Do you know the sound of danger, what if you couldn't here it? Looking for an investor that is interested in the answer, especially deaf, has deaf relatives and/or friends.
We are a company dedicated to research and the production of a product to transform and reduce the danger of minimized sound such as wearing ear protection and or deafness on individuals. This will improve the lives and more importantly safety of those that are not able to hear sound coming.
We are in phase 2 of the project. This phase is to produce a serviceable product that can A: be sold to a larger company to take over production or B: be produced ourselves if that route is needed. Phase 1 ascertaining whether the product is feasible, and creating a working prototype has already been completed. It is estimated that it will take 1-2 years of research with readily avalaible materials and programs/algorithms that are accessible to us already. The research that is needed is just simply creating a serviceable prototype that can be produced and used easily for mass production.
The product will have an impact on 600,000 reported deaf US citizens, 70,000,000 reported world wide, 1,000,000 reported individuals reported road workers, + anybody in an environment wear hearing protection is needed preventing them from hearing dangers, or even their bosses trying to contact them.
I have worked closely with the engineers at Design 1st with targeted research specifically based on the feasibility and creation of the product. The simple answer is that the product is viable, the consumer demographic is massive, and the interest is positive. It is simply a market easily overlooked and unnoticed, until it isn't.
I was walking through Gallaudet the other day, and the campus, which is an all deaf community and university by the way, is filled with sound, sound that most of the students, and even faculty don't know about. One of the most important is the sound of danger, one in which I noticed as a hearing individual but went unnoticed by the student in question as they walked in front of a vehicle. Luckily the vehicle stopped having noticed the student, likely a common occurrence. However, what happens when it doesn't? Was the student at fault? Simply, no, they looked both ways as should be, but neither was the car, as they came around the corner and not from down the street. The student did not notice them coming up from behind, but I did, as a hearing individual I heard the noise of the car as it came up from the side, which is why I looked over to see the incident, but to the deaf student it was unknown. The product is necessary, the market is massive, it's time to think differently.
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