Nike’s Truly Smart Sneakers

WIRED’s Peter Rubin joins the Gadget Lab podcast to talk about his experience wearing Nike’s newest self-adjusting sneakers. Plus: Nitasha Tiku weighs in on mandatory arbitration at tech companies.

Self-lacing sneakers have been the dream since Marty McFly first rocked Nike MAGs in 1989, but most attempts at turning shoe leather into smart sneakers have been expensive, produced in small batches, and frankly, a little gimmicky. Until now: Earlier this week, Nike revealed Adapt BB, the company's latest self-lacing basketball shoe. And these actually seem ... smart. WIRED's Peter Rubin joins the Gadget Lab podcast this week to talk about what it's like to wear the new kicks, and describes all of the tech that goes into them. At $350, the Adapt BB's are a little more accessible than previous iterations, though as Peter points out, they're likely to be worn by professional athletes and Nike-backed college teams to start.

Also on this week's podcast: WIRED's Nitasha Tiku talks about a group of Googlers who have launched a public awareness campaign about mandatory arbitration agreements, arguing that employers use them to suppress workers facing harassment and discrimination.