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Hearing through your bones
Hearing through your bones —
Bone conduction technology allows people with deafness to hear, helps tech-heads talk, and lets swimmers listen to music underwater. Find out more.
Google
Hearing through your bones —
For people with some forms of hearing loss, where sound cannot take the natural path from the outer to the inner ear, bone conduction can help them get round the issue. The Bonebridge implant transmits sound waves via bone conduction directly to the inner ear where they are processed just like a natural sound.
couresy medel
Hearing through your bones —
Artist Markus Kison found a haunting new use for bone conduction technology: allowing visitors to Dresden, Germany to relive the horrors of the city's WWII air raids. At a silent observation deck, visitors can look out over the city, while placing their elbows on the railing and cupping their ears to hear the screeching airplane engines and exploding bombs.
Courtesy Markus Kison
Hearing through your bones —
An integrated bone conduction speaker is at the heart of the Google Glass experience. It allows users to listen to notifications and instructions from their device, while being free to communicate with others and interact with the world around.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images
Hearing through your bones —
Neil Harbisson -- a contemporary artist born with color blindness -- has hacked a camera to pick up colors and transmit it to his ear as a musical note, via bone conduction. He calls it his Eyeborg.
Courtesy Lars Norgaard
Hearing through your bones —
Dreampadturns your pillow into a speaker that only you can hear. Now you can lull yourself to sleep with sweet music transmitted through the fluff.
courtesy dreampad
Hearing through your bones —
Aftershokzbluetooth bone conduction headphones allow joggers to jog and cyclist to cycle without the risks inherent in ear-plugging headphones. They believe it could make exercise safer.
Courtesy Aftershokz
Hearing through your bones —
Going one better, Cynapsput the whole headset into a cap. The conductor slots into the headband and sends your music down to your ears.
courtesy Max Virtual LLC
Hearing through your bones —
Panasonicare among the big brands also releasing bone conduction headphones this year. They reckon their BTGS10 will work for TV watchers who don't want to disturb their sleeping significant other.