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			Wireless hearing aids? How technology continues to improve our lives 
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            [April 15, 2011] 
            (ARA) - "Any sufficiently 
			advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic," wrote 
			physicist and science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke. Imagine what 
			our ancestors, who relied on telegraphs or landline telephones, 
			would make of today's wireless communications technology. | 
		
            | You can navigate a new city using nothing more than a palm-sized 
			device that talks to a larger device orbiting far above the earth. 
			You push a button in an upstairs office that orders a printing 
			machine in the kitchen to print out the recipe for tonight's dinner. 
			And you can wear hearing aids that allow you to watch a movie with 
			others by having the sound streamed directly into the hearing aids 
			at a volume that's right for you, while your family can watch 
			comfortably at the same time. 
 Whether or not you understand the mechanics of how the technology 
			works, it's easy to feel the effect wireless communication has had 
			on our lives is downright magical. From mobile phones that allow us 
			to speak with others from virtually anywhere on the planet to garage 
			door openers that save us from having to exit our cars in the 
			soaking rain, wireless devices are everywhere in American life.
 
 The technology and its application are developing at a breakneck 
			pace. For many of us, it's becoming easy to imagine that wireless 
			technology can have practical use in virtually every aspect of our 
			lives. New developments like two-way transmission capabilities that 
			will make Wi-Fi networks even faster and more fluid will influence 
			how - and how often - we use wireless technology.
 
 In particular, wireless technology has widespread implications for 
			our health. It facilitates communications among medical 
			professionals, allows a doctor in a different city to view your MRI 
			readings in real time, and even makes it easier for hearing impaired 
			individuals to share in high-tech entertainment that might have been 
			problematic for them with traditional hearing aids.
 
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			In the simplest sense, hearing aids are designed to amplify sound. 
			Now, new wireless hearing aids by hearing aid maker Starkey stream 
			sound directly from your TV, radio or computer to your hearing aids, 
			allowing you to hear these devices at the volume you want without 
			disturbing others in the room.
 Wi Series hearing aids can be customized to fit your ears. And they 
			provide the high quality features including an advanced noise 
			reduction and speech preservation system and feedback canceller that 
			Starkey is known for. The hearing aids eliminate the need to wear 
			headphones in order to enjoy certain media, like TV or radio. Once 
			you plug the aid's companion device into your TV, radio or other 
			media device, you can begin streaming sound immediately without 
			pairing or the need for a body worn device. You can learn more at 
			www.starkey.com.
 
 "Baby boomers and many in the older generation are increasingly 
			comfortable with technology," says Barry Freeman, Ph.D., of Starkey. 
			"They don't want to give up enjoying media because of hearing 
			impairment or hearing aids that conflict with media use. Now, 
			wireless hearing aids ensure they don't have to."
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