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Control Your Bionic Hand With An iPhone (Part 1)

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Your iPhone can do anything? Now it can program bionic hands…

As a certain time-honored advertising campaign so famously said: “There’s an app for that” – and of course, it’s true that iDevices and the iOS platform that powers them have expanded so many people’s sense of precisely what a mobile phone can be expected to do, ever since the first iPhone’s emergence in 2007.

iOS apps now take the form the everything from productivity-boosting word processing and spreadsheet apps to means of making art and music

iOS apps now take the form the everything from productivity-boosting word processing and spreadsheet apps to means of making art and music

iOS apps now take the form the everything from productivity-boosting word processing and spreadsheet apps to means of making art and music, and there are – of course – a fair amount of games to be found in the App Store as well. But life isn’t always a mere game, and every now and then, something with the dizzying functionality and intuitiveness of iOS comes to the rescue of someone who needs something infinitely more invaluable than a mere gimmick with which to while away those hours.

Yes, iDevices may be criticized sometimes as expensive toys, but they have also had life-changing value for some of us – people like Jason Koger and Nicola Wilding.

How iPhones are bringing life after debilitating injury

People may joke, from time to time, that a person is so glued to their iPhone that it’s practically an extension of their body. For some people, that is quite literally true, but even the jollier interpretation of the phrase has a certain kernel of truth. iDevices have long been hailed for their incredible intuitiveness and even as you read this very article, you’ll be dabbing various areas of the screen without a moment’s thought, perhaps switching from one app to another as you do.

People may joke, from time to time, that a person is so glued to their iPhone that it’s practically an extension of their body

People may joke, from time to time, that a person is so glued to their iPhone that it’s practically an extension of their body

Sometimes, people use styluses on their iDevices, although many simply use their fingers – but have you ever stopped to think just how big an effect it would have on your user experience if neither were an option for you? Such devices are, after all, designed around default human bodies with their fully-functioning arms and fingers that give them the ability to pinch, cling, glide and perform so many of the other functions that you never gave much conscious thought to.

Part of the genius of an iDevice is that using one is as sample and as intuitive as picking up a pen. But then again, it really is the case that people don’t realize what they have until they lose it, which is certainly something that you could say of personal mobility and dexterity. There is a gracefulness, elegance and poise to the human digits that many of us don’t consciously appreciate – but it would be a different story if you suffered a debilitating injury that robbed you of the use of them.

Jason Koger’s story

In just about the worst-case scenario, about which so many people have nightmares – the complete loss of their hands. That was exactly what happened to the protagonist in our first story, Jason line in 2008. After his trauma, the last thing that he could have expected was anything approaching a return to an almost full range of motion. It would have surely seemed still less likely to him that one of the sources of his respite would be a smartphone app.

The i-limb differs from standard prosthetics in its incorporation of five individually powered fingers, including a fully-rotatable thumb

The i-limb differs from standard prosthetics in its incorporation of five individually powered fingers, including a fully-rotatable thumb

That is precisely what has transpired, with CNN reporting that he is the first double amputee to have been fitted with prosthetic arms that can be controlled by an iPhone app. It has to be admitted that the arms themselves are nothing if not formidable. As a matter of fact, the i-limb ultra – the brainchild of UK firm Touch Bionics – represents the leading edge in prosthetic technology, with the developers describing it as the closest thing to a real human hand. The i-limb differs from standard prosthetics in its incorporation of five individually powered fingers, including a fully-rotatable thumb. The wrist also rotates, while the 24 other grip patterns that are made possible by the app mean that Koger can do things like picking up a pen, using tools and shaking hands.

It’s all very impressive; we’re sure you’ll agree. Jason has a less realistic-looking, claw-like “working hand” at his disposal, and he has even customized his own grip pattern.

Most poignantly, ha has spoken of the “gift” of being able to hold onto his daughter’s hand for the first time in five years.

So many of us can’t to appreciate the heightened convenience brought to the life of someone like Jason by such an apparently simple combination as some bionic hands, an iPhone, a stylus and a well-chosen app. Whereas it once wasn’t possible for him to adjust the grips on his bionic hands without flying hundreds of miles to visit a clinician. Now, he can make those changes himself with the minimum of fuss and five his life so much more independently.

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