Hardware Costs Prove Too Much for Health-Tech DePIN Project Pulse, a company that tried to build a decentralized health wearable network, has officially closedHardware Costs Prove Too Much for Health-Tech DePIN Project Pulse, a company that tried to build a decentralized health wearable network, has officially closed

Pulse DePIN health wearable shuts down, cites hardware costs and funding gap

2026/04/11 20:35
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Hardware Costs Prove Too Much for Health-Tech DePIN Project

Pulse, a company that tried to build a decentralized health wearable network, has officially closed its independent operations. The team announced they’re transitioning users to their manufacturing partner’s app, effectively ending their vision of rewarding people for sharing health data.

It’s a sobering moment for anyone watching the DePIN space. The company pointed to what they called “unforgiving” capital requirements in hardware manufacturing as the main reason for shutting down. Building physical devices, it turns out, costs real money—a lot more than launching another software token.

The DePIN Funding Problem

DePIN stands for Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks. The basic idea is using crypto incentives to get people to build and maintain real-world hardware. Think WiFi hotspots, sensors, or in Pulse’s case, health wearables.

But here’s the thing: software protocols can scale with relatively low costs. You write code, deploy it, and that’s mostly it. Hardware is different. You need to design it, test prototypes, manufacture at scale, ship products worldwide, handle returns, provide customer support. The capital expenditure—what businesses call CapEx—is enormous.

Pulse’s experience suggests there’s a funding gap in the DePIN world. Venture capital seems more interested in liquid tokens and AI projects right now. Hardware companies need patient money, not quick flips.

A Late Pivot That Couldn’t Save the Business

The Pulse team mentioned they tried to pivot toward artificial intelligence to catch the 2026 market wave. I think many companies are doing this—seeing AI as the next big thing and trying to shift direction.

But pivoting when you’re already struggling with hardware costs might be too late. The complexity of integrating AI into a failing hardware business proved too much. It’s like trying to fix a sinking ship by adding more features instead of patching the holes first.

This timing issue matters. In the current crypto cycle, projects that didn’t secure enough runway during the 2024-2025 period are hitting what some call a “liquidity wall.” Money gets tight, and without a sustainable business model beyond token speculation, companies run out of options.

What Happens to Existing Users

If you own a Pulse wearable, you have until May 14, 2026, to migrate your data to the JStylePro app. That’s their original equipment manufacturer partner. Without this transition, the devices essentially become electronic waste.

It’s a practical reminder that when Web3 projects fail, there are real-world consequences. People bought physical hardware expecting it to work, and now they need to take action to keep it functional.

Looking at the bigger picture, Pulse seems part of a pattern in crypto. Companies raise money during hype cycles, build something ambitious, but struggle to create a business that doesn’t depend entirely on token prices going up. When the market shifts or funding dries up, the hardware becomes unsustainable.

Perhaps the lesson here is that some ideas need more traditional business planning alongside the Web3 innovation. Hardware costs money—real, substantial money—and crypto incentives alone might not cover those bills. The DePIN space might need to find new funding models or focus on areas where hardware costs are lower.

For now, Pulse’s shutdown shows how difficult it is to bridge the physical and digital worlds in Web3. The vision of decentralized health data networks remains compelling, but the path to getting there seems rougher than many anticipated.

The post Pulse DePIN health wearable shuts down, cites hardware costs and funding gap appeared first on TheCryptoUpdates.

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