it is always good to have some little clues. My only
other tweet from Inwith
InWith's 3D circuitry platform can potentially enable 100's of new biocompatible devices that deliver drugs, diagnose disease,
monitor biomarkers and augment senses, to name a few applications.
"The human augmentation market, which includes implants as well as bionic limbs and fledgling computer-brain connections, will grow more than tenfold, to $2.3 billion, by 2025, as industries as diverse as
health care, defense and sports, adopt such technologies, researcher OG Analysis predicts. “We’re only at the beginning of this trend,” says Oliver Bendel, a professor at the University of Applied Sciences & Arts Northwestern Switzerland who specializes in machine ethics.