Analysis

Lego arm for disabled kids wins prize in Paris

11th February 2016
Enaie Azambuja
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A prosthetic arm made of Lego, which children can customise to their own needs, has won the grand prize at a digital technology forum in Paris. The IKO Creative Prosthetic System, created by Colombian designer Carlos Torres, is compatible with Lego parts and can be customised with different shapes, colours and accessories.

"Torres wanted to help children with malformed or injured arms feel less isolated by making their disability feel less of a burden or a stigma," organisers of the Netexplo forum commented. "As well as technology, imagination can help children overcome a handicap."

The winner was chosen from entries from around the world, including an app that can translate the 11 official languages of South Africa and a Japanese robot that achieved high enough grades in school exams to go to the University of Tokyo.

The Netexplo forum, put on by the observatory of the same name for the ninth year, explores innovation in digital technology via a network of 20 universities spread across 15 countries.

Event co-founder Thierry Happe said the Netexplo Observatory had identified some 2,175 digital inventions this year.

"The 10 nominations illustrate the general trend that, thanks to digital [technology], has pushed the limits in order to enlarge the field of possibilities," Mr Happe said.

Learn more in the project's website

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