nike free shoes america

404 - File or directory not found. The resource you are looking for might have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable. NEW YORK—I just got to try on new Nikes that I never have to lace up, the futuristic sneaks Nike has been talking about for years. Unveiled to much hoopla at a New York event Wednesday, Nike HyperAdapt 1.0 has power-operated laces. As soon as you step into a pair — as if they were slip ons —and press a "+" button, the laces tighten. The shoe even lights up. The new shoe was unveiled by Nike CEO Mark Parker, along with a raft of other technologies. They're expected out by the holiday season, but Nike hasn't announced pricing yet. Nike says the new shoe is "powered by an underfoot-lacing mechanism" — think tiny motor — and it "proposes a groundbreaking solution to individual idiosyncrasies in lacing." In other words, if your shoe laces frequently come untied, these have you covered. Nike has been talking about its self-tying shoes for over two years (and actually working on this technology for ten years).

Movie-goers have been anticipating them for even longer: Marty McFly, the time-warped teenager played by Michael J. Fox in Back to the Future Part II, famously had self-tying shoes. Nike expects the shoe to come in various sizes and for multi-purposes. The size 10 shoes I got to wear briefly at the event indeed felt snug once I pushed the + button. When I was ready to pull them off, I pressed a "--" (minus) button and the fit relaxed making them easy to pull off. .@edbaig tries on the new @Nike HyperAdapt Trainer 1.0.
nike shoes with fabric — Hadley Malcolm (@hadleypdxdc) March 16, 2016
white nike shoes australia The shoes are battery operated and use an inductive charge system and magnetic cup.
best women's shoes for running and lifting

It takes about three hours for a full charge. Nike says with average use you'll have to charge the battery every couple of weeks. A lighting system lets you know when you'll need to charge it. Which raised the question, what if the battery dies when you are ready to pull them off? Nike says you can easily pull them off as a low top shoe. At the event, Nike also unveiled a new version of the Nike + app, slated to launch in June, aimed at combining its Nike Training Club, Nike Running Club and retail apps into one, more personalized experience.
best-way-tie-your-running-shoesUsers will be able to shop, be notified of local Nike events and have access to personalized training programs and "on-demand coaching."
sports shoes sale in melbourneThe app experience differs based on a user's location, clothing and shoe sizes, and sport and lifestyle preferences, which they are prompted to enter when first setting up the app.
what are the best nike walking shoes

"Athletes want more than a dashboard," Parker said at the event. "They want a relationship." Contributing: AP and Hadley Malcolm Nike to unveil 'Back to the Future' self-tying power laces in 2015Nike's again using bright Flyknit footwear to anchor its medal stand looks, selecting this Free RN Flyknit colorway for Olympians to wear for Rio 2016. Per the brand's info on Olympic looks for August, Brazilian and American athletes should don these when accepting their hardware. The selection is not unlike the medal stand shoe for the 2012 Olympics in London, the volt/black Nike Flyknit Trainer. While these images are of the retail version of the shoe, it's possible that athlete exclusive ones with slight modifications will be worn at the games–that was the case for the aforementioned Flyknit Trainer. The Nike Free RN Flyknit pictured releases on Aug. 6.Nike Unveils Innovative Team USA Olympic Track Gear With the U.S. Olympic Trials track and field championships July 1-10 in Eugene, Ore., and the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games themselves a little more than a month away, Nike took the occasion to roll out innovative new shoes and apparel at its Ultimate Innovation press unveiling in New York City on June 28.

The photo gallery below highlights some of the gear and innovations Nike elite athletes and the U.S. Olympic track and field team will be wearing this summer. RELATED: Inspired Gear for a Summer of Speed and Celebration RELATED: More about Nike’s AeroSwift Technology 2016 Nike Team USA Gear The Olympic track uniforms continue the basically single color scheme of recent years, albeit with several shades of blue in subtle horizontal stripes, prompting four-time Olympian Jackie Joyner-Kersee, who was in Manhattan for the event, to say, “I wish we’d get some red and white in there too – after all, that’s our flag’s colors!” (In this photo, sprinter Allyson Felix wearing a Nike Vapor track and field kit with Nike AeroSwift technology and Nike Zoom Superfly Flyknit spikes.) Photo: Courtesy of Nike The Team USA uniforms do include tiny flecks of red, but these are not justShown here in a black prototype, the tiny triangular spikes are called AeroBlades, and vary in size and density depending on their location on the uniform, and are intended

to reduce aerodynamic drag or wind resistance. Nike also created adhesive tape strips with AeroBlades that athletes can affix directly to their bodies in the areas known to produce the highest wind resistance. Nike arrived at the shape of the silicone-based blades by using a 3-D printer to build prototypes and testing hundreds of different shapes in a wind tunnel. (In this picture, hurdler Omar McLeod wears Nike AeroSwfit Tape during a race at the 2016 Prefontaine Classic in May.) Also unveiled were new sunglasses called the Nike Wing. feature a single-piece, hinge-less lens designed to reduce drag, weight four grams less than traditional eyewear, and only allow red light through, which Nike says provides a calming effect to the runner. The main focus of Nike's unveiling, however, was the shoes, and the new technology designed to make the athletes who wear them faster. A large display of models for every discipline of track and field—from the 100-meter dash to the marathon and long jump to pole vault—held center stage in one of the rooms at the Studio 45 event space, and the neon yellow

shoes, with pink highlights, were impossible to miss. It’s quite likely those fluorescent shoes may be crossing the finish line first in Eugene and Rio as well if the new technology they incorporate pays off, according to Brett Schoolmeester, Nike’s running“We started with the sprints,” he said. “We hadn’t updated our sprint line in several years, and what we learned is that athletes’ feet need to become very rigid to propel them faster. Our goal was to make our spike plates even stiffer but at the same time not increase their The marquee shoe of the bunch is the Nike Zoom Superfly spikes made for sprinters. By using a design algorithm Nike came up with a honeycomb design which is often seen in nature, Schoolmeester said. It’s allowed Nike to create the spike plate of the shoe to be four times stiffer and half the weight of its previous spike plates. And that's just a part of the innovative design of this shoe, Schoolmeester says.