The DebitBand is a concept payment system that would replace debit cards. The concept was imagined by recent CSULB Graphic Design graduates Jack Curry and Steven Arthur Wood. The band using RFIDs, as well as a touch-sensitive OLED display in order to make payments and check out balances.
The best feature of the DebitBand is its embedded ferrofluid tubes. Basically, after setting a monthly balance, a user will feel the tubes tighten whenever they get closer to going above the budget. The tubes will provide an awareness that would physically appropriate the saying, "money's getting tight."
The band provides a fiscal responsibility and will only loosen by obtaining a Budget Extension Code using the mobile application or physically entering a bank in order to reevaluate your budget. Hopefully, the DebitBand will come into fruition to provide an easy way to make paying (and ironically, saving) easier.
Budget-Saving Bracelets
The Debitband Concept Payment System is a Physical Fiscal Reminder
Trend Themes
1. Concept Payment Systems - The DebitBand concept payment system presents an opportunity for the development of new innovative payment solutions.
2. RFID Technology - The use of RFIDs in the DebitBand showcases the potential for advancements in RFID technology to improve payment systems.
3. Fiscal Awareness Tools - The implementation of ferrofluid tubes in the DebitBand suggests a growing demand for innovative tools that promote fiscal responsibility and awareness.
Industry Implications
1. Payment Processing Industry - The DebitBand concept payment system could disrupt the payment processing industry by offering a fresh approach to making payments.
2. Wearable Technology Industry - The DebitBand's integration of RFIDs and touch-sensitive OLED display highlights the potential for disruptive innovation in the wearable technology industry.
3. Financial Technology (fintech) Industry - The DebitBand's combination of payment functionalities and fiscal awareness tools could spur disruptive innovation within the FinTech industry.