Equipment allows people to dream as they wish

Inspired by the fantasy film Inception, the two inventors in Brooklyn, New York have created a sleeping mask to help users dream as they wish.

Remee is fitted with an REM device that measures the movement of the face so it can theoretically help the user to have a good dream by letting the user's brain know what they are dreaming about.

The goal of the product is to help people dream as they wish, from driving a race car or flying to America to have lunch with Abraham Lincoln.

In the Inception movie directed by Leonardo DiCaprio and inception, a group of corporate espionage has entered the dream of a man to sow the idea into his subconscious. It is the world where technology can enter the human subconscious through the penetration of dreams.

Picture 1 of Equipment allows people to dream as they wish
Remedy can not always help to create a dream as you wish. (Source: Daily Mail)

Remee is a product of two 30-year-old founders Duncan Frazier and Steve McGuigan of Bitbanger Labs.

Duncan and Steve put the product on the Kickstarter website with the goal of attracting $ 35,000 in investment. But until this week Remee received nearly $ 573,000 from 6,550 people.

The sleep stages are divided into two types: REM and REM. In sleep, people usually experience these two stages several times each night. The REM stage is when dreams usually come and last until the morning.

Remee will recognize the REM stage and 'enter the dream' with light. This device waits 4-5 hours for users to go deep into the REM stage in front of the light from 6 small LEDs mounted inside the mask that are turned on.

Picture 2 of Equipment allows people to dream as they wish

The idea is simple: you are playing a perfect golf game in the dream, and you see the red light in the distance.

The device will help you realize you are dreaming. Once you've figured it out, you can decide what to expect next, like imagining a quick expedition to Antarctica or a timeless journey.

McGuigan says that he uses Remee several times a week, but admits that achieving the state of mindfulness in dreams is difficult, and that this does not always happen with the help of Remee.

References: Daily Mail