Join

Eyeborg01


The Eyeborg Project is the work of Rob Spence, a 36 year old filmmaker residing in Toronto, Canada and Kosta Grammatis – an unemployed engineer from San Francisco, California. Rob's eye was badly damaged in an accident involving a shotgun at age of 13. Rob had his eye surgically removed and replaced with a prosthetic one after enduring ten years of pain. Now with the help of Kosta and a team of ocularists, inventors, engineering specialists, Rob is building a prosthesis that can capture and transmit video.


Warning: this video may contain shocking material.


In order for the project to be succesful Kosta Grammatis and his team implemeted the smallest, lightest, power efficient technologies that could be found. The world's smallest CMOS cameras -- 1.5 mm square are being used, small enough to be lost in a sneeze.


Eyeborg02


The video signal is being transmitted wirelessly to be recorded elsewhere by an RF Transmitter that's smaller than the tip of a pencil eraser, and lithium polymer battery technology is powering the eye. Kosta envisions that the data will be sent to a backpack to be recorded.


Eyeborg03


Rob Spence is currently working on a documentary film about the Eyeborg Project and the experience of living with a bionic eye. He hopes it will raise questions and build awareness regarding issues around surveillance in our society.


Eyeborg04


eyeborgblog.com | Related: Is Your Tooth Ringing? | Roboswift, Eyes In Disguise | Robofly

Enjoying this story? Show it to us!

0 Likes

Share your thoughts and join the technology debate!

Be the first to comment