Harvard studies exoskeletons that use ultrasound to adapt to the user
They have become ever faster and more precise, and with this new Harvard development, exoskeletons are rapidly spreading.
They have become ever faster and more precise, and with this new Harvard development, exoskeletons are rapidly spreading.
A patch that "mimics" cacti effectively manages to collect sweat where other sensors cannot, allowing analysis without taking blood.
By now, as you know, it's the hunt for the perfect solid-state battery. A great ally could be paper.
Our clothes will speak to us, leaving our hands increasingly free from devices. PocketView is just the latest product of wearable display research. And it's currently the best.
Over the past 100 years, an astonishing series of inventions has changed the world. What will be the next, able to change the future life? Here are 8.
Careful design allows for the "biomimetic" development of batteries inspired by snake scales. They will come in handy for wearable devices and soft robots.
A third limb can always be handy: if it is light, compact and extensible, it risks becoming a "must have" of the future.
Rice University “spins” carbon nanotubes onto a tight mesh, transforming it into a formidable “diagnostic” piece of clothing.
A remedy for the excess of electronic waste (also due to planned obsolescence)? Soluble electronics. A team shows that it is possible.
A totally different approach to that of brain implants at Neuralink. Laboratory tests are encouraging: next step, animal testing.
From sweat or from the pressure of the fingertips, a wearable device generates energy in an extraordinary cost / yield ratio.
A smart carpet from MIT distinguishes and monitors movements - just step on it. In the future he can become a medical assistant, a fitness coach, a playmate
The long-announced Facebook smartwatch is almost ready. Two cameras and one goal: to bypass Apple and Google. Will he make it?
The CEO of the Finnish company is certain: Oura Ring and other new generation wearables will anticipate problems by changing medicine
Healthcare is changing, and healthcare professions will change too. Not necessarily fewer jobs, but different. Here's what could be next.
A reversible fabric capable of changing the wearer's temperature conditions was developed by two universities in China and the USA
A Dubai salon catches the trend of Smart nails: the nail becomes a small hub to transmit data, and pay tomorrow.
An exoskeleton developed by Stanford University increases walking speed by 40%. It could make seniors quicker than healthy youngsters.
Systems to monitor health in real time (starting from pulse and pressure) are getting closer thanks to the development of a new ultra-thin patch that feeds itself.
20 years after the unveiling of the human genome, science can now sequence many more in less time: it will soon have the data it needs to unlock many secrets of genetics.
There is someone who would do anything to tear you away from your addiction to screens (don't deny). Even pay you. Don't believe it?