Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Soon Clothes will Work as A Transceiver Of Digital InformationTccicomputercoaching.Com



Soon Clothes will Work as A Transceiver Of Digital InformationTccicomputercoaching.Com

Imagine now when you just enter the home after late night party and your wife caught you by your lying! You just thought “How did she know?” You are attending your final examination viva at college, which are very tough, you are hardworking, intelligent, yet in viva result is dependent on your luck and examiner. But now you can imagine what he or she is going to be asked? It’s really great relaxation for engineering and medical students.
At office you can always try to give satisfaction to your Head by your good work, yet you are not in his good employee dictionary. But now you can read your Boss’ brain and make him happy by doing work as per his thinking.
Kids who are sweet and innocent yet very difficult task to realize their mind. But now also it’s possible to scan their mind and make them happy.
If this is possible then it will very advantageous for police-officers and CBI. Because they can investigate very well. They make them speak true easily. So, in all over the world crimes will be decreased or all most removed.
All this will soon be possible as the researchers working on wearable electronics have been able to embroider circuits into fabric with super precision -- a key step toward the design of clothes that gather, store or transmit digital information.
"A revolution is happening in the textile industry. We believe that functional textiles are an enabling technology for communications and sensing and one day, even for medical applications like imaging and health monitoring," said lead researcher John Volakis from Ohio State University.
Ohio researchers has the prospective to combine of electronic components such as sensors and computer memory devices into clothing with 0.1 mm precision.
Researchers who are working to develop wearable electronics have reached a milestone: They are able to embroider circuits into fabric with 0.1 mm precision -- the perfect size to integrate electronic components such as sensors and computer memory devices into clothing, concrete the way for clothes that gather, store or transmit digital information.

The researchers used threads of 0.1mm diameter, made with seven filaments. Each filament is copper at the centre, enamelled with pure silver.Such e-textiles can lead to shirts that act as antennas for smartphones, workout clothes that monitor fitness levels, bandages that tell how well a wound is healing and caps that sense activity in the brain.








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