Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Canadian Entrepreneur Enters Hands-Free Hoverboard Market Engulfed In Patent War

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Sep, 2015 11:02 AM
    A Canadian entrepreneur is stepping into a fierce global patent war as he begins to sell a hands-free "hoverboard" he believes will revolutionalize urban transportation.
     
    Darren Pereira's Huuver company has begun to sell online its brand of self-balancing electric boards called Uuboard (the first two vowels of both names have umlauts). A Toronto dealership is in the works.
     
    The colourful units that travel up to about 10 km/h have motors that are propelled by movements detected from sensors near the feet.
     
    "I think it's going to change the way we move," Pereira said in an interview from Toronto.
     
    Two gyroscopes are so sensitive they detect small shifts in balance. Lean forward and the device moves forward. Lean back and it reverses. Move to the right and it turns that way.
     
    The technology — described by some as mini-Segways without the poles — has drawn the ire of the New Hampshire-based company that first introduced its self-balancing personal vehicle in 2001.
     
    The subsidiary of China's Ninebot technology last week filed suit in Delaware for patent infringement against Inventist Inc., a Washington state company that sells transportation devices, including Hovertrax and Solowheel.
     
    Ninebot said its second-generation units, launched in 2006, included patented LeanStar technology.
     
    Inventist, however, said it has its own patents for "a two-wheel, self-balancing vehicle with independently movable foot placement sections."
     
    It filed suit against Ninebot in China, and last June against Soibatian Corporation for their product, the IO Hawk. Billionaire Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban then partnered with Inventist's founder, adding firepower to the effort to go after alleged copycats.
     
    Pereira, however, says the legal battles won't deter him from pursuing this business opportunity.
     
    "They could go after me but I'm about pushing public transportation," he said.
     
    Several Chinese factories pump out thousands of units a day under various names including Oxboard, Cyboard, Future Foot, Monorover, Airboard, Freego, Esway and Overoad.
     
    The Uuboard sells for $949 and comes with a one-year warranty, but rival products are available for between about $600 and US$1,800. Huuver's Chinese supplier, Cube Electronics Tech, said on its website they can be purchased directly for up to US$200.
     
    While the various models look alike and carry similar features, Pereira said they're not identical. Some are a little slower, sluggish and less durable, he said.
     
    Pereira said the Uuboard can work up to nine hours on a 135-minute charge. Weighing 22 pounds, it can carry people between 50 and 350 pounds.
     
    The hoverboards can be used on urban bike lanes and sidewalks, but Pereira said he's been asked to put it away at a Blue Jays game and in some shopping malls.
     
    Despite its US$1,800 price tag, the IO Hawk has had trouble keeping up with demand since it entered the U.S. market in February and attracted the attention of celebrities and athletes.
     
    Justin Bieber, NBA all-star Stephen Curry, actor Jamie Foxx and Kendall Jenner have all been seen using the device or a slightly cheaper brand, PhunkeeDuck.
     
    Rapper Wiz Khalifa was in the news recently when he claimed to be arrested at the Los Angeles airport for riding the device he called a "hoverboard" even though it has wheels that firmly touched the ground.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    When WhatsApping becomes a secret!

    When WhatsApping becomes a secret!
    Don't want to let your friends know whether you have read their latest WhatsApp posting - especially ones who get angry soon?

    When WhatsApping becomes a secret!

    Now, see how your child would age

    Now, see how your child would age
    Do you often play guessing games at home how would your child look like when he/she grows old? Well, ask a computer and you can see how your child would age!

    Now, see how your child would age

    After diabetes, Google Glass sets eyes on Parkinson's

    After diabetes, Google Glass sets eyes on Parkinson's
    After unveiling a smart contact lens that monitors glucose levels in tears in January, Google is now working on to support people with Parkinson's disease - via Google Glass, it much-anticipated wearable device to be launched later this year.

    After diabetes, Google Glass sets eyes on Parkinson's

    Intimacy 2.0: This dress goes transparent as you are turned on!

    Intimacy 2.0: This dress goes transparent as you are turned on!
    Wear this dress very, very carefully as it goes transparent the moment you are sexually aroused. Aptly named 'Intimacy 2.0', the dress gets transparent when the wearer is aroused.

    Intimacy 2.0: This dress goes transparent as you are turned on!

    Coming Soon, 'touch' secure smart phones, tabs

    Coming Soon, 'touch' secure smart phones, tabs
    Afraid of losing important data saved in your smart phone or tablet? Not to worry any more as researchers - including an Indian-American scientist - from the Georgia Institute of Technology have gone a step further from passwords, gestures or fingerprint scans.

    Coming Soon, 'touch' secure smart phones, tabs

    'Australia' discovered on Mars!

    'Australia' discovered on Mars!
    This is just another example of Martian pareidolia - a psychological phenomenon that tricks your brain into seeing familiar objects in apparently random shapes - but the similarity is uncanny.

    'Australia' discovered on Mars!