Posts Tagged ‘60 Minutes’

Dean Kamen demonstrates robotic, prosthetic DEKA arm on 60 Minutes

Monday, September 21st, 2009


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60 Minutes took a look at New Hampshire Inventor Dean Kamen’s latest invention, a prosthetic arm developed by his company, DEKA Research & Development, with a four-fingered hand with an opposable thumb.

MHT first wrote about the arm in 2007. DEKA created the prosthetic with help from Holliston-based Liberating Technologies Inc., and funding from DARPA’s $100 million Revolutionizing Prosthetics project.

The robotic arm is powered by a lithium battery and equipped with multiple microprocessors, sensors and haptics technology. The prosthetic is designed to move and function similar to a real arm and hand that can grasp bottles and lighter objects.

Users control the arm — which is designed to be able to curl weights of up to 20 pounds — with sensors in their shoes and a joystick they can either move with their shoulder muscles or remaining portions of their natural arm.

Last month, MIT researcher Hugh Herr — who lost both of his legs below the knee to frostbite at age 17 — landed $20 million for from General Catalyst and WFD Ventures for his startup iWalk, which is developing robotic ankle and foot prosthetics.

Brown, Mass General research lets disabled control computers with thoughts

Monday, August 10th, 2009


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60 Minutes updated a 2008 story about mind-controlled technology last night. The piece spotlights Brown researcher John Donoghue’s Braingate system, which allows a woman paralyzed after a stroke to control a computer cursor with her thoughts via sensors implanted in her brain. Mass General’s Leigh Hochberg is conducting the clinical trial for the technology.

Last month, Singularity Hub posted about Braingate2, which introduces wireless networking to the mix.

Raytheon puts ray-gun on helicopter

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Raytheon is developing a version of its Active Denial System that can be fired from helicopters, according to New Scientist. The magazine reports the Air Force plans to increase the budget for the pain-inducing microwave-based weapon from $2 million to $10 million a year. 

“The transmitting antenna on the current system is 2 metres across, produces a single beam of similar width and is steered mechanically, making it cumbersome. At the heart of the new weapon will be a compact airborne antenna, which will be steered electronically and be capable of generating multiple beams, each of which can be aimed while on the move.”

In March, Raytheon project manager John Finkenauer told me the defense contractor was developing a version of the system small enough for a soldier to use in the field.

After the jump, watch 60 Minutes’ report on the ADS from June 2008. (more…)

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