A group of Stanford students faced an impossible challenge: design an ultra-low cost, high-performance knee joint that is built for extreme conditions of the developing world. Two years later, their Jaipur Knee has been fit on over 300 amputees across the globe and highlighted in Time Magazine and Fast Company

We stopped by their Palo Alto office to see how they did it.

More from the Bassett Blog:  http://blog.bassett.tv/

  1. lentetijd reblogged this from bassettinspiration
  2. gardant reblogged this from badethnography and added:
    Some nice applied medical anthropology with engineering. Aw yeah, my school is always winning! That is, when it’s not...
  3. badethnography reblogged this from bassettinspiration
  4. bassettinspiration posted this