Puma brings back an 80s shoe style with updated tech


  • TECH
  • Friday, 14 Dec 2018

Puma's bringing back the RS-Computer running shoe. — AFP Relaxnews

Why rely on your phone or smartwatch to track your steps when you could use a 21st-century rendition of the Puma RS-Computer running shoes?

This week Puma announced that it's bringing back the "OG" sneaker from 1986. Though the model didn't make much of a lasting impact back then, despite the tech being "extremely advanced for its time", the RS-Computer shoe concept is an intriguing one, considering how technology has evolved since then, and Puma wants to make this pair of trainers an exclusive and covetable model.

The original RS-Compter shoes had a custom computer chip built into every heel that would record time, traveling distance, and calories burned and send the results to any Apple IIE or Commodore 64 using a 16-pin cord. Does that sound like a useful piece of tech that we could benefit from today? Puma seems to think so.

Puma brings the original RS-Computer design to the 2018 rendition but, thankfully, the tech is getting an upgrade. The only cable these modernised sneaks need is a USB one to charge them; instead of having to connect them to a computer to collect the information that the shoes record, they are now equipped with Bluetooth tech, so you can wirelessly connect them to your smartphone with the help of an RS-Computer app which will process all the data. To ensure that you still get that 1980s low-bit colour experience, "the app interface uses 8-bit graphics seen on original computer screens and inside the app is an 8-bit game."

Like the originals, these shoes can track the distance you traveled as well as the number of calories burned, but now the number of steps you've taken can also be recorded. The sneakers will record 30 days' worth of information which you can check out on your Android or iOS device. At the start of each month, the shoes will reset, but runners will still be able to reference all recorded data in the Monthly Statistics tab in the corresponding application.

The two buttons, a red and a black one on either side of a tiny screen atop the tech pack located on the rear of the right shoe, will respectively prompt the display of a runner's daily step target status and battery status. Why deal with checking these stats on a watch when you could bend down to see this info on the back of your ankle?

Now, if these sneaks are something you'd like to add to your shoe collection or maybe even rely on for your fitness tracking, you better act fast: only 86 will be produced in remembrance of the year that the original pair launched, each with a number one through 86 stitched into the tongue. Reports say the shoes go on sale Dec 13 for €650 (RM3,091) on Puma.com in the United States and Japan, at Kith, and in Puma stores in Harajuku, Tokyo; Carnaby Street, London; and Berlin. – AFP Relaxnews

The Star Festive Promo: Get 35% OFF Digital Access

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.02/month

Billed as RM 96.20 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Czech prime minister in favour of social media ban for under-15s
Analysis-Investors chase cheaper, smaller companies as risk aversion hits tech sector
PDRM calls for greater parental vigilance as grooming by online predators leads victims to share more CSAM content
New app helps you sit up straight while at your computer
Dispose of CDs, DVDs while protecting your data and the environment
'Just the Browser' strips AI and other features from your browser
How do I reduce my child's screen time?
Anthropic buys Super Bowl ads to slap OpenAI for selling ads in ChatGPT
Chatbot Chucky: Parents told to keep kids away from talking AI dolls
South Korean crypto firm accidentally sends $44 billion in bitcoins to users

Others Also Read