(Interviewer) Hi, we're here with Daniel Levine, and he showed everyone his and his team's creation called the Pallette, and he was one of the more exciting entries here at the Hackaday Prize Awards Ceremony. So, if you could please tell us a little bit about you showed today? Sure. So, this is Palette. It's just some pictures of Pallette. Pallette is a tongue/computer interface. It fits like a mouthguard, and lets you use your tongue to control your surrounding technologies. Pallette uses infrared to track the tongue, so you don't have to push against the top of your mouth. The real idea behind Pallette was to try to create an assistive technology that is discreet and hidden from view and does not disrupt your identity. So, there are many different technologies that exist today. There's Eye Gaze, but you have to have a camera in front of you, and there's voice commands, which there's no privacy. So, the idea behind Pallette was to try to create a device that stays hidden and that you could control without anyone knowing that you have it. So, like a funny tagline we have for that is like telekinesis with your tongue, in a way. But this sort of is like a first push in this direction, and the hope is that this direction will... We're gonna keep on pushing it, and the hope is that these sort of interfaces will become so sleek and so unnoticeable that anyone, especially folks that really use this, folks with tetraplegia, will be able to interact with surrounding technologies, greater independence without anyone noticing and without any sort of disruptions to identity. (Interviewer) Wonderful. Have you seen people's... What's their experience been of those who have used it or? So right now, it works decently. It's surprisingly comfortable. It's a little bit big at the moment, but it fits, so, but it fits in the mouth. It's comfortable, and you can use it well. I think at the moment, people are most excited by the idea of what this can be and can become. Right now, it's like a usable prototype. (Interviewer) Okay, nice. What inspired this to you and your team, how did you? So, first, my team is like We're a bunch of friends, and we care about trying to do something good in the world, and then, there's also some, like, back stuff. I do a lot of gymnastics, and you find yourself injured sometimes, and you just appreciate being able to do a lot of thing... You appreciate being able to do what you wanna do. Like, even just being able to lift your hands normally or walk or... And I think that sort of sentiment goes through to say, like, you know, we have all this ability to create, and we have all these advancements all over the place and all these things that perhaps we don't need, you know? We should really be using our efforts to try to create things that we do need so that we can all experience life on our own terms. (Interviewer) And then, where do you expect to take this in the future? So, we created this as an open-source platform, so we put the designs on the Internet so that anyone can pick up those designs and create Pallette. We want to... The idea is that we wanted to create a community of folks that would use this to really understand the needs of... So we're not just making technology, and folks that can advance the technology and push the boundaries of what it can become to really create, like, this ideal of technology that doesn't feel like technology that could help us live more independently universally. (Interviewer) Wonderful. Thank you for sharing, and we hope you keep creating and also showing your creations to everyone. No problem. (Interviewer) All right. Thank you. (Interviewer) Take care.