The lego arm deserves extra points for style, looks, chad, rizz, alpha, sigma, common sense, reaction, flex, mental fortitude, creativity, and imagination.
There was a climber who had an accident and ended up losing both legs. He designed his own prostheses, originally to look like human legs, before realizing...why? He ended up making legs that were more like stilts and gave him the ability to climb in ways literally nobody else could.
I saw corps transform Night City into a machine fueled by people's crushed spirits, broken dreams and emptied pockets. Corps've long controlled our lives, taken lots and now they're after our souls. I’ve declared war not because capitalism’s a thorn in my side or out of nostalgia for an America gone by. This war’s a people’s war, a war against a system gone haywire; spiraled out of our control. You don’t see it… but you will.
That could be an EXCELLENT idea for a kid's lawyer, can't say for 100% of the kids but 99.99% do have a nice time with anything related to lego The lawyer would be more trusting and the kid would be curious, opening him to talk more and venting/opening up more easily
I mean, in many ways, we're already there. Have been for a while, actually, but they're still in development for public use. It's basically a tail for people who's jobs require them to lift and move heavy loads. It acts as both a counterweight and a balancing aid, preventing muscle strain and back pain, I think they were modeled off of kangaroo tails to an extent. It's also cool as heck.
Yeah they might seem cool, but they are way worse than actual human hands. I think they won't even come close to your original hands in a few more centuries
Holy shit. I just got an arm just like that one on Thursday. So far it’s amazing. I had a brachial plexus injury so I have less function than you but it helps a lot.
These types of channels are so cool. They raise awareness about people with disabilities while doing cool things with robotic body parts and other stuff
@@SezimusLive Well no duh. Ofc we know they exist, but every once in a while it’s good to see someone with a disability handling themselves really well.
@@SezimusLive people with disabilities are of course well known of as far as their existence goes but we dont really see how they live their everyday lives even though theyre everyday people, which is weird isnt it?
Its electrodes inside the socket touching the muscle on your lower arm, it has two sections (for me) and you have to do therapy to separate the muscles and control them separately if you can’t already. The electrodes open and close the arm aswell as other functions when activated for long enough (like 2-3 seconds)
Let me just break it down for you, First you need a brewing stand and a handful of sugar, you'll also need 3 bottles of water, place the bottles of water under the brewing stand and place the sugar in the top slot, you'll have to go to the Nether for blaze powder, too.
It would take a 22mkg lateral press to make this dude look straight. Haven't seen a more clear cut case of sugar in the tank since An Artist Named Prince
I hate admitting it since they’re understandably still used to this day, but growing up I was terrified of how older model prosthetics DID NOT blend in whatsoever. The fifty shades of bandaids and kung fu grip hands always unsettled me to the point that I preferred the plain old yellow/white ones that would just have a bare hook on the end of them. Cost aside, it is amazing how personal and unique they’re becoming to people everyday
I was always of the opinion, On one hand, replacing lost limbs with a replica of our limbs is a noble pursuit of science... But on the other hand, using a missing limb as an opportunity to slap some weird shit on is quite something
And then you have commissar Yarrik, from Warhammer 40k, who has a laser-firing bionic eye (one shot before recharge, I believe), and chose to replace his lost arm with an oversized, mechanzed claw taken from the enemy (an ork/space orc) who severed it in the first place... there's a lot of potential for some batshit crazy things...
What makes you think you can afford to slap some weird shit on your limb after missing a limb, when you can't afford to slap some weird shit around now?
The Bionic hand looks incredible and efficient. I'm so glad we live in an era where this technology is available for the public. Edit: Yes the prosthetics are expensive but there are charities, sponsors, donators who can help funding. It's a big leap tech/cost wise from what companies could do 10 year ago. It's only going to get better and more affordable so I'm grateful for that.
@@amir-rifle_8447 Sure but in just a short few years companies have created more affordable solutions. It's still in $10-15k range but It's better than the $60k from a decade ago.
i mean honestly i think they just got cheaper and thus more accessible, it may have just been some gay hoax or something but i saw a video a while back of a prosthetic limb from the 20s that had full finger movement functionality
It always makes me smile to be reminded that we live in a world where losing an arm or leg, something that ruined your life a few decades ago, isn't such a big deal anymore.
@@PNikiV Or health insurance. That's what it is for. Everyone pays a small part of his income so that the one person that actually needs some crazy expensive treatment (and that could be anyone of us; one day you react a bit to slow while driving and you arm is gone) will not be in debt for the rest of his life.
@@neptun2810 A bionic prosthesis on insurance? Damn, that must be pretty good insurance. In my country you can get a prosthetic from the government, but you have to wait quite a long time and they give you something random there. There are several ways to get something good, but there you need either special conditions or money, just not all at once and not in such quantity.
@@PNikiVwas gonna say yeah in the US pretty sure I see plenty of people with the old fashioned arms and legs because these arms are luxury items. You’re not getting that on insurance. And if you are it’s because you’re already super wealthy and your insurance payment for a single person per month probably pays off a new car. The arms cost between 20-80k. And insurance companies tend to tell you that your life saving operation isn’t covered so it makes me wander about just having a robot arm. I could be wrong though, and all these guys I’ve seen in town don’t know they can get their hand(s) on a new robot arm/leg for basically free
walking by the wall (Shy one) the shadows will not fall (Shy one) is silently ignored (Quiet one) discouraged by the noise (Quiet one) living without choice (Quiet one) is a life without a voice When you can't even say my name Has the memory gone? Are you feeling numb? Go and call my name I can't play this game, so I ask again Will you say my name? Has the memory gone? Are you feeling numb? Or have I become invisible? that dreamers wish away (Hindsight) is falling on my face (Highlights) the shape of my disgrace When you don't hear a word I say As the talking goes, it's a one-way flow No fault, no blame Has the memory gone? Are you feeling numb? And have I become invisible? And no one hears a word they say Has the memory gone? Are you feeling numb? Not a word they say But a voiceless crowd isn't backing down When the air turns red With their loaded hesitation Can you say my name? Has the memory gone? Are you feeling numb? Have we all become invisible?
I love how myoelectric prosthetics seem to be getting more and more common, especially considering how they have been on the market for around 10+ years from what I recall I do hope that they become cheap enough that pretty much any amputee can have one (having the option to go manual or myoelectric)
lego cup had me wheezing. not at the fact you have a lego prosthetic, but the comic proportion of cup to head like a real lego figure. Hope youre doing alright, have a good one
Explaination: Its electrodes inside the socket touching the muscle on your lower arm, it has two sections (for me) and you have to do therapy to separate the muscles and control them separately if you can’t already. The electrodes open and close the arm aswell as other functions when activated for long enough (like 2-3 seconds)
Boss get down! That's an enemy gunship! A single burst from its machine gun can cut a man in half. Stay low and crawl along the ground. That should enable you to sneak past enemies.