Categories: AI/ML News

Stanford’s tiny eye chip helps the blind see again

A wireless eye implant developed at Stanford Medicine has restored reading ability to people with advanced macular degeneration. The PRIMA chip works with smart glasses to replace lost photoreceptors using infrared light. Most trial participants regained functional vision, reading books and recognizing signs. Researchers are now developing higher-resolution versions that could eventually provide near-normal sight.
AI Generated Robotic Content

Share
Published by
AI Generated Robotic Content

Recent Posts

We can finally watch TNG in 16:9

Somone posted an example of LTX 2.3 outpainting to expand 4:3 video to 16:9. I…

19 hours ago

The Complete Guide to Inference Caching in LLMs

Calling a large language model API at scale is expensive and slow.

19 hours ago

The Human Infrastructure: How Netflix Built the Operations Layer Behind Live at Scale

By: Brett Axler, Casper Choffat, and Alo LowryIn the three years since our first Live show,…

19 hours ago

Introducing granular cost attribution for Amazon Bedrock

As AI inference grows into a significant share of cloud spend, understanding who and what…

19 hours ago

OpenAI Executive Kevin Weil Is Leaving the Company

The former Instagram VP is departing the ChatGPT-maker, which is folding the AI science application…

20 hours ago