“Imagine this: You’re sitting in your living room watching the season premiere of ‘Game of Thrones’ when suddenly you get a text message from your 2-month-old daughter saying her diaper needs to be changed,” Michael Franco reports for CNET. “No, she’s not a super-smart infant who learned how to text at birth — but her diaper is pretty smart and it knows when it’s wet and needs your help — even if winter is finally coming right this second.”
“That future that might be possible, thanks to a new invention from Takao Someya and a team of researchers at the University of Tokyo,” Franco reports. “This team, in July 2013, announced in the journal Nature that they’d come up with flexible circuits, thinner than a piece of plastic wrap, that could be implanted in the body to monitor body temperature or blood pressure or implanted on the roof of the mouth to be used as a touch pad for quadriplegics.”
Franco reports, “Now, they’ve applied their research to a truly worthwhile problem — knowing when a diaper is soiled without having to undress the wearer first.”
Read more in the full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: Introducing the iMade™.