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Students design intelligent wheelchair

VNA
Published: January 18, 2017

With a passion for physics, a Dong Nai-based group of students have invented an affordable robot-wheelchair.  Their aim is to ease the struggle disabled people have with movements and maneuverers. Their invention has been inspired by the wheelchair used by world-renowned physicist Stephen Hawking.

Former Minister of Science and Technology Nguyen Quan (right) presents the awards to the contest’s winner, the Dong Nai students with their “Supporting robot for people with infirmities and disabilities

The three students from the Dong Nai Technology University in Dong Nai Province also demonstrated on stage how their robot can double as a bed for the user to lay or sleep on. The robot can also lift or lower the user, within a certain level, so a user can easily move from the robot chair to his bed without assistance.

The chair is also outfitted with a robotic arm that can hold a water bottle or hand over clothing to users. The machine can either be manually controlled via a control panel or an app on a smartphone or tablet.

This thoughtful creation has deservedly earned the first prize worth 15 million VND (670 USD) in the 2nd Viet Nam Maker Contest with Intel Galileo 2016 (VMIG), which came to an end last weekend.

The contest was jointly held by the Centre for Viet Nam Youth Talents, Science and Technology (CYTAST) and Intel Viet Nam, under the auspices and guidance of the Ministry of Science and Technology (MoST), Central Committee of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union (HCM CYU).  The intention is to promote the young generation’s creativity and spike their interests in science and technology, which ultimately is expected to contribute to the development of the country's high-tech economy.

The contestants made full use of Intel’s Edison platform  which, with the Intel Edison board at its core, aims at making it easier for hobbyists and inventors to develop consumer electronic devices, especially the Internet-of-Things devices, which is the current hot trend in the tech world.

In the six months beginning in June 2016, the nation-wide contest drew some 110 ideas from 29 universities and academies. Of these, 42 teams – each comprised of a maximum three students and one teacher for guidance – were selected to enter the preliminary round, in which they had three months, with one Intel Edison board and 2 million VND, to bring their ideas to reality.

Sixteen best creations from 14 universities were eligible to enter the final round.

The contestants’ inventions covered a wide range of fields, from education, health, agriculture, environment, transportation, and urban planning.

The two second place prizes went to iGloves - a product from HCM City University of Science team which can convert sign languages into Vietnamese speech, and a heat-vision camera from the Ha Noi University of Science and Technology team which detects and gives warnings via smartphones about people with abnormally elevated body temperatures which is often a tell-tale sign of sickness.

Other notable products include a pesticide-spraying robot, back massager shirt, a system that monitors working conditions, such as temperature and air quality for workers in factories, a system to provide users with bus routes and other information, and is able to give warnings when theft is detected.

(Source: VNA/ DA NANG Today)

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