DailyDirt: Prosthetics To Be Proud Of
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
A few years ago, Oscar Pistorius was not allowed to participate in the Olympics because, as a double amputee, his prosthetic legs might have given him an advantage over athletes who weren’t using prosthetic legs. Prosthetic technology doesn’t stand still, so it’s understandable that the Olympic committee didn’t want to allow devices that could give future athletes extremely unfair mechanical advantages. Here are just a few interesting prosthetic developments that might change the perception of “disabled” persons.
- Prosthetic limbs don’t have to look like medical devices or dead body parts. Artificial legs can be made with a variety of different designs, and the manufacturer of these bespoke legs occasionally requests help from volunteers who can “donate” their legs as a scanned template for prosthetic designs. [url]
- Last May, Claire Lomas finished a marathon in a $70,000 bionic suit — after being paralyzed from the chest down in 2007. She walked about 2 miles per day, so it took her about two weeks to complete the London Marathon. [url]
- MIT researchers have created a glucose fuel cell that could be used to power brain implants or other implantable electronics that could control prosthetic devices. This device could get all the sugar it needs from cerebrospinal fluid, so it wouldn’t need batteries (although external prosthetics would still need to be powered separately). [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post.
Filed Under: claire lomas, fuel cell, london marathon, mit, olympics, oscar pistorius, prosthetics
Comments on “DailyDirt: Prosthetics To Be Proud Of”
The cyborg nation begins!
The website for for the second story, ReWalk, has a video that is really very touching. The faces on the people who have been confined to wheelchairs when they stand up and walk speak volumes about their appreciation.
http://phys.org/news/2012-06-scientists.html
Now that people can bend light, it may be possible to create floating induction furnaces that mold the metal directly into thin air.
Ok, ok, I just though that 3.5 Terabits of data transfer was cool and I tried finding a way to plug it here.
Talking about prosthesis, what if the world was afflicted by a cataclysmic event?
Hydrolemic System
A set of prosthetics that enables a human being to live on 32mm of water a day?
A cooler name for a floating induction furnace would be plasma-vortex-induction-furnace.
Add to the list
Surely you must add to the list the novel Limbo 90 by Bernard Wolfe, published in 1952.
Read it, then read the linked articles.
We Are the BORG
You will be Assimilated.
Resistance is Futile!