2014 is coming to an end, and together we have seen the inventions that may change our lives and benefit mankind this year.
1. ReSound LiNX hearing aid
The ReSound LiNX hearing aid, launched at the World Mobile Communications Conference in February this year, is an auxiliary hearing device that can be connected to the iPhone Bluetooth. The wearer can adjust the volume with the mobile phone, and the action is not easy to detect to avoid causing embarrassment. The device uses the ReSound App to record application data, providing the wearer with a more precise and personalized service, such as providing different volume settings according to different environmental locations.
2. Telebot robot
The undergraduate team from the Florida International University Discovery Lab invented a 6-foot, 75-pound prototype robot that is expected to help police and military personnel with limited mobility perform simple tasks such as daily patrols. To control the robot, simply wear the Oculus Rift virtual reality-enhanced helmet, wear a sports tracker, tie the armband, wear motion-sensing gloves, and combine with Cisco's telepresence telepresence conferencing technology. Remote control.
The project began in 2012, and the prototype robot is the latest achievement of the team. Their next step is to put a “coat†on the robot for field testing.
3. Vodafone mobile network in the backpack
In February of this year, the Vodafone Foundation showed the public the Instant Network Mini mobile network equipment that can be stuffed in a backpack. The device weighs about 25 pounds, and the similar equipment that was previously launched weighed 200 pounds. It has no portability. The improved version can be assembled in about 10 minutes. It is expected to provide the world's disaster relief emergency work. Great support.
With the Instant Network Mini mobile base station, users can dial 5 mobile phones simultaneously and send and receive thousands of text messages within a radius of 100 meters.
4. Foldscope paper microscope
In March of this year, Stanford University bioengineer Manu Prakash invented the paper microscope Foldscope for only $0.50. The microscope is made of cardboard, with a bookmark size and a microscope in the middle, which can magnify objects up to 2000 times.
The Foldscope is low-priced, custom-tailored and easy to assemble, and is expected to benefit science-loving children and researchers who lack laboratory equipment.
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