The people behind this amazing technology are from Waterloo Labs (waterloolabs [dot] com) and can be reached at Waterloolabs [at] gmail [dot] com. Send them an e-mail and they will tell you more about this technology. Thanks.
This is amazing engineering gentlemen. Has it been applied to people that are paralysed or injured in accidents and cannot move? I am assuming that this system can be shrunk so that potentially a hospital bed in an intensive care unit would have something like this so that doctors can communicate with patients who have lost mobility. This could potentially save time and enable a much better level of communication between patients and doctors.
The people behind this amazing technology are from Waterloo Labs (waterloolabs [dot] com) and can be reached at Waterloolabs [at] gmail [dot] com. Send them an e-mail and they will tell you more about this technology. Thanks.
AnalogDevicesInc 1 year ago
This is amazing engineering gentlemen. Has it been applied to people that are paralysed or injured in accidents and cannot move? I am assuming that this system can be shrunk so that potentially a hospital bed in an intensive care unit would have something like this so that doctors can communicate with patients who have lost mobility. This could potentially save time and enable a much better level of communication between patients and doctors.
MadBrainiac 1 year ago
Be sure to check out our other Videos on our youtube channel
WaterlooLabs 1 year ago
That will give you headachs from eye strain
flying149 1 year ago
This is really neat
Noob2point0 1 year ago
@Noob2point0 Thank you
AnalogDevicesInc 1 year ago
Nice!
jeriellsworth 1 year ago
@jeriellsworth Thanks Jeri... we're glad that you like the vid.
AnalogDevicesInc 1 year ago