Wearable Devices is an early-stage Israeli company developing wrist-worn neural input devices under the "Mudra" brand. The core technology uses a wristband worn near the inner wrist to detect bioelectrical signals from nerve bundles beneath the skin, translating those signals into gesture-based commands that let users control digital devices through subtle finger movements — without touching a screen. The company sells two consumer products: the Mudra Band, an aftermarket band for Apple Watch enabling touchless gesture control across Apple devices, and the Mudra Link, a standalone wristband compatible with any Bluetooth device, including smart glasses and computers. On the B2B side, Wearable Devices sells development kits to consumer electronics companies, industrial firms, game studios, and academic institutions evaluating neural input for their own products. The company's long-term ambition is to license its sensor hardware and software stack to consumer electronics manufacturers for integration into their own wrist-worn devices, collecting a fixed annual license fee plus per-unit royalties — though no licensing agreement has been signed yet. For industrial customers, the intended model is SaaS, and for consumer electronics brands, it involves bulk purchase orders. The company recently launched Mudra Experience Studio, a developer platform providing SDKs and APIs for third-party developers and OEMs. Manufacturing is outsourced to contract manufacturers in Asia and Israel. The company remains deeply pre-profitability, with R&D spending far exceeding revenue as it works toward its first licensing deal.
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