What aspect was often overlooked in the early wearable computers developed from the 1960s and 1970s?

Answer

The user's long-term physical well-being caused by wearing the apparatus.

The early wearable computers, stemming from academic and military research in the 1960s and 1970s, were primarily feats of engineering focused on demonstrating computational capability or augmenting senses. These apparatuses, while technologically groundbreaking, were frequently bulky and highly specialized. Because the primary goal was often to make the technology function—to *do* something, such as process data—the secondary effect of *wearing* that specialized, often heavy or poorly balanced technology for many hours each day was frequently secondary or overlooked. This contrasts sharply with ergonomic wearables, where minimizing physical consequence and ensuring long-term comfort are core requirements.

What aspect was often overlooked in the early wearable computers developed from the 1960s and 1970s?
inventiontechnologywearableergonomic