You don’t often see open‑source hardware shaking up med‑tech.
This startup is treating medical devices more like smartphones: it’s releasing both the software (under AGPL) and the hardware designs (under Creative Commons) so anyone can build on them.
The platform already powers a portable blood monitor and a low‑intensity ultrasound therapy unit that’s shown promise against strokes. The thing that I think is interesting is that sharing safety data and modular designs could let researchers and regulators cut years off the usual approval cycle, very cool to see this open source experiment.
This startup is treating medical devices more like smartphones: it’s releasing both the software (under AGPL) and the hardware designs (under Creative Commons) so anyone can build on them.
The platform already powers a portable blood monitor and a low‑intensity ultrasound therapy unit that’s shown promise against strokes. The thing that I think is interesting is that sharing safety data and modular designs could let researchers and regulators cut years off the usual approval cycle, very cool to see this open source experiment.