Exoskeleton
-
{
- All
- News
- Videos
-
AIIMS Delhi Preparing Special Exoskeleton To Help Paralysed Patients Walk
- Friday February 23, 2024
- India News | Asian News International
AIIMS Delhi and DRDO are collaborating on a project to develop a special exoskeleton for soldiers who have been injured in service and have lost their ability to walk or became paralysed.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
CES 2023 Unveiled: The Coolest Startups and Tech Demos on Day One
- Thursday January 5, 2023
- Written by Ishaan Singh, Edited by Jamshed Avari
CES 2023 has kicked off in Las Vegas, and many new and unique innovations have already been showcased. Here are five of the most unique and interesting products from startups and major brands.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Robotic Titanium Exoskeleton Gives Wheelchair-Bound Children the Ability to Walk
- Thursday October 20, 2022
- Agence France-Presse
Atlas 2030, a robotic exoskeleton designed especially for children is helping children who use wheelchairs to walk during muscle rehabilitation therapy. The robotic suit was used to help David Zabala, a wheelchair-bound 8-year-old with cerebral palsy, to walk and stand in front of a mirror where he drew smiling faces with coloured marker pens.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Robotic "Exoskeleton" Gives Paralysed Children Gift Of Walking
- Thursday October 20, 2022
- World News | Agence France-Presse
Wearing a robotic exoskeleton designed especially for children, an eight-year-old boy with cerebral palsy walked through a therapy room in Mexico City, smiling triumphantly at the once-unthinkable feat.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Hyundai Develops New Wearable Robot To Help In Manufacturing Process
- Saturday September 7, 2019
- Written by Ameya Naik
Hyundai Motor Group has developed new Vest EXoskeleton (VEX), a wearable robot created to assist industrial workers who spend long hours working in overhead environments. The VEX enhances productivity and reduces fatigue of industrial workers by imitating the movement of human joints to boost load support and mobility.
-
www.carandbike.com
-
MIT Scientists Using Lobster Exoskeleton To Develop Flexible Body Armour
- Wednesday February 20, 2019
- Science | Peter Holley, The Washington Post
Imagine a highly sophisticated body armor that is as tough as it is flexible, a shield that consists largely of water, but remains strong enough to prevent mechanical penetration.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
This Swiss Robotic Device Can Help People With Disabilities Walk Again
- Sunday August 13, 2017
- World News | Written by Amitoj Singh
A Swiss university claims to have brought out a medical invention that can help paralyised people walk again. Researchers at the Switzerland's Technical University have made TWIICE, a robotic device that can help a person with paralysis of the legs to walk. It is called TWIICE because it gives them a second chance.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Wearable Robot In China To Help People With Disabilities Walk
- Tuesday March 28, 2017
- World News | Indo-Asian News Service
A China-made wearable robot, which can help disabled people walk, is expected to enter the market in one to two years, the developer has said.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Hyundai Reveals 'Wearable Robot' Exoskeleton
- Thursday May 19, 2016
- Written by CarAndBike Team
When Hyundai is not working on cars, planes or designing heavy equipment, it isn't really twiddling its thumbs. This is when we see some crazy ideas pouring out from the South Korean marquee and this time it's a wearable robot prototype, which it says is more or less like the Iron Man suit.
-
www.carandbike.com
-
Medical Advances Turn Science Fiction Into Science Fact
- Saturday July 19, 2014
- Written by RobinS
Exoskeletons helping the paralysed to walk, tiny maggot-inspired devices gnawing at brain tumours: in many respects, the future of medicine is already here.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Medical Advances Turn Science Fiction into Science Face
- Saturday July 19, 2014
- World News | Agence France-Presse
Exoskeletons helping the paralysed to walk, tiny maggot-inspired devices gnawing at brain tumours, machines working tirelessly as hospital helpers: in many respects, the future of medicine is already here.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
AIIMS Delhi Preparing Special Exoskeleton To Help Paralysed Patients Walk
- Friday February 23, 2024
- India News | Asian News International
AIIMS Delhi and DRDO are collaborating on a project to develop a special exoskeleton for soldiers who have been injured in service and have lost their ability to walk or became paralysed.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
CES 2023 Unveiled: The Coolest Startups and Tech Demos on Day One
- Thursday January 5, 2023
- Written by Ishaan Singh, Edited by Jamshed Avari
CES 2023 has kicked off in Las Vegas, and many new and unique innovations have already been showcased. Here are five of the most unique and interesting products from startups and major brands.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Robotic Titanium Exoskeleton Gives Wheelchair-Bound Children the Ability to Walk
- Thursday October 20, 2022
- Agence France-Presse
Atlas 2030, a robotic exoskeleton designed especially for children is helping children who use wheelchairs to walk during muscle rehabilitation therapy. The robotic suit was used to help David Zabala, a wheelchair-bound 8-year-old with cerebral palsy, to walk and stand in front of a mirror where he drew smiling faces with coloured marker pens.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Robotic "Exoskeleton" Gives Paralysed Children Gift Of Walking
- Thursday October 20, 2022
- World News | Agence France-Presse
Wearing a robotic exoskeleton designed especially for children, an eight-year-old boy with cerebral palsy walked through a therapy room in Mexico City, smiling triumphantly at the once-unthinkable feat.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Hyundai Develops New Wearable Robot To Help In Manufacturing Process
- Saturday September 7, 2019
- Written by Ameya Naik
Hyundai Motor Group has developed new Vest EXoskeleton (VEX), a wearable robot created to assist industrial workers who spend long hours working in overhead environments. The VEX enhances productivity and reduces fatigue of industrial workers by imitating the movement of human joints to boost load support and mobility.
-
www.carandbike.com
-
MIT Scientists Using Lobster Exoskeleton To Develop Flexible Body Armour
- Wednesday February 20, 2019
- Science | Peter Holley, The Washington Post
Imagine a highly sophisticated body armor that is as tough as it is flexible, a shield that consists largely of water, but remains strong enough to prevent mechanical penetration.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
This Swiss Robotic Device Can Help People With Disabilities Walk Again
- Sunday August 13, 2017
- World News | Written by Amitoj Singh
A Swiss university claims to have brought out a medical invention that can help paralyised people walk again. Researchers at the Switzerland's Technical University have made TWIICE, a robotic device that can help a person with paralysis of the legs to walk. It is called TWIICE because it gives them a second chance.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Wearable Robot In China To Help People With Disabilities Walk
- Tuesday March 28, 2017
- World News | Indo-Asian News Service
A China-made wearable robot, which can help disabled people walk, is expected to enter the market in one to two years, the developer has said.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Hyundai Reveals 'Wearable Robot' Exoskeleton
- Thursday May 19, 2016
- Written by CarAndBike Team
When Hyundai is not working on cars, planes or designing heavy equipment, it isn't really twiddling its thumbs. This is when we see some crazy ideas pouring out from the South Korean marquee and this time it's a wearable robot prototype, which it says is more or less like the Iron Man suit.
-
www.carandbike.com
-
Medical Advances Turn Science Fiction Into Science Fact
- Saturday July 19, 2014
- Written by RobinS
Exoskeletons helping the paralysed to walk, tiny maggot-inspired devices gnawing at brain tumours: in many respects, the future of medicine is already here.
-
www.gadgets360.com
-
Medical Advances Turn Science Fiction into Science Face
- Saturday July 19, 2014
- World News | Agence France-Presse
Exoskeletons helping the paralysed to walk, tiny maggot-inspired devices gnawing at brain tumours, machines working tirelessly as hospital helpers: in many respects, the future of medicine is already here.
-
www.ndtv.com