- A number of companies are marketing waterproofing technologies designed to protect consumer electronic devices, “an endeavor that may revolutionize the mobile market,” suggests Mobiledia.
- P2i, HzO, and Liquipel are companies competing to bring their water-repellent technologies to portable devices such as phones and laptops.
- P2i waterproofs by spraying devices with chemicals, placing them in a vacuum chamber, and then pulsing electronic currents through the chamber. This bonds the waterproofing chemical “to every atom on the phone’s surface.”
- HzO coats a phone’s internal components and claims to protect submerged phones for longer than the P2i process. “Our coating is thicker, building layers on top of each other and providing a protection that can endure underwater for extended periods of time,” claims HzO president Paul Clayson.
- California-based start-up Liquipel (which ETCentric reported on during CES), waterproofs phones at a cost of $60 per device. “Liquipel is reportedly negotiating a contract with Fujitsu to coat its upcoming tablets and phones, as the company aims to expand its mail-in business,” reports Mobiledia.
- As of now, external cases dominate the market, but off-the-shelf waterproofing techniques could have numerous applications and could make other products obsolete.
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