Margaret Hamilton standing next to the stacks of pages of Apollo code she wrote by hand that took us to the moon. This woman is my idol!
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For all the functionality and freedom that modern prosthetics provide, they still cannot give their users a sense of what they’re touching. That may soon change thanks to an innovative electrode capable of connecting a prosthetic arm’s robotic sense of touch to the human nervous system that it’s attached to. It reportedly allows its users to feel heat, cold and pressure by stimulating the ulnar and median nerves of the upper arm.
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Teaching robots to adjust their grip the way humans do - Read more on http://ift.tt/2iSrTLg
Developer, innovator, life-long student. Computer Science graduate student at @DePaulU. VP/COO @bnonews, now engineering and coding for good.
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