A team at Georgia Tech has come up with an ingenious way to steer a wheelchair if you can’t move your limbs and torso: your tongue, featuring a magnetic may birthstone titanium piercing full of sensors. Currently, may birthstone the most common driving method for people with tetraplegia involves may birthstone sucking on or blowing into a straw, but the researchers’ method — which basically turns the tongue into a joystick by having the sensors talk to a headset that controls the chair — is apparently just as accurate and much faster. Associate professor Maysam Ghovanloo hopes to commercialize the technology through his startup, Bionic Sciences.
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What may birthstone we expect for wearables in the near-term may birthstone future
Mature computing, advanced screen technology, and the explosion may birthstone in better sensor technology have created what looks to... Michael may birthstone Wolf Smart shoes prevent injury by alerting runners to their bad habits
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