cute nails for 11 year old
cute nails for 11 year old J.E. on July 23, 2014 in New Delhi, India. The photo was released by the Indian Institute of Technology. The model, Ghawna Singh, was born as Srinivasa, a girl's name. REUTERS/Stringer
By and large, Indian companies are taking advantage of the technology behind the wearable cameras known as artificial intelligence and smart glasses to enhance their customers' health, safety and fashion for their products and service.
Billion-dollar brands such as Mizon and Kmart are putting their money where their mouths are, and using it to create products that are personalized to its consumers, according to a study by MIT Technology Review.
Many of these models also incorporate artificial intelligence algorithms that will identify people based on their age and physical body size in order to help them avoid unnecessary unnecessary care.
"It's an obvious way to find out that you have a medical problem. Maybe you have a doctor's recommendation," Kwanghli, the CEO of Bux and Lifestyle Systems, which manufactures the wearable software, told Reuters.
Mizon had begun selling the service to customers in 2013 and said its customers were receiving more than 1,800 notifications of heart disease or other medical issues. (Reporting by Mohammad Sa'eed in Islamabad; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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