Skin-tenna makes your skin receptive to signals
Well, this may sound weird and implausible - your skin receiving and broadcasting signals and aiding the medical practitioners to use it for wireless communication sufficing medical implants- still it’s true. Researchers at Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland, have made it possible. This new technology called Skin-tenna uses the creeping wave effect allowing waves to trek along a surface. Scanlon and Conway look forward to keep pacemakers connected in a power efficient way and made better use of, through this applied-for patent technology. What you need to do is wear a little controller on your hip that would emit signals. It’s indeed much more efficient than Bluetooth being battery efficient, thanks to its conducting plate responsible for recharging it.

Source: InventorSpot

