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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Robot invented to crawl through veins

Creepy crawly

By Sylvie Barak

Monday, 6 July 2009, 16:34

SCIENTISTS FROM Israel's Technion University have unveiled a tiny robot, made using Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) technology, purportedly able to crawl through a person's veins in order to diagnose and potentially treat artery blockage and cancer.

The little robot - with a diameter of just one millimeter - has neither engine nor onboard controls, instead being propelled forward by a magnetic field wielded on it from outside the patient's body.

blood-robot-8gwd4

Controlling the tiny bot externally means boffins have been able to shrink it to a previously impossibly tiny scale, allowing it to crawl its way through the typical human body's veins and arteries using miniscule outstretched arms which grip the vessel walls. Yes, that made us shudder too.

Scientists reckon the mini bot can even withstand massive blood flow and is able to push forward regardless of the magnetic field actuation direction, doing away with any need for exact localisation and direction retrieval.

A controller can move the little crawly creature in increments, with its speed of up to nine millimeters a second regulated by varying external magnetic field frequencies. Outside control also means the robot can be made to work for an unlimited amount of time, rather than suddenly - not to mention inconveniently - keeling over to die of battery failure in the middle of a medical procedure.

A small cross sectional area on the tiny robot apparently allows fluids to flow with minimal interference making intra-vascular motion more feasible, and opening up the possibility of minimally invasive medical treatments, as well as diagnosis within the body. Researchers are also apparently toying with the idea of attaching miniscule cameras to the bot, as well as other "tools" it may need to perform internal surgery.

As if getting under people's skin wasn't enough, Technion researchers say they're also looking at putting the ant-like creature to work in urban water distribution systems, to look for any leaks that need plugging.

We hear that research is going swimmingly. µ

From the INQUIRER

Apple admits its Iphones are overheating - the INQUIRER reports

 

Don't use them in Britain this summer

By Nick Farrell

Friday, 3 July 2009, 12:13

WHILE WE WERE reporting that some of Apple's new Iphones are getting hot enough to discolour their casings, we failed to notice that Job's Mob was advising punters not to use them when the temperature is a little hot.

This will be news to those Iphone users who battled with the UK's heatwave this week, but apparently Apple revised a support document about Iphone temperature to include the Iphone 3GS.

Apparently you can operate an Iphone - either 3G or 3GS - only where the temperature is between zero and 35 degrees Celsius, which translates to 32 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit for you INQ readers in the US.

High-temperature conditions might temporarily shorten battery life or cause the device to temporarily stop working properly, warns Apple.

This could explain why many Iphone users have also been reporting that battery life on their pretty toys is not what Apple marketing had claimed.

Apparently you should not leave your phone in your car, because temperatures in parked cars can exceed the safe operating range. We guess that carrying one around in your pocket is also a bad idea.

However this means Apple finally has a reason for overheating Iphones that is not based on poor design. It can blame the British weather just like we all do. µ

 

The exact article from the Inquirer without modifications