How Wearable and Portable Tech Is Reshaping the Outdoor Recreation Industry

The outdoor recreation industry has always been shaped by equipment innovation – better materials, lighter frames, more durable construction.

But the integration of wearable and portable technology into outdoor pursuits over the last decade represents something different in kind, not just degree. It’s changed what people can do outdoors, how they do it, and how they understand and share the experience afterward.

Cameras and the Documentation of Experience

The shift in how outdoor adventures are recorded and shared has been dramatic. Where photographers once needed heavy, dedicated equipment to document serious outdoor pursuits, action cameras now deliver high-resolution footage in a package small enough to mount on a helmet, a chest harness, or the end of a pole.

This has changed recreational culture as much as technology. Documenting a climb, a ski run, or a mountain bike descent has become a normal part of the activity for many participants, not an afterthought.

The footage serves personal memory, skills analysis, and increasingly a social function – trail communities, climbing clubs, and ski touring groups share footage in ways that build connections and attract new participants to the sport.

GPS and Navigation Technology

Dedicated GPS devices and GPS-enabled smartwatches have substantially reduced the barrier to entry for navigating complex terrain.

Apps like Gaia GPS and Komoot, combined with cellular and satellite-connected watches, give recreational users access to detailed topographic mapping that previously required significant expertise to interpret and use.

This democratization of navigation has real benefits: more people can explore more complex terrain with greater confidence. However, it also creates risk if users rely on devices without developing underlying navigation skills.

Battery failure, hardware damage, and signal loss in complex terrain remain real vulnerabilities, and experienced outdoor instructors consistently argue that map and compass skills remain essential regardless of what technology someone carries.

Fitness and Health Tracking

Wearable fitness technology – smartwatches, heart rate monitors, and GPS running watches – has transformed how outdoor athletes train and recover. The ability to track elevation gain, heart rate zones, sleep quality, and training load in real time gives recreational athletes access to data that was once the exclusive domain of professional sports programs.

There are now products specifically designed for outdoor use, with multi-day battery life, barometric altimeters, and dedicated activity profiles for skiing, trail running, mountaineering, and more.

The data these devices generate has helped many recreational athletes train more intelligently, reduce injury risk, and hit performance goals that once seemed out of reach.

Safety Technology

Perhaps the most consequential development in outdoor portable tech has been in safety. Satellite communicators like the Garmin inReach and SPOT devices allow backcountry users to send GPS coordinates and emergency alerts from anywhere on the planet, regardless of cellular coverage.

In genuinely remote terrain, these devices have saved lives in situations where traditional emergency contact systems would have failed.

How Tech Is Expanding Who Goes Outdoors

One underappreciated effect of portable and wearable technology is its role in expanding who participates in outdoor recreation. Navigation apps with detailed trail information, fitness trackers that make progress visible and motivating, and cameras that allow people to share their experiences have all lowered the psychological and practical barriers to getting started.

First-generation outdoor participants – people who didn’t grow up in families that hiked, climbed, or skied – often cite digital tools as part of what made outdoor activity feel accessible.

The social dimension is particularly significant: being able to share footage and connect with communities online creates a sense of belonging that encourages continued participation.

The Balance Between Technology and Skill

The outdoor recreation industry has had ongoing debates about the appropriate role of technology in traditionally skills-based pursuits. Guide associations, mountain rescue organizations, and outdoor educators generally take the position that technology supplements but should not substitute for fundamental skills and judgment.

This is a reasonable position. A GPS watch doesn’t replace the ability to read terrain. A satellite communicator doesn’t substitute for the decision-making that avoids the need for a rescue in the first place.

The most effective outdoor participants use technology to enhance their capability, not to bypass the process of developing genuine competence.

What Comes Next

The trajectory of wearable and portable tech in outdoor recreation points toward greater integration, longer battery life, and more sophisticated data analysis. AI-assisted route planning, real-time weather overlays, and health monitoring systems that flag early signs of altitude sickness or heat stress are all areas where development is actively ongoing.

The outdoor industry has always found ways to absorb new technology while maintaining the essential character of being outside, moving through terrain, and testing yourself against the environment. That balance seems likely to hold, even as the devices themselves continue to evolve.

A Sport Still Defined by the People in It

Technology has genuinely changed outdoor recreation, and mostly for the better. It has made activity more accessible, more safe, and more connected to broader communities of practice.

But the qualities that draw people outdoors – challenge, solitude, physical effort, and the particular satisfaction of moving through landscapes under your own power – remain fundamentally unchanged. The gear is better. The human experience it supports is the same one it’s always been.

 

How do emergency services navigate complex indoor spaces during critical situations?

When smoke fills a stairwell or a crowd surges toward a locked exit, seconds decide outcomes, and indoor navigation becomes as critical as the siren outside. Recent high rise fires, large venue evacuations, and more frequent multi agency drills have pushed emergency services to modernize how they move inside complex sites. The challenge is immediate: GPS weakens indoors, signage disappears in darkness, and even familiar buildings turn hostile when alarms, debris, and panic reshape every corridor.

When every second counts

Could you pick the right stairwell first? Firefighters and paramedics often enter with incomplete information, and they must choose routes quickly while heat, noise, and stress distort judgment. Dispatchers start with pre incident plans, verified access points, known hazards, and on site contact numbers, then they push that package to vehicle terminals and command tablets, so crews do not waste minutes hunting for a service entrance. Teams confirm their entry point on arrival, and they report changes fast, because a locked fire door or a disabled elevator can reroute the entire operation.

Radio remains essential, yet modern responses add structured data so teams do not rely on memory under pressure. Many services conduct surveys before emergencies occur, and they store hydrant locations, standpipe connections, sprinkler control valves, elevator overrides, and rooftop access routes in shared systems that supervisors can update after renovations. Incident commanders assign sectors, track who advances where, and enforce accountability checks at set intervals, because losing a crew inside a maze multiplies risk for everyone.

Maps that work indoors

How do you map a building you cannot see? Indoor mapping platforms convert architectural plans into navigable layers, with rooms, stair cores, restricted zones, and critical equipment marked clearly for operational use, rather than for a glossy brochure. Responders use those layers to plan approach routes, identify alternate exits, and avoid dead ends that trap teams when fire spreads or structural damage blocks corridors. When renovations change layouts, updated mapping prevents crews from sprinting toward a door that no longer exists, and it helps commanders choose safer paths as conditions evolve.

The best tools respect emergency constraints: they load fast, they work offline, and they present simple symbology that stays legible in low light or on a shaking screen. A crew leader can open a floor, tap a stairwell, and share a route to a teammate entering from another side, which keeps teams aligned even when they cannot meet face to face. Platforms such as Visioglobe.com show how indoor maps, routing logic, and searchable points of interest can merge into a single operational view, so navigation stays usable when voice instructions and visibility fail at once.

Finding people fast

What if the victim cannot call out? Locating occupants and responders often depends on indoor positioning, because GPS fades indoors and raw radio signal strength can mislead in steel heavy environments where reflections bounce signals into false confidence. Wi Fi and Bluetooth can estimate location using existing infrastructure, while Ultra Wideband can deliver higher precision in selected zones, and inertial sensors can bridge short gaps when signals drop in stairwells or underground corridors. Agencies rarely bet on one method, and they fuse inputs to stabilize results when smoke, moving crowds, and radio congestion turn clean diagrams into messy reality.

Finding people also means tracking teams, and that is where procedures and devices meet. Some departments use wearable tags or telemetry systems that log entry time, assignment, and last known position, while commanders monitor air supply limits and set check in points that prevent silent drift into danger. Venues can help by sharing live building data, such as elevator outages, access control status, and door sensor alerts, because a locked gate can funnel evacuees into a bottleneck and trap responders behind them.

What venues can do next

Book an indoor mapping and safety audit, then set a budget for updates, device replacement, and drills that keep crews fluent. Prioritize basements, plant rooms, and long corridors, and test offline access during exercises. Look for safety grants, smart city funds, and resilience aid to cover part of the rollout.

Garmin launches new products in its outdoor and golf ranges

Garmin has had another bumper launch day, with new products across its smartwatch, golf and outdoor ranges. The launch features the first ever dedicated golf watch for juniors, Approach J1, in addition to a Cerakote Edition of the much-loved tactix 8 which brings even more style, substance and sophistication to the very capable smartwatch.

Additionally, Garmin is launching the Approach G82 golf launch monitor and handheld plus Xero L60i, the first and only laser rangefinder with onboard map-based GPS navigational capabilities and a high resolution, multi-colour display perfect for wildlife and nature enthusiasts.

tactix 8 – Cerakote edition

  • Premium Cerakote coating offers long-lasting durability and a unique and rugged look
  • Ceramic-polymer composite coating is popular for its abrasion, corrosion and chemical resistance properties
  • The coating is sprayed onto each smartwatch, then baked to help cure the coating, providing a unique look and feel that becomes more refined as the watch is worn
  • Features a stunning 1.4-inch AMOLED display, titanium bezel, sapphire lens and built-in LED flashlight for after-dark visibility
  • Boasts Garmin’s suite of dedicated tactical, performance, navigation and connected features, like a jumpmaster activity, Stealth Mode, 40-meter dive rating, 24/7 health monitoring, TopoActive maps, multi-band GPS with SatIQ technology, built-in speaker, Garmin Pay and more
  • Available in two different Cerakote coatings: slate grab or olive drab
  • Price: £1,379.99 // // €1,599.99

Approach J1

 

  • The Approach J1 is the first GPS golf watch purpose-built to help youth golfers learning the game play with confidence and track their performance.
  • The watch is packed with innovative features like tee-off guidance, personal par and pace-of-play timer to help young golfers get to know the game.
  • Innovative concepts also help young players make informed decisions on club selection, while the experience can be customised as the golfer progresses.
  • Designed to go virtually unnoticed during a golf swing, the Approach J1 features a bright, 1.2-inch AMOLED touchscreen display and is available with either a cloud blue or lilac metal bezel and a ComfortFit fabric strap.
  • The Approach J1’s water-resistant design allows users to play through light rain and wind, while the smartwatch boasts up to 15 hours of battery life in GPS mode.
  • Price: £309.99 // €349.99

 

Xero L60i

  • GNSS-enabled rangefinding monocular combines premium optics with advanced technology and state-of-the-art sensors for an unparalleled rangefinding experience.
  • The first and only laser rangefinder with onboard map-based GPS navigational capabilities and a high resolution, multi-color display overlaid into superior optics.
  • Features fully multicoated, low-dispersion glass, which provides razor-sharp optics with a flat field of view, accurate color fidelity and superior light transmission.
  • Ranges targets out to 3,600 meters through 7X magnification.
  • IPX7 water-resistance rating and runs on two AAA lithium batteries.
  • Price: £2,179.99 // €2,499.99. 

Approach G82

  • The Approach G82 is a seamless golf tool with expanded radar metrics that help golfers dial in their swing and introduces putting metrics to help improve consistency on the green.
  • Players can easily view detailed information on the large, 5-inch high-resolution touchscreen, while Garmin Golf users can get even more course details with aerial imagery.
  • The ultimate warmup tool, the Approach G82 includes several features to help golfers prepare for their next round.
  • The Approach G82 is also designed to give golfers an edge with on-the-course information to help them make informed decisions during the round.
  • Designed with all types of weather in mind, the Approach G82 is built with an IPX7 water rating, while users can get up to 25 hours of battery life in GPS mode and up to eight hours in radar mode.
  • Price: £519.99 // €599.99

Esri launches interactive map of festive events in Ireland

Esri Ireland, the market leader in Geographic Information Systems (GIS), has announced the launch of a digital map of fun-filled events happening around Ireland this festive season.

The interactive, easy-to-use StoryMap will help yuletide revellers to navigate what’s on across the island of Ireland this Christmas. From markets and festivals to light shows and ice-skating, there is something to suit all ages and interests.

The festive map includes a Web App enabling the public to search for events by county and location, to make planning your festive adventures even easier.

Esri Ireland specialises in the application of geographic information systems, helping customers record where things happen and analyse why, with the aim of providing insight and helping them to make better decisions.

As Esri’s official point of presence in Ireland and Northern Ireland it has, since 2002, partnered with both the public and private sector to help them understand the impact of geography on their business.

Recognised as one of the Best Workplaces in Ireland, Esri Ireland is part of the Esri Global Network, a billion-dollar privately held software company with nearly 10,000 employees worldwide. www.esri-ireland.ie

In Finland, smart collars and satellite positioning put every reindeer on the map

For some, Finland conjures up magical images of Lapland, the Northern Lights, Santa Claus and reindeer. Others know Finland as an innovative powerhouse of telecoms and digital technology. Now, a creative innovation from Elisa is bringing both these views together, utilising satellite-based positioning and smart technology to make the daily work of reindeer herders significantly easier and improve the animals’ welfare.

In Finland, reindeer are a normal part of life – a typical herd animal and an important source of livelihood for many people in the wild north of the country. A single reindeer farm can own hundreds of reindeer, which roam freely over vast areas across the frozen landscape in search of food. In the past, tracking their herds required farmers to travel long distances and to have a profound understanding of nature and the local conditions.

Now, Elisa has launched a reindeer tracking service developed in close collaboration with reindeer herders themselves. The system utilises the excellent coverage of Elisa’s mobile network and the Internet of Things to provide precise, real-time data about the location and welfare of each and every reindeer in a farmer’s herd, freeing up a significant amount of time for herders.

A simple yet sophisticated solution

The concept behind the service is simple: a collar with a positioning device is attached to the reindeer’s neck. The collar is designed so that it does not disturb the reindeer. Reindeer herders can monitor the movements and welfare of their herds via an app on their phone or computer, making it easy to follow where their animals are and making their work significantly easier.

“For example, rounding up reindeer from across the wilderness and sorting them or marking and tagging the calves has always been very time-consuming and laborious work. If you know the exact location of each individual reindeer, the work becomes considerably quicker and easier”, explains Markus Ahokangas, Elisa’s Regional Director for northern Finland. “Reindeer also sometimes get trapped in deep snow or by thin ice, and they can get injured by predators or road traffic. This system sends out alerts in real time if an animal’s situation changes, making it much easier for herders to rescue their animals. Without these devices, many of these animals would be trapped in the wilderness with little chance of help.”

Elisa provides the entire solution – positioning device, app and subscription – making it simple to acquire the system and roll it out across the herd.

Similar solutions have been tried before, but the new service takes advantage of the excellent coverage and connectivity of Elisa’s network, which is crucial in the challenging conditions that prevail in Lapland. As reindeer do not respect national borders and will wander between Finland, Norway and Sweden, the system has versatile map views that cover Finland’s neighbours as well.

Developed with reindeer herders to meet real-world needs in challenging conditions

The service has been developed through two years of close collaboration with around 20 reindeer herders in Finland, Sweden, and Norway in real usage environments – the fells, forests and wilderness of Lapland. The aim of the thorough development work was to meet the actual needs that reindeer farmers have, and the system is available to herders in Sweden and Norway as well.

“Our system utilises the latest technology and up to 130 positioning satellites to make sure that location tracking is accurate and extremely precise. Battery life was a core factor in the development of the system, and for example, herders can adjust how frequently the collars send updates to optimise the batteries’ power use and make sure they last throughout the season”, says Jale Naskali, who is responsible for IoT solutions at Elisa.

Reindeer herders have been enthusiastically signing up for the service since its launch in the autumn, with advance sales of hundreds of devices to dozens of customers.

“In Finland alone, there are around 6,000 reindeer herders with about 200,000 reindeer, so there’s a lot of room for growth. We are actively seeking feedback from users to help us in continuing to develop the service. We’re already planning changes and improvements to the map views based on what herders have told us”, says Ahokangas.

With real-time location tracking, reindeer herders can monitor their animals across the vast Arctic landscapes, improving safety and efficiency like never before. Now Santa will always know where Rudolph is.

Digital map charts 1,800 Culture Night events across Ireland

Esri Ireland, the market leader in Geographic Information Systems (GIS), today announces that The Arts Council has used Esri’s technology to create a digital map of events happening around Ireland for Culture Night 2025 – which falls tonight, Friday 19th September.

The interactive, easy-to-use map will chart your cultural course and help you to navigate over 1,800 free events taking place across the island of Ireland. From music, theatre, and comedy to poetry readings, walking tours, and puppet workshops, there is something for all ages and interests on the 2025 programme.

The Arts Council has created a digital map of events happening around Ireland for Culture Night 2025 using Esri’s technology

The Culture Night digital map allows you to search for events by county, location, venue, and event name. It also allows you to search by start time, age suitability, and accessibility.

The event’s 20th edition, Culture Night celebrates the richness and diversity of culture in Ireland today.

Dublin City Council Launch ‘DiscovAR Dublin’ – Ireland’s First Augmented Reality Map

Dublin City Council has today announced the launch of a new augmented-reality (AR) mapping feature that allows users of the Dublin Discovery Trails app to open up a 3D map of Dublin on their device and allow them to explore the city in a new, innovative way.

‘DiscovAR Dublin’ is a first for Ireland in utilising new open Google Maps technology to form an interactive 3D map where users can be transported into the city to interact with the map to uncover Dublin landmarks, museums and attractions. Users can also learn more about the history and significance of locations such as the Guinness Storehouse, EPIC – the Irish Emigration Museum and 14 Henrietta Street.

The project is a collaboration between the Dublin City Council, Smart Dublin and Virgin Media Business alongside Peel X, who developed the feature for the Dublin Discovery Trails app.

Launched last year, the app is a platform on which the Dublin local authorities can develop new and exciting immersive experiences combining the real-world history with smart technologies. Already there are unique experiences published including Doors into Docklands, Balbriggan and Castleknock heritage tours.

Lord Mayor of Dublin, Daithí de Róiste, launching this exciting new feature said, “This is first for Ireland, the user can ‘literally’ step into the city from anywhere in the world and explore Dublin in the palm of their hand. This innovative technology will help further position Dublin as a world-class destination with this new experience. I’m delighted to launch DiscovAR here today and I’d encourage everyone to download the app and try it today to explore the best of what Dublin has to offer.”

Tourists and locals alike can use the app before they visit the city, or while they are in the city with the vision that it will assist users to learn more about Dublin and its extensive history, sights, monuments and streets across the capital city.

Also commenting on the launch of ‘DiscovAR Dublin’, Jamie Cudden, Smart City Lead, Dublin City Council said, “DiscovAR offers a new way for visitors and locals to experience the capital city. Through our Smart Dublin programme, we are always thinking about how we can embrace new technologies to enhance how people engage with our Capital City. This app through its immersive AR technology is a new and fun way to explore the City’s culture and history and we see huge potential to expand this.”

The Dublin Discovery Trail app is part of a larger Smart Tourism strategy to invest in digital to transform Dublin’s tourism experience for how we tell the story and history of the city and was developed as part of the new Dublin City Council Tourism Strategy 2023-2028 – Innovation Pillar. Using new and immersive technologies, such as augmented reality, will help further position Dublin as a world-class tourism destination with this new digital experience and allow for further unique and tailored customer experiences that will keep the city relevant for tourists.

For more information on ‘DiscovAR’ and to download the app visit http://dublindiscoverytrails.com or search Dublin Discovery Trails on Apple App Store or Google Play..

Esri Ireland map celebrates history of Pride in Ireland

Esri Ireland, the market leader in Geographic Information Systems (GIS), has created an LGBTQ+ Pride Month digital StoryMap. The map highlights ‘The History of Pride in Ireland’ and features a full schedule of Pride celebrations across the country that will last all summer long.

Using the interactive map, developed with Esri’s ArcGIS digital mapping system, embark on a captivating journey that follows the story of the LGBTQ+ community in Ireland. Discover pivotal historical moments, significant locations, and transformative events that sparked a profound societal shift towards a more diverse and inclusive Ireland. The map also features LGBTQ+ Resource Centres that offer support, guidance, and meetups across the island of Ireland.

As citizens from every corner of the country prepare to unite in a radiant display of rainbow hues, the Summer of Pride Map is your guide to the vibrant tapestry of Pride festivals and parades that are happening around Ireland. This year, the iconic Dublin Pride Festival (19th – 25th June) celebrates the 40th anniversary of the first Dublin Pride Parade. From Belfast to Galway to Cork there will be theatre, live music, quiz nights, rock & roll bingo, parades, and more. To top it all off, this year Laois is making history with its first-ever Pride Festival on September 14-17th.

Esri Ireland’s interactive map celebrates Pride in Ireland

Esri Ireland, the market leader in Geographic Information Systems (GIS), today reveals its interactive StoryMap, ‘The History of Pride in Ireland’, in celebration of this year’s LGBTQ+ Pride Month (1st-30th June).

Built using Esri’s ArcGIS digital mapping system, the map visualises the journey of the LGBTQ+ community in Ireland, including major historical dates, locations and events which defined the movement towards a more diverse and inclusive Ireland.

It guides people through the years, from the annual picnics in Merrion Square during the 1970s to raise awareness of the Stonewall Riots, to the legalisation of same-sex marriage in both Ireland and Northern Ireland in more recent years.

The map also highlights this year’s Dublin Pride Festival (22nd-28th June) and the 2022 Dublin Pride Parade (25th June) – returning as an in-person event for the first time since 2019 – as well as other activities happening in Belfast, Cork, Derry, Limerick and Mayo.

Link for map