The “Bad Hair Day” Brush
Filed under: Gadget news, developments, oddities
As if looking at your hair’s horribly tangled mess is not enough, Japan’s Kao Corporation’s smart hairbrush further rubs it in by letting you rate a “bad hair day” on a scale of 1 to 10.
The hairbrush analyzes the damage caused by hair treatments such as hair dyes and bleaches by “listening” to the sound as hair is brushed.
“To make the brush, an aluminium bar a few micrometers long is polished and sandblasted and then buried amongst the prongs of the brush. A microphone attached to the bar then picks up vibrations as hair is dragged over the bar. A built-in strain gauge also records the resistance caused by brushing.
A USB connection feeds these measurements to a PC which compares the sound and the pulling strain. Tests carried out in a Tokyo hair salon showed that hair in good condition makes far less noise than dirty hair with split ends. Loud sound at high frequencies also indicates too much bleaching, the inventors say. The brush could help hairdressers work out the appropriate treatment for a person in their care.”
LINK via NEW SCIENTIST
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September 21st, 2006 at 11:02 am
[...] Kao Corporation, which we mentioned yesterday for this wonderful, very useful hairbrush, is not going to be stopped in its quest to make the planet pretty. The company worked with a Keio University research team led by robotics professor Takashi Maeno in developing an artificial skin that feels just like human skin. “The artificial skin developed by Kao and Keio mimics the feel of human skin with a 1-cm thick “dermis” of elastic silicone covered by a 0.2-mm thick “epidermis” of firm urethane. Countless tiny hexagonal indentations etched into the urethane epidermis provide it with a very realistic texture. … [...]