From Ancient Wisdom to AI: How Ayurveda and Wearables are Redefining Personalized Health in 2024
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Deepinder Goyal announced a waitlist for Temple, his experimental temple-worn wearable monitoring brain blood flow for longevity and wellness, sparking global buzz in biohacking circles as a minimalist brain health tool.[5] Meanwhile, the Oxford Biohacking Society and OxAI announced a March 1 hackathon on AI x biohacking for predictive health and personalized medicine, signaling academic momentum.[3]
No major deals, regulatory shifts, or disruptions surfaced in the last 48 hours, but consumer trends lean toward accessible AI personalization over fads, with fiber-boosted products like Poca sweetener from Hims alums tapping treat culture and fibermaxxing on social media.[7] Hair longevity serums highlight scalp care growth in a 124 billion dollar hair market by 2029.[8]
Compared to prior weeks, activity mirrors Global Wellness Summit reports on longevity at Davos and GLP-1 expansions, but leaders like CureNatural respond to data overload by adding prescriptive Ayurveda layers, while Goyal pushes experimental hardware. Supply chains remain stable, with no price changes noted; enthusiasm builds for AI-driven shifts in consumer behavior toward constitutional wellness.[1][2][5] Overall, biohacking evolves from diagnostics to actionable, heritage-fused tech in a female-led longevity pivot.[6]
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