- Oh my God, am I gonna break this shoe?
Go in there.
Okay.
(robotic humming)
Oh it, it feels me.
Nike's introducing it's second version
of it's self-lacing HyperAdapt
shoes, the Adapt BB.
And this pair is a lot more
affordable at 350 dollars,
pairs over a Bluetooth, and remembers
how tight you like your shoes.
It's a ton of technology packed
right under the arch of your foot.
People are probably going
to buy it in droves,
just like they do with
most any other Nike shoe,
but what does it mean when your shoe acts
more like gadget?
We wanted to see what they're all about,
so we're here today at Nike's
campus to try them out.
(robotic humming)
(exhales loudly)
Okay, so these are them.
This is a prototype version.
This is not the color way
they're gonna be released in,
but I've never worn these before.
I've never worn the first version either.
After all of this hype.
This is kind of hard.
Okay, that's in.
Let's see if I can press some buttons.
(robotic humming)
Ohhhhhh.
Now we're tightening.
(robotic humming)
Oooh.
It's like giving my foot a hug.
Yeah, that is much tighter.
Can you guys picture LeBron doing this
at the sidelines during the game.
Pressing down on his buttons.
Although these were neat to try on,
and unlike any other shoe I've ever worn,
I'm not convinced self-lacing
shoes are the future,
so I chatted with Nike visionary,
long time designer of the Jordan's,
and the creator behind the
self-lacing shoe concept,
Tinker Hatfield.
- I was invited into the
process of designing products
for Back to the Future II.
It just occurred to me, a
shoe that would come alive
when you touch it, and it recognizes you,
essentially adapts to you,
seemed like a very, out
there, futuristic idea,
but on the other hand, it also seemed
like it would be doable
at some point in time.
(robotic beeping and humming)
- Power laces, all right!
- [Ashley] The Back to the
Future shoe was just a prop.
There were people controlling the shoe
through strings below the floor.
Actual self-lacing shoes didn't come out
until the Nike Mag's in 2016.
Then a few months later, the
HyperAdapt 1.0's followed.
This third version refines
everything from those two shoes,
and gets the HyperAdapt
ready for a wide release.
- Such a huge amount of
effort and engineering
that went into this motor.
And it's not just the
invention of the motor,
but then' it's how it's been finalized
so we can build it for
many other people to use.
- [Ashley] This motor is key
to making the shoe mainstream.
The HyperAdapt 1.0 had
tons of cables and wires
connecting the laces, motors, and lights.
It was a tangled, delicate set-up.
Compare that to the Adapt BB,
where the shoe's technology
has been completely re-engineered
for mass manufacturing.
All the shoe needs to make it smart
is it's lacing cable and lace engine.
The cable's threaded
through the motorized spool
you see in the lace engine,
which then winds around the spool,
making the shoe tighter.
All the techy stuff is in that engine too.
Literally everything.
Of course, you don't think
about any of the tech inside
when you're wearing the shoes,
but that doesn't change the fact
that you're walking on top
of a lithium ion battery,
and a bunch of other electronics.
That's a little scary to me.
Jordan Rice, engineer of HyperAdapt,
tells me not to worry though,
and he walked me through
how the team tests the shoes
to make sure they won't explode.
- So, we've put it out in the field,
we've put it on athletes,
we've put it on NCAA athletes,
semi-pro athletes,
athletes that play professionally overseas
and come home for the summer,
and then regular athletes
playing hoops on a Thursday night.
We literally beat it
up really, really hard
right over top of the
lace engine in the shoe.
- All right, so like,
vintage HyperAdapt 2.0.
- So you mean, like,
five years down the line?
- Yeah, like five years, I
wore the hell out of mine,
but I'm ready to sell them.
- Yeah.
- 'Cause it's it's a bad example.
I can't, it doesn't matter
about the app support
or anything, it's just like,
I can't tighten the shoes
ever again, right?
- Yeah, I mean, the shoe is dependent
on this lace engine.
There's not a manual lacing method for it.
In terms of battery decay,
most of the batteries
that you see decay in
your normal devices do so
because they're being charged
and discharged every day.
And so, you have a
certain number of cycles.
You go through 365 of those
on your phone in a year.
It would take you a very long time,
at 10 to 14 days battery life,
to go through 365 on these.
- [Ashley] Jordan thinks
the shoe isn't going to die
anytime soon.
And anyway, the shoe is smart enough
that it will always save
enough battery to unlace.
Worst case scenario though,
you can check your battery
life through the app,
and control some other things.
- Pair it over Bluetooth,
and then it'll do a quick
tighten, loosen on your feet
to sense, kind of, the optimal setting.
Once you have a setting you like,
you can also set a mode and save it.
- Self-lacing shoes are
a really interesting idea
that anyone who geeks
out on tech or sneakers
will probably want to try.
Personally, I'm not going to
rush out to buy these shoes,
because I'm not a sneakerhead,
and I'm not a basketball player.
These just aren't the right
shoes for me right now.
But Nike really seems to
believe these are the future.
- We've learned how to
make shoes a lot better,
so they don't stretch as much,
but they want a, everybody
wants fresh, new shoes
all the time.
Our next goal will be to make this
in more colors and more styles.
If somebody switched shoes,
we would like them to...
And they would probably like
to switch to another shoe
that has the same technology in it.
- Nike clearly has grander
plans for this technology,
and you can even see
hints of it in the name.
Adapt BB stands for adapt basketball,
so in the future, a different kind of shoe
might have a different
name, like a running shoe
might be Adapt R, or something like that.
But even if this adaptive fit technology
doesn't take off, it's
not the end of the world.
Nike will go on and so will laces.
- And we'll make sure that
there's still cool shoes,
even 20 years from now that have laces.
Can we shake on that?
- Yeah, we'll hold you to it.
- Hold me to it if I'm still kicking.
- (laughs) Oh my gosh.
Dark note to end on.
- Oh, dark, yes.
- Hey, thanks for going
on this self-lacing journey with me.
Tell me in the comments,
do you want to wirelessly
charge your shoes?
Do you hate tying your shoes?
Lemme know.
And as always, stay locked to The Verge
for all the future tech
content you'll ever need.
