It appears Fujitsu ran a "future design" contest. And C|Net ran a pictorial on the winners.

I think I can say with complete confidence that whoever designed this "cane" has never needed to use one. Not only is this thing almost completely useless as a cane, it looks like a repetitive-stress injury (probably to the carpal tunnel) waiting to happen. It's comparable to all these design-school motorcycle "concepts" designed by people who have never ridden a motorcycle and don't understand the first thing about how one works, and which it's usually obvious at the first glance would be completely unrideable.
I don't care how high-tech and sexy your "design" looks. Make some effort to learn a little about whatever it is you're trying to come up with a new design for, before you whip out your copy of Illustrator and just start making shit up. This is not a mobility aid for a disabled person; it's a bloody fashion accessory.
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I don't even think they consulted any physical therapists either.
Hopefully, before this atrocity comes out and is forced on us, someone from PT will tell them where to shove it.
*shudder*
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The friend I was planning to send graphics cards to got his main problem solved last night .... turned out he installed from a baselayout 1.2 stage3 tarball, got upgraded to baselayout 2.0.2 from portage, and nothing told him he needed to run dispatch-conf. I think he does still need some parts though, but mainly server hardware. I'll have to check.
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The cane has been around for literally a few hundred thousand years, if not more. The amount of human-factors engineering that's gone into it is absolutely beyond human imagining. Billions of people have used canes and given feedback. This means our current designs are within epsilon of perfection -- at least as perfect as mass-produced devices can be for a tool that is ultimately best when crafted to fit a particular person's needs at a particular point in time.
If you were to assign me to design "the X of the future!", I would start by designing something that hasn't already gone through a few hundred thousand design iterations.
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