Paeng Min-wook, 28, has developed a robotic eyeball he has
dubbed "The Third Eye", which obsessive mobile phone users can
strap to their foreheads so they can browse injury-free on the
go.
The device opens its translucent eyelid whenever it senses the
user's head has been lowered to look at a smartphone. When the
user comes within one to two metres of an obstacle, the device
beeps to warn of the impending danger.
"This is the look of future mankind with three eyes," Paeng, a
postgraduate in innovation design engineering at the Royal
College of Art and Imperial College London, told Reuters as he
demonstrated use of The Third Eye around Seoul.
"As we cannot take our eyes off from smartphones, the extra eye
will be needed in future."
Paeng's invention uses a gyro sensor to measure the oblique
angle of the user's neck and an ultrasonic sensor to calculate
the distance between the robotic eye and any obstacles. Both
sensors are linked to an open-source single-board
microcontroller, with battery pack.
Paeng's demonstration of the device in Seoul this week garnered
attention from passersby.
"I thought he looked like an alien with an eye on his forehead,"
Seoul resident Lee Ok-jo said. "These days many young people can
get into accidents while using their mobile phone. This would be
good for them."
Paeng said The Third Eye was meant as a warning, not a real
solution for smartphone addicts who won't pay attention to where
they are going.
“By presenting this satirical solution, I hope people would
recognize the severity of their gadget addiction and look back
at themselves,” he said.
(Reporting by Minwoo Park and Daewoung Kim; Editing by Jane
Wardell and Sonya Hepinstall)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|