn't matter what kind of board you have, if you're not there with a local and/or you're not everything they think you should be then you're getting that ass-kicking.
I wasn't aware surfers were such violent degenerates, in addition to being the airheads they're traditionally portrayed as.
You learn something new every day.
Re: (Score:2)
> in addition to being the airheads they're traditionally portrayed as.
It's worse than you imagine, by far.
Surfers are dangerous thugs, and they will issue beatdowns at the slightest provocation, or even no provocation at all.
They roam in packs, speak in a near-incomprehensible dialect, and evade all duties to god, country, family, and work in a crazed hedonistic pursuit of some delusional "perfect wave."
The most cursory of examinations
Re: (Score:2)
I wasn't aware surfers were such violent degenerates, in addition to being the airheads they're traditionally portrayed as.
Well, like anything else it's not universal, but yes; Surfers tend to be violent and territorial. I imagine after the fifth or sixth time some jackass cuts you off or better, rides over you, it's tempting to go pretty aggro, but on the other hand, a lot of surfers have a problem with sharing. On the gripping hand, what are violent young men supposed to do with their time?
Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, it's THAT kind (Score:1)
It wasn't until the end of the summary I realized it was referring to something else than web-surfing. Duh.
flex and return speed (Score:2, Insightful)
Recently surfboard flex and return speed have bean at the forefront of board design. Unfortunately there are two very big problems with trying to design a board that has perfect flex. One is that surfers descriptions are flawed. A surfer might say a board feels stiff when the board is actually very flexible. The stiff feeling comes from the board having a fast return speed from flex. The second problem is that a board that has the best new flex design could get bad reviews because it is not what people
Re: (Score:1)
I'm glad somebody gets it. Performance surfing lore is filled with so much misinformation. Tools like these can bust some myths and clarify what is actually happening to the board and to the water when someone is surfing.
Re: (Score:2)
Bicycles are the same too. I heard one group of cyclists arguing over a set of carbon fibre rims, one cyclist loved them and the other said he tried them and returned them for something else.
You can surf *without* a computer? (Score:2)
Huh. :P
Hydrofoil Boards (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
it got seen off by the surfing equivalent of the "get off my lawn"brigade
If there was such a brigade with any influence whatsoever, paddle boards would not have happened.
I only saw it (in videos) for tow surfing on hideously large waves, and there it did not appear to me to give the speed or control of a typical big wave board. I doubt you could paddle that thing up to speed on smaller waves, and if it endangers your life on waves that are larger, I don't really see it becoming popular.
It's better (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
A board with a PC and wireless connectivity.
Back when I was single, sitting out there for a couple hours on a Sunday afternoon hoping the wind would die or knowing a particular mob would leave, I would totally go for some wireless web surfing.
Could have been awesome... (Score:2)
What, no media player? No digital camera? No Shark Shield [sharkshield.com]?
With all of the possibilities, they seem to have chosen the lamest ones.
A GPS? Seriously? "Dude, this surf is awesome....where the hell am I?" I still remember where I was the last time I surfed - 14th Street, Del Mar - a short climb down the cliff to the isolated beach.