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

Listen to your heart: Hands Free Tinder uses your heartbeat to find the perfect match

Add as a preferred source on Google

If you’re a Tinder user, you might have found that swiping through possible matches was getting a little tedious. Good news! You will soon be able to use your heart instead, which could cut down on that tendinitis. Design agency T3 used the latest Apple Watch SDK to develop a Tinder clone that monitors your heartbeat when you look at pictures of possible matches.

“Who ever loved who loved not at first sight,” wrote Shakespeare, and T3 seems to have taken this to heart — so to speak. The firm’s app provides you with feedback on how the photos of potential matches affect your heart rate. A circular indicator shows how fast your heart is beating. If it’s racing, then it’s a match. On the other hand, if your heart isn’t showing any enthusiasm, then the next profile picture will automatically appear without the need to swipe. Basically, you can let your heart decide.

Recommended Videos

Of course, there is a lot more to a person than their picture, and we’re wondering if T3 will take this to the next level and monitor your heart rate when you actually meet someone. We imagine users checking their watches two minutes into a date to see something like “Get the hell out of Dodge” or “Buy her (or him) a drink already” on the display.

The video above only shows the Apple Watch, but it will work on Android Wear watches that have heart rate sensors, too. Unfortunately, neither version is available yet, but they are “coming soon” according to T3. Hands Free Tinder could prove to be more accurate than your eyes, but even if it’s not, your thumb will be thankful.

Robert Nazarian
Robert Nazarian became a technology enthusiast when his parents bought him a Radio Shack TRS-80 Color. Now his biggest…
Open-ear earbuds are the new headphones for people who want plausible deniability
They keep the room audible, the podcast running, and the social contract just blurry enough to survive another workday.
Simon Cohen wearing Bose Ultra Open Earbuds for Personal Surround Sound with a Bose Smart Soundbar.

I like noise-canceling earbuds because the outside world has a way of barging in without permission. A few blocks to the gym shouldn’t require hearing every motorcycle, car horn, or construction drill the city can throw at me.

The problem shows up on the walk back, usually when I stop to buy something. Suddenly, I’m at the checkout counter holding my earbuds like tiny expensive pebbles, trying not to be rude, trying not to drop them, and somehow making the whole thing look more dramatic than it needs to be. Then one slips, and I’m bent over looking for inconspicuous black earbuds on hot asphalt.

Read more
Oura Ring 5 is 40% smaller with its most scratch-resistant design yet
A slimmer Oura Ring 5 brings longer battery life
Oura Ring

Oura has announced a new version of its popular smart ring, called the Oura Ring 5. Compared to the Ring 4, the new model has a 40% smaller body (2.28mm thick), made of lightweight, non-allergenic titanium.

To achieve a thinner and lighter design, the brand has reworked the mechanical, electrical, optical, battery, and sensing architecture.

Read more
Samsung wants to take care of your Ozempic weight loss journey with its smartwatch
The study will compare Galaxy Watch8-supported guidance with standard care for adults beginning GLP-1RA treatment
Health app on Samsung Galaxy Watch 8.

Samsung is pushing its wearable deeper into the Ozempic era with a Mass General study that asks whether a smartwatch can help people understand what changes after they start GLP-1 treatment.

The six-month effort will focus on adults beginning GLP-1RA therapy, a drug category widely associated with major weight-loss results. Instead of focusing only on pounds lost, the research will track muscle, activity, heart rate, and body composition during treatment.

Read more