A team of researchers in Singapore has come up with a tiny, micrometer-thin battery that can store energy from human tears to power smart contact lenses. If inventors ever arrive at a viable prototype ...
Across the world, some 80 million people suffer from glaucoma, a number that’s expected to swell to 111 million by 2040. Today, an estimated three million have been diagnosed in the United States. But ...
The Mojo smart contact lens, due to ship within the next few years, boasts 14,000 pixels per inch packed into a sand-grain-sized display that beams directly into your eyes’ fovea, the tiny part in the ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. A smart contact lens that lets you see like ...
The company Mojo Vision has created a prototype for an impressive smart contact lens that is ready to head into its testing stage. These contact lenses have been in development for seven years to this ...
Novartis, the Swiss healthcare firm, has announced it will license Google’s exciting smart contact lens technology, initially unveiled by the Google X team at the beginning of this year. This is the ...
Smart contact lenses that grant the wearer night vision as well as act as a private, super-discreet interface for your digital life could be coming to your eyeball, if startup Mojo Vision has its way.
Today, the smart wearable market consists of mostly smart bands, smartwatches, and wireless earbuds. But what if smart contact lenses were added to that list? It’ll be a sight to see. The idea of a ...
InWith has confirmed the world's first soft smart contact lens. For those who have no idea what InWith Corporation is, this tech firm specializes in Ophthalmic and MEMS (Microelectronic Mechanical ...
Diabetes is called an incurable disease because once it develops, it does not disappear regardless of treatment in modern medicine. Having diabetes means a life-long obligation of insulin shots and ...
Following is a transcript of the video. Narrator: Imagine a world where you look across the street and get directions or see information on your heart rate while cycling without looking down. All ...
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