Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Mobile
  4. News

AirPop’s Active+ Smart Mask tracks your breathing like Fitbit tracks your steps

Add as a preferred source on Google

With the Active+ Smart Mask, AirPop brings Fitbit-style health tracking to your face, but instead of being all about steps and calories, it’s about your breathing and air quality. Face masks have become part of everyday life over the last year, and even when the coronavirus pandemic passes, many may consider wearing a mask more often, and AirPop has given you a reason to choose a more high-tech version.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

A sensor, which AirPop calls the Halo, is the smart part of the mask, and measures your breathing rates and monitors the filter installed in the mask. The filter is designed to block dust, allergens, and particles, but has a limited lifespan. The Halo sensor communicates with an app on your phone to alert you when a new filter is required.

Recommended Videos

Inside the app, you’ll find data on pollutants the mask has blocked, informing you about the mask’s effectiveness, along with how long you’ve been wearing the mask per day and over time, breaths taken per minute, the volume of air that has passed through it, and accompanying data for if the mask is worn when exercising. It also provides advice on air quality in the local area and suggests whether wearing the mask would be beneficial, and in what environments.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

AirPop has been making masks since 2015, but this is its first connected version. The Bluetooth connection is powered by a coin cell battery which should last for about six months, and the app will be available for both iOS and Android. It will sync with Apple HeathKit if you use the iOS version. The washable mask itself has a preformed 3D structure to keep the filter away from your face, and hidden under the soft shell is a medical-grade membrane that seals around your mouth. AirPop claims its four-layer filters will remove 99.3% of particles and 99.9% of bacteria.

The AirPop Active+ Smart Mask is clearly a big step beyond the cloth masks many will have purchased in 2020, and the price reflects this. It will cost $150 upon release in January 2021 after CES, and this price includes four filters, each of which is good for 40 hours of effective filtration. You can choose between a white, black, and bright lime green version, and AirPop sells packs of four replacement filters for $25. You’ll find it first on AirPop’s own website, and with various retailers soon after.

Take a look here at all the best wearable tech from CES 2021.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
Google Health’s rough Fitbit takeover is already forcing a major cleanup plan
Google is answering complaints about its Fitbit replacement with workout repairs starting this week and more changes planned through summer
stepehen-curry-wearing-google-fitbit-air

Google is moving to calm frustration around its redesigned Google Health app, which has replaced Fitbit and is now available to Android and iOS users as version 5.0.

The first repair is basic but important. Runs that appeared as general workouts for some users are due to be corrected this week, with run splits also being added to summaries.

Read more
Amazfit users are first in line for Strava’s big strength training update
Strava is adding muscle maps, workout logs, and shareable strength milestones
Man working out wearing an Amazfit smartwatch

Strava has recently rolled out a major strength training update, and Amazfit users are among the first to benefit from it. The update lets strength workouts sync with more detail, instead of showing up as basic gym sessions.

Amazfit is one of 14 launch partners, alongside Garmin, COROS, WHOOP, Fitbod, Hevy, Runna, JEFIT, Caliber, Liftoff, Motra, REMAKER, iFIT Personal Trainer, and 24 Hour Fitness, that will be getting the update this summer.

Read more
XREAL’s $299 glasses just gave casual AR buyers a much easier way in
X By XREAL are AR’s new budget troublemaker
X by XREAL with different front frames

XREAL is finally making AR glasses a little less intimidating. The company's new X By XREAL (AKA xbx) was just announced as a more accessible sub-brand aimed at people who want the big-screen experience without diving straight into premium hardware.

The brand's first product is the a01, which is a pair of lightweight AR glasses that are available in China now, while the US launch is expected to kick off in July for a starting price tag of $299.

Read more