bodynet

English

Etymology

From body + net, in the sense of network.

Noun

bodynet (plural bodynets)

  1. (science fiction) An array of technology attached to the body.
    • 1996, William J. Mitchell, City of bits: space, place, and the infobahn:
      Think of yourself on some evening in the not-so-distant future, when wearable, fitted, and implanted electronic organs connected by bodynets are as commonplace as cotton []
    • 1998, John Beckmann, The virtual dimension: architecture, representation, and crash culture:
      A cathedral of light, if you will, of prefabricated carbon-fiber and lightweight synthetic thermal resins; equipped with stereo-immersive walls and motion sensors that respond via a bodynet to my ever shifting loci of desires and needs []
    • 2008, Julio Francisco Dantas de Rezende, Transpersonal Management: lessons from the Matrix trilogy:
      With this technology, in the near future, people can participate in parties without leaving the house, needing only to dress in a bodynet (clothe[sic] with sensors).
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