BRN Discussion Ongoing

stockduck

Regular
Just a thought...a little bit offtopic:

I recently went to the hairdresser, as most of us do a few times a year. The former master hairdresser has handed over his business to the younger generation, but still works enthusiastically. Here's the problem, which I believe could lead to a new product with high global sales.

The hands, with their bones, tendons and muscles, are subject to severe wear and tear in the hairdressing trade, which could be reduced by a precise, effective and efficient high-performance exoskeleton. I would suggest that it makes more sense to develop such products equipped with intelligent sensors than robots for domestic use. Mass-produced goods made of injection-moulded plastic parts and weighing very little.

In gardening, electronic shears are used as a substitute for manual labour, but in my opinion, this cannot be transferred to hairdressing.

Perhaps the management knows a customer, who is interested in such a product and sees a future for it. (One battery change per working day, for example).

It is likely that such an exoskeleton could also be extended to other professions.


Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
 

stockduck

Regular
...only dot joining....:cry:


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Frangipani

Top 20
James Shields (our VP of Sales & Business Development) and Ivan Projić (CEO of Neuromorphyx) at the BrainChip booth at embedded world 2026 earlier today:






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