ENN - Electric News.net
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Edit your alerts
News
   CORRECTIONS
Survey
Let us know how to make ENN better!
Take our reader's survey.
 
Infrastructure or die
With competition in Ireland's Internet access market heating up, the focus must move to infrastructure for long-term economic success.
More here

 

The following e-mail will be sent on your behalf.

 has sent the following story to you from ElectricNews.net.

The story is available from https://electricnews.net/news.html?code=7858450

MLE researchers design dental speaker
Monday, June 17 2002
by Matthew Clark


Two researchers in Dublin's Media Lab Europe have designed a tooth that could be
used to wirelessly receive digital signals from a mobile phone. James Auger and Jimmy Loizeau, who are now researchers at Media Lab Europe, came
up with the idea as part of a future product competition run by the UK's National
Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts while at the Royal College of Art.
The project will be on show at the UK's Science Museum for the next six months.


Essentially the futuristic tooth would use wireless technology, such as 802.11 or
bluetooth, to take signals from audio devices such as mobile phones, radios,
stereos or computers, Auger explained to ElectricNews.Net. These signals would be
changed into vibrations that would travel from the tooth, to the skull,
eventually creating audible sound in the user's inner ear. No one but the user
would be able to hear the sounds.


The two men have not yet built a prototype, and Auger is hesitant to say whether
the men would be interested in turning the project into a commercial venture,
only saying, "We will just wait and see."


"That was never really our intention," Auger explained. "What we were really
interested in was the feedback that the idea generated." He went on to say that
part of the project was simply to see how people reacted to futuristic
biotechnology that was easily foreseeable, but did not yet exist. "Mostly
people were shocked at the idea," Auger claimed.


"Lots of people put it into a medical context...it seems to be quite acceptable
to allow technology into the body for replacement purposes such as artificial
joints. Lots of people, when they see it, see it as an application that could be
used for deaf people, which is not an idea we put out there," Auger commented.


At Media Lab Europe Auger plans to continue to generate ideas about new
technologies to gauge what people think about the notion of replacing or
enhancing body parts with machines or other technological means. Currently he is
working on a project that deals with the social implications of genetic
modifications.


"There is huge debate with these kinds of things. If you apply Moore's Law to
digital implants, it seems to make sense that in 30 years artificial eyes and
artificial ears will be available with superior capabilities to normal eyes and
ears," he said. "Would people trade in their natural eyes for ones with night
vision or telescopic sites?...And more importantly, how are people going to feel
about this sort of thing if they do?"


For more information about Auger and some of his work, visit his HREF="http://www.augerment.com">Web site.


Search

Weekly Digest
Read a roundup of the top tech stories with our Weekly Digest .

Jobs
Mobile Marketeing 2002

UTV Internet - all Ireland flat rate internet access

Aztech

Powered by The CIA

 

© Copyright ElectricNews.Net Ltd 1999-2002.