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by SteveVeilStream
537 days ago
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This sounds great for the problem they are trying to solve but it also sounds like it could be useful for a lot of other interesting applications. I would assume you could put the same sensor on a plastic pipe and infer details about the liquid inside. If I was this team, I might look at how to commercialize this tech for industrial process control in parallel with the slow process of commercializing it for medical purposes. "The system’s key components are a radar chip, which sends and receives signals through the body, an engineered “meta-surface”, which helps focus these signals for better accuracy, and microcontrollers, which process the radar signals using artificial intelligence algorithms. The algorithms improve the accuracy and reliability of the readings by learning from the data over time." |
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