BeBionic teases advanced bionic hand, Terminator 5 now has a prop supplier (video)

It won’t officially launch until May, but we’re already guessing that the folks over at DaVinci are casting quizzical glances towards BeBionic. The UK-based outfit is teasing what it calls the “next generation of fully articulated myo-electric hands,” which are said to provide “a range of naturally compliant grip patterns that provide repeatable accuracy” to those who have lost their own hand(s). Better still, the functions (speed, grip force, grip patterns, etc.) can be customized to suit each individual user, and the integrated wireless chip means that said tweaking can take place sans any troubling USB cables. The company’s also planning to reveal the planet’s first powered wrist with rotation capabilities as well as flexion / extension, and the range just wouldn’t be complete without silicone skin available in 19 tones. Hop on past the break for a couple of promo videos — we get the feeling the world of prosthetics is about to take a huge leap forward.

Continue reading BeBionic teases advanced bionic hand, Terminator 5 now has a prop supplier (video)

BeBionic teases advanced bionic hand, Terminator 5 now has a prop supplier (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Feb 2010 10:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Quotient system electronically diagnoses ADHD, oh look a bunny

Quotient system electronically diagnoses ADHD, oh look a bunnyCubicles are the site of many of the worst cases of adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), so it’s perhaps a bit ironic that Quotient’s ADHD System looks an awful lot like a cubicle on wheels. It’s an automated machine that presents a series of games and challenges for a user to participate in, all while watching that user with a pair of cameras — one up top to monitor head movement and one below to look for a bouncing leg. We think the same could be done far cheaper with a webcam and a Yurex leg odometer, but the FDA has recently seen fit to clear parent company BioBehavioral Diagnostics to start marketing this thing, so look for these to crop up in every elementary school faster than a twitchy kid can say Ritalin.

Quotient system electronically diagnoses ADHD, oh look a bunny originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Feb 2010 09:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tape measure toilet paper helps you diet

Tired of using your toilet time to just sit there and feel fat? A new toilet paper aims to make your time more productive and healthy by encouraging exercise and helping you keep tabs on your results.

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The Measuring Tape Toilet Paper is printed with a measurements in centimeters that you can use to do a quick gut check while no one else is looking, and then dispose of the evidence of your metabo problems.

While that may not be very useful while you’re sitting down, the rest of the paper is printed with various illustrations that demonstrate how you can do exercises while on the porcelain throne, from stretches to toe touches.

While this is clearly a novelty of sorts, toilet paper in general is a blank slate just waiting for a creative, value-added innovation. Brands certainly don’t like the idea of being defiled, but there are plenty of other ways to use this ubiquitous and personal medium.

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A Closer Look at Haiti Quake Survivor’s Use of Tech

woolley Dan Woolley was all over the news last week as the tech geek who survived the Haiti earthquake with the help of a first-aid iPhone app, his digital SLR and, of course, a lot of luck.

The religious man credits his survival to God and all those praying for him. But in an interview with Wired.com, he reveals that he was even more technologically resourceful than initial reports suggested.

After the quake struck, burying the Hotel Montana in rubble, Woolley, a web programmer, came up with some clever techy ideas. In addition to consulting the iPhone app First Aid & CPR for advice on treating cuts, Woolley used his digital SLR’s focusing light to help illuminate his surroundings. He snapped photos of the wreckage, using the flash to help him search for refuge. His viewfinder revealed a crumbled elevator shaft, where he prayed, rested and bandaged his wounds. Then, Woolley set his alarm to go off every 20 minutes to stay awake, fearing that if he fell asleep, he could go into shock. A French rescue team dug him out of the shaft 65 hours later.

Help Haiti Recover

That was the gist of the story broadcast news outlets reported last week on Woolley, but there’s more.

While waiting for rescue, Woolley recorded voice memos for his family with his iPhone. And when he was feeling discouraged, he used the iPod app to listen to music.

How did his iPhone battery last an amazing 65 hours? Woolley had a Mophie “Juice Pack” battery extender that he plugged into his iPhone, giving it several hours more juice. He also stopped using the alarm after feeling reassured that he wouldn’t go into shock.

When the battery meter sank to 20 percent, Woolley shut off the iPhone to save the power. Before he did, he had stored some text messages calling for help, figuring he would have them ready to send in case he could get a miraculous cell connection.

“It really was an incredible tool in my pocket, and I was really glad to have it,” Woolley told Wired.com on the phone.

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Woolley clarified that he was using the app not to learn to treat his cuts, but rather to ensure he was doing it properly.

“I don’t know if I would’ve necessarily done things differently if I didn’t have [the iPhone app],” Woolley admitted. “At a point of great inner turmoil it was great to have something that was definitive. It’s not like I read it and I learned and said, oh really I should tie the wound? It’s more like OK, this is what I do. All right, I’m doing the right thing.”

Woolley added that many on the web criticized him for not having a first-aid kit with him. He said critics were missing a major point about the importance of the iPhone, and other similar app-powered smartphones, such as Google’s Nexus One, being a general-purpose tool that you carry with you everywhere.

“For people who pointed out I should’ve had a pocket first aid kit, the reason they’re wrong is I wouldn’t have it in my pocket,” he said. “How many people have gone out of their way to add one more thing to their pocket? What was valuable about the iPhone is it was already in my pocket. And I thought, it would probably be a good way to have some first aid tips in here, so I downloaded that app. That’s the value of this utility.”

Woolley was one of reportedly 23 survivors rescued from the rubble that buried Hotel Montana in Port-au-Prince, Haiti after the massive earthquake. He was shooting a video about poverty-stricken children in Haiti with his friend David Hames, a filmmaker, when the quake struck. Hames was not found.

“My iPhone did not save me, God and the prayers of tens of thousands of His people did,” Woolley said.

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Photo courtesy of Dan Woolley


Bill Gates: Malaria Vaccine May Be Ready in Three Years

When he’s not trash talking Google, Microsoft founder Bill
Gates is devoting himself to doing more good in the world. The battle against malaria
has long been one of the chief issues of his post-executive life. In a recent
interview, Gates told the BBC that he thought a malaria vaccine is not far off.

“We have a vaccine that’s in the last trial phase–called
phase three,” he told the network. “A partially effective vaccine could even be
available within three years, but a […] fully effective vaccine will take
five to 10 years.”

Gates added that, while there’s value in funding to curb
global climate change, it ought not come at the expense of funds for fighting
disease. “Climate change is very important, it is an issue money should go
to,” he told the BBC. “It just shouldn’t come out of health aid budgets.”

Artificial muscles let cadavers (and someday paralyzed humans) wink with the best of ’em

The above contraption, aside from looking really uncomfortable, is the latest advance in electroactive polymer artificial muscle technology. Using soft acrylic or silicon layered with carbon grease, EPAMs contract like muscle tissue when current is applied — making ’em just the ticket for use in UC Davis’s Eyelid Sling. Billed as the “first-wave use of artificial muscle in any biological system,” the device is currently letting cadavers (and, eventually paralyzed humans) blink — an improvement over current solutions for the non-blinking, which include either transplanting a leg muscle into the face or suturing a small gold weight into the eyelid. Look for the technology to become available for patients within the next five years.

Artificial muscles let cadavers (and someday paralyzed humans) wink with the best of ’em originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jan 2010 14:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Man Buried in Haiti Rubble Uses iPhone to Treat Wounds, Survive

U.S. filmmaker Dan Woolley was shooting a documentary about the impact of poverty in Haiti when the earthquake struck. He could have died, but he ultimately survived with the help of an iPhone first-aid app that taught him to treat his wounds.

After being crushed by a pile of rubble, Woolley used his digital SLR to illuminate his surroundings and snap photos of the wreckage in search of a safe place to dwell. He took refuge in an elevator shaft, where he followed instructions from an iPhone first-aid app to fashion a bandage and tourniquet for his leg and to stop the bleeding from his head wound, according to an MSNBC story.

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Join Reddit’s Haiti relief fundraising drive with Direct Relief International.

The app even warned Woolley not to fall asleep if he felt he was going into shock, so he set his cellphone’s alarm clock to go off every 20 minutes. Sixty-five hours later, a French rescue team saved him.

“I just saw the walls rippling and just explosive sounds all around me,” said Woolley, recounting the earthquake to MSNBC. “It all happened incredibly fast. David yelled out, ‘It’s an earthquake,’ and we both lunged and everything turned dark.”

Woolley’s incident highlights a large social implication of the iPhone and other similar smartphones. A constant internet connection, coupled with a device supporting a wealth of apps, can potentially transform a person into an all-knowing, always-on being. In Woolley’s case, an iPhone app turned him into an amateur medic to help him survive natural disaster.

Say what you will about the iPhone. This story is incredible.

Update: As Wired reader “bbqbologna” noted in the comments below, the app used in question was Pocket First Aid and CPR. A user review by “Webguydan” reads, “Consulted this app, while trapped under Hotel Montana in Haiti earthquake, to treat excessive bleeding and shock. Helped me stay alive till I was rescued 64 hours later.”

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Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Japanese group introduces wearable ‘human recorder system’

Looking to keep watch on a few more vitals than something like the Fitbit provides? Then you might just be a candidate for this all-seeing, all-knowing “human recorder system” developed by a group of researchers from the University of Tokyo, and now offered by the non-profit WIN Human Recorder Co. Unlike the Fitbit, you have to affix this one directly to your chest, but that will let you monitor things like heart rate and body surface temperature in addition to movement with the aid of a three-axis acceleration sensor. What’s more, you’ll also be able to keep continuous watch on all that data via your cellphone of computer, but that won’t exactly come cheap — the sensor itself runs $330, to which you’ll also have to add $110 a month for the monitoring service.

Japanese group introduces wearable ‘human recorder system’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mediche LifeOne Brings Diabetes Support to the 21st Century

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The vast majority of devices on display at CES are–as the name implies–consumer electronic products. It’s always exciting when someone introduces a product that could actually do some good in someone’s life, like, say, the Mediche LifeOne. The device, which looks like a slightly oversized cell phone case/organizer, helps diabetes suffers get easier, more efficient health readings.
The package contains a glucose reader, injector pen, and mobile device–in the picture, the latter looks an awful lot like an iPhone, though the Mediche rep I spoke with assured me that that’s only the prototype–it will look less copyright infringy when it actually comes to market.
The device records insulin does and glucose levels, transfering them to the Mediche server over a cell network. Users and their doctors can then access the information online and communicate with fellow diabetes suffers through the site.
Mediche is a British company. The device will likely hit Europe first–and then Asia. There’s no time frame for its stateside debut, but the company is expecting it to arrive on our shores eventually. According to the rep, the reason for the delayed decision is the fact that the injector pen isn’t the most popular option for diabetes patients in the states.

Philips Activa fitness MP3 player reminds you to move

It’s the new year, so what better way for a company to prey upon your insecurities than by offering devices that accessorizes your ambition to really meet your fitness goals this time around. Philips knows this, so it’ll be expanding its DirectLife wearable activity monitor to Germany this month and then to the UK a few months later while launching its new Activa personal audio player here at CES. Activa brings along a little trick called TempoMusic; a feature that analyzes your music library to later match songs to your aerobic intensity. That means that Activa can help keep you motivated by shouting out feedback on your progress in addition to words of encouragement while automatically selecting the appropriate music to match the pace of your workout or give you a boost when needed. Later, while cooling down with some cold suds and a delicious slice of warm tobacco pie you can check your progress and caloric burn rate via the bundled PC software. Activa will be available worldwide sometime in April for about $130, suggested.

Continue reading Philips Activa fitness MP3 player reminds you to move

Philips Activa fitness MP3 player reminds you to move originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 06:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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