Wobbly and shaky hands is one thing.. focus, endurance, precision and also consistency while operating is another.. we're not talking about 10 minutes operation.. it took hours.. in that time, talent is very important as if a person who have wobbly and/or shaky hands will have their condition amplified through time.. At first glance it will help for some not-so-talented person become a surgeon.. with those anti-wobbly feature taking some movement for extra reference.. but.. that will just make talented surgeon doing more movement per operation compared when using similar tools without the anti-wobbly feature.. unless the feature can be turn on and off at will.. that might make a difference..
I was a software engineer on the first CE approved surgical robot 25 years ago. So this isn't particularly new. They are getting better and cheaper (ours was more than $1M in 1999 when $1M was real money).
I had the opportunity to buy a used DaVinci robot system. The University hospital was selling very cheap one and I had just come into some money. Part of me regrets not buying it, but paying for my wife's appendectomy was probably more important.
The cob was wheeled out of surgery to cheers and applause, only to be wheeled into a summer BBQ feast and a buttery demise.
Wobbly and shaky hands is one thing.. focus, endurance, precision and also consistency while operating is another.. we're not talking about 10 minutes operation.. it took hours.. in that time, talent is very important as if a person who have wobbly and/or shaky hands will have their condition amplified through time..
At first glance it will help for some not-so-talented person become a surgeon.. with those anti-wobbly feature taking some movement for extra reference.. but.. that will just make talented surgeon doing more movement per operation compared when using similar tools without the anti-wobbly feature.. unless the feature can be turn on and off at will.. that might make a difference..
I knew all that practice in Dr Mario on my Virtual Boy would eventually pay off.. Harvard medical school: HERE I COME!!!😂😂
They did surgery on a corn kernal! 🤯
I was a software engineer on the first CE approved surgical robot 25 years ago. So this isn't particularly new. They are getting better and cheaper (ours was more than $1M in 1999 when $1M was real money).
Piss off with your bs
I want one of these. Not sure what I would do with it, but still
Micro soldering
I'd use it for watchmaking. Would help with watches that have super small components
I had the opportunity to buy a used DaVinci robot system. The University hospital was selling very cheap one and I had just come into some money. Part of me regrets not buying it, but paying for my wife's appendectomy was probably more important.
@@michaelrcolton could have done the appendectomy yourself if you’d bought it. Two birds with one stone!
@@IAmNumber4000 It did occur to me, not gonna lie. I'm pretty sure I could have done it.
Sony master of electronics
Japan is so ahead of us westerners!
Do I need to be a PSN Plus subscriber to use this?
This is brilliant I think intuiative and stryker will have competion, they should have AI and ML includede as so much surgery is repetitive
Wer bekommt dann im falle dessen:
Operation gelungenen Patien tot...
Die Schuld?
It only cost one bugatti
Seriously you believe that it’s needed to be operated by a human?
ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh