Has anyone else ever noticed that every Will Smith movie has something to do with aliens or robots taking over the planet and ending civilization as we know it?
Well, now Will Smith's worst nightmares have become a reality. Charlie Kemp, a professor at Georgia Tech and Emory University, has been working on a robot to help people with ALS perform simple tasks. The robot can fetch small items, such as a bottle of pills or a hairbrush, as well as open doors.
The robot, named EI-E, works through lazer technology. The owner simply points to an object they want the robot to fetch for them, and the robot will bring it to them.
The only downfall I see in this product is this: what if the person misplaces their lazer?
Read more about this here.
Well, now Will Smith's worst nightmares have become a reality. Charlie Kemp, a professor at Georgia Tech and Emory University, has been working on a robot to help people with ALS perform simple tasks. The robot can fetch small items, such as a bottle of pills or a hairbrush, as well as open doors.
The robot, named EI-E, works through lazer technology. The owner simply points to an object they want the robot to fetch for them, and the robot will bring it to them.
The only downfall I see in this product is this: what if the person misplaces their lazer?
Read more about this here.
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