When Don Moir lost his ability to speak 16 years ago due to Als, no one ever expected he'd get it back. Yet thanks to technology made possible by Not Impossible Labs, he was able to tell his wife, Lorraine, how he feels about her. "As soon as I found out about Don and Lorraine, I knew that Not Impossible had to give Don his voice back," its founder, Mick Ebeling, said in the video. A year ago, Javed Gangjee, a volunteer at Not Impossible, promised Don that he would find an answer that works for him specifically. So that's exactly...
- 2/19/2015
- by Alexandra Zaslow, @alexandrazaslow
- PEOPLE.com
When Don Moir lost his ability to speak 16 years ago due to Als, no one ever expected he'd get it back. Yet thanks to technology made possible by Not Impossible Labs, he was able to tell his wife, Lorraine, how he feels about her. "As soon as I found out about Don and Lorraine, I knew that Not Impossible had to give Don his voice back," its founder, Mick Ebeling, said in the video. A year ago, Javed Gangjee, a volunteer at Not Impossible, promised Don that he would find an answer that works for him specifically. So that's exactly...
- 2/19/2015
- by Alexandra Zaslow, @alexandrazaslow
- PEOPLE.com
Elliot Kotek.
California-based Australian Elliot Kotek is combining his twin passions of creating technology to help humanity and making documentaries.
The co-founder of media and technology company Not Impossible, Kotek is producing a feature-length documentary Project Daniel and he.s just released online a 6-minute doc Don.s Voice.
In a separate venture he has just completed Queen Mimi, a feature doc profiling 89-year-old Marie .Mimi. Haist, who was homeless for 35 years. Living and working in a laundromat in Santa Monica she befriended actors Zach Galifianakis and Renée Zellweger and turned her life around.
Kotek has financed Not Impossible.s shorts by corporate sponsorships, highlighting technology devised by his firm.
Project Daniel is a spin-off of the short film Project Daniel - Not Impossible's 3D Printing Arms for Children of War-Torn Sudan, which followed the visit of Mick Ebeling, the firm's CEO and co-founder, to Sudan's Nuba Mountains in...
California-based Australian Elliot Kotek is combining his twin passions of creating technology to help humanity and making documentaries.
The co-founder of media and technology company Not Impossible, Kotek is producing a feature-length documentary Project Daniel and he.s just released online a 6-minute doc Don.s Voice.
In a separate venture he has just completed Queen Mimi, a feature doc profiling 89-year-old Marie .Mimi. Haist, who was homeless for 35 years. Living and working in a laundromat in Santa Monica she befriended actors Zach Galifianakis and Renée Zellweger and turned her life around.
Kotek has financed Not Impossible.s shorts by corporate sponsorships, highlighting technology devised by his firm.
Project Daniel is a spin-off of the short film Project Daniel - Not Impossible's 3D Printing Arms for Children of War-Torn Sudan, which followed the visit of Mick Ebeling, the firm's CEO and co-founder, to Sudan's Nuba Mountains in...
- 2/15/2015
- by Don Groves
- IF.com.au
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