Wearable tech developed in Waterloo helps swimmers lap competition - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

Wearable tech developed in Waterloo helps swimmers lap competition

A playing-card sized wearable sensor developed in Waterloo is helping swimmers fine-tune their performance.

A new wearable technology developed in Waterloois using liveperformance data to help swimmers step up their game.

It's called a Triton unit, developed by the companyTritonWear.

It's about the size of a deck of cards and attaches to a swimmer's goggles, using motion sensors to measure detailslikestroke count, turn timeand distance per stroke, paintingan overall picture of a swimmer's performance.

The data can be accessed poolside, in real time, on a tablet or computer.

"Basically the coach can go out and see the athlete they want to look at or they can see a high level overview of the team as they train," said Tristan Lehari, co-founder and CEO of TritonWear. "They get real-time data every single length from their athletes."

Data access 'like never before'

About the size of a deck of cards, the device attaches to a swimmer's goggles and uses using motion censors to measure a swimmer's performance. (TritonWear)

Aformer captain of the University of Waterloo Warriors swim team, Lehari knew keeping track of a whole a pool full of swimmers at once was hard enough for coaches let alone analyzing the minute performance detailsthat separate high level athletes.

"There is one coach on deck, twenty-plus athletes in the water or a dozen performance metrics that a coach is trying to keep track of at a given time," said Lehari. "We have automated that process to let them spend more time coaching and really working with their athletes, plus they get data over timelike never before in the sport."

In December 2015 thecompany received $500,000 from the federalSouthern Ontario Fund for Investment in Innovation.

Since then, TritonWear has been adoptedby athletes in twenty countries.

"We even had an athlete break a national record in Norway based on changes they made while using our data," he said.