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Soon, we'll be wearing wired wardrobes

You can wear your heart on your sleeve. Why not your electronics? In a burgeoning trend that has captivated Silicon Valley, a mind-boggling array of wearable electronics has begun to arrive, not just at websites or clothing outlets near you, but on arms, faces, wrists, even pinkie fingers.

FILE - This June 27, 2012 file photo shows Google co-founder Sergey Brin demonstrating Google's new Glass, wearable internet glasses, at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco. Google is starting to notify 8,000 people who will be invited to buy a test version of the company’s much-anticipated Internet-connected glasses for $1,500. The invitations are being sent to the winners of a contest conducted a month ago. Google asked U.S. residents to submit applications through Twitter or its Plus service to explain in 50 words or less how they would use a technology that is being hailed as the next breakthrough in mobile computing. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, file)
FILE - This June 27, 2012 file photo shows Google co-founder Sergey Brin demonstrating Google's new Glass, wearable internet glasses, at the Google I/O conference in San Francisco. Google is starting to notify 8,000 people who will be invited to buy a test version of the company’s much-anticipated Internet-connected glasses for $1,500. The invitations are being sent to the winners of a contest conducted a month ago. Google asked U.S. residents to submit applications through Twitter or its Plus service to explain in 50 words or less how they would use a technology that is being hailed as the next breakthrough in mobile computing. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, file)Read moreAP

You can wear your heart on your sleeve. Why not your electronics?

In a burgeoning trend that has captivated Silicon Valley, a mind-boggling array of wearable electronics has begun to arrive, not just at websites or clothing outlets near you, but on arms, faces, wrists, even pinkie fingers.

"Everyone's recognizing that tech's next great, innovating chapter is more practical and intimate use of computing power in our everyday lives," said Scot Herbst of San Jose design firm Herbst Produkt. "And that means not having to reach into your pocket, grab your phone, and put in a password. It's all about making computers more organic in their interaction with you."

Hold onto your hats, which also happen to be undergoing digital makeovers, with things like snowboard helmets decked out with $599 Oakley Airwave goggles with GPS and streaming audio. From Apple's rumored iWatch to Google's in-the-works eyeglass-like Glass ($1,500 for an early pilot version), to tech-embedded clothing from Uniqlo that uses the body's evaporating moisture to heat knee-high socks that cost about $13 a pair, the wearable digital revolution is upon us.

"The trend is gaining momentum because the cost of chips, along with sensors like gyroscopes and heat- and light-sensing devices, has dropped dramatically," said analyst Avi Greengart, research director for consumer devices at Current Analysis.

"Unlike a lot of bleeding-edge tech, these things work," he said. "I have a Fitbit, which is a little clip you put on your belt, and it's a glorified pedometer. But it does much more, and it makes it easy for me to see how much physical activity I've had during the day, for example, and that motivates me to exercise even more."

An army of engineers, fashion designers, futurists, and gadget geeks is hard at work, trying to extend the reach of computing power along those precious few inches from pocket and purse to forearms and ears.

At Intel Labs, user-experience researcher Cory Booth said his team was looking beyond that, "past the near-term fascination with specific locations on the body, like the wrist, to a more long-term view. We see an entire new ecosystem of devices that will multiply over time and interact with one another."

Many of these gadgets will piggyback on the muscular computing power available in the cloud, said Mike Roberts, an engineer with PARC, a Xerox-founded research-and-development center in Palo Alto, Calif.

Computers take the mountain of input from your device, crunch it, and immediately suggest ways for you to, say, improve your athletic performance.

Roberts talked about one very human application of wearable technology, a beta version of a head-mounted computer that PARC worked on with Motorola Solutions. It connects users in the field - say, a sailor trying to fix a broken generator on a naval ship - with experts thousands of miles away.

"The helmet's video camera captures the generator, then the expert takes stills from the video and annotates them to show the guy which bolts to remove to fix the generator," he said. "This gives you expert advice anywhere in the world, and it's all hands-free."

Over time, experts say, consumers will be dazzled by an assortment of electronic gear woven into their clothing, strapped to limbs, wrapped as thin membranes over their fingers, or hung from their belts. Challenges with wearable tech abound, from harnessing enough computing power onto ultrathin devices, to persuading consumers to wear silly-looking glasses and bulky watches without "needing them out" too much.

John Edson, president of San Francisco design firm Lunar, said that with the proliferation of these devices, "my smartphone becomes just the collector of all the data coming from the sensors I've got on me. Like the swipe and pinch features on the iPad, we're just starting to scratch the surface of things we can do with gestures."