When Berkeley Bionics first unveiled eLEGS, an artificially-intelligent bionic exoskeleton that helps paraplegics to walk, it created a stir throughout the tech community. Everyone wondered: Could ...
A whole new generation of paraplegics may be able to stand up and walk away from their wheelchairs. Exoskeleton developers Berkeley Bionics recently unveiled their eLEGS system, a lower body robotic ...
Wondering where you've heard of Berkeley Bionics before? These are the same whiz-kids who produced the HULC exoskeleton in mid-2008, and now they're back with a far more ambitious effort. Announced ...
Berkeley Bionics, a developer and maker of bionic exoskeletons, has unveiled its new eLEGS, a wearable, artificially intelligent, bionic device that powers paraplegics up to get them standing and ...
Berkeley Bionics unveils eLegs, one of a number of bionic exoskeletons that get paraplegics out of their wheelchairs and on their feet. Leslie Katz led a team that explored the intersection of tech ...
A new wearable, artificially intelligent, bionic device that powers paraplegics up to get them standing and walking, has just been launched by Berkeley Bionics. Dubbed eLEGS, the device an be adjusted ...
Bionic legs may sound like something out of a science fiction movie, however, they are soon to be a reality at a local rehabilitation hospital. Good Shepherd Rehabilitation in Allentown has been ...
SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) -- Eighteen years ago, Amanda Boxtel was paralyzed in a skiing accident; today, a futuristic invention is helping her walk upright again. Boxtel strode onto a stage in San ...
Amanda Boxtel is about to stand up. A skiing accident 18 years ago partially severed her spinal cord leaving her paralysed. Boxtel is wearing a new exoskeleton called eLEGS, which could soon help ...
In what could prove to be a major boon for paraplegics, a Berkeley based company has announced the launch of "eLegs" which promises to help people without the power of their legs to stand up and walk.
Step by step, bionic engineers are transforming lives in ways that barely could have been imagined until recently. Our Cover Story is reported now by Barry Petersen: A wheelchair used to be all ...
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