CHAIR ON THE SIDE: There's a fundamental problem when one person is pushing another in a wheelchair: they can't easily chat because one is behind the other. It would be much easier and more sociable if they could be side by side. The Side by Side handlebar takes care of that.
It easily attaches near the front of the chair and is angled so pushing still makes the chair go straight ahead. The handlebar also includes a horn and light the rider can operate for themselves. Rubber grips, hollow metal tubing and a folding mechanism make the handlebar light and affordable. What a difference a little design makes.
A LITTLE PUSH: While some metals and polymers may remember their shapes and snap back after being deformed ceramics usually just break because they're brittle. Now researchers have created shape-memory ceramics — at least in tiny filaments with a diameter of just 1 micrometer. These strong flexible ceramics could be used for medical applications, such as actuators that release drugs in implants.
OPEN HANDED: Prosthetic hands, often made with materials like titanium and carbon fibre, are amazing devices but also very costly. One British inventor is making a low-cost prosthetic hand thanks to a 3D printer. The Dextrus hand connects to an existing prosthesis using a standard connector and picks up signals from its wearer's muscles.
Each finger is individually activated and feedback allows the hand to feel objects, adjusting the grasp to safely handle even delicate items. The project is open source so anyone can use and build on the designs and code. 3D printing in changing lives in such interesting ways.