It’s surprising how many different times a life has been saved by technology. It’s not just phones stopping bullets either, there are plenty of other awesome stories too.

We’ve collected interesting tales and brilliant examples of everyday technologies and simple items that have saved a human life.

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Drone saves a life

There are a few different stories about drones saving lives. Usually involving helping with search parties but at the end of 2021, a drone helped with a medical emergency.

In Trollhättan, Sweden, Everdrone’s Emergency Medical Aerial Delivery service was used to deliver an Automated External Defibrillator to a 71 year-old-man who was suffering a cardiac arrest.

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This allowed for emergency treatment faster than could have happened by traditional means. Then he was transported to hospital for full treatment.

This photo shows a terrific Formula One car crash where driver Charles Leclerc had his lifesaved by the “Halo” head protection device.

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The Halo is a ring-like device that was introduced to vehicle design to protect the driver’s head in case something like this happened.Leclerc Tweeted this imagesaying he was happy to have the protection from the Halo. Theaftermath imagealso shows just how lucky the driver had been.

Razer headset saves a life

At the start of April 2022, an 18-year-old from California shared theseimages on Redditsaying that their life was saved by their Razer headset when a stray bullet broke through their bedroom window and was deflected by the headset.

“Hello to everyone who sees this,” Enough_Dance_956 wrote. “I’m trying to get a hold of someone at Razer to thank them with all my heart. Wednesday morning at 10:30am a stray bullet went through my window and hit the Razer headphones on top of my head. If it wasn’t for the headphones made with good quality I would’ve been a dead kid at the age of 18. I couldn’t even imagine all the pain my family and friends would’ve been through”

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IBM’s Watson AI saved a woman from leukaemia

IBM’s Watson is undoubtedly a clever piece of tech. It’s capable of advanced natural language processing, information retrieval, automated reasoning and more.

In 2016, the system was used by the University of Tokyo for the medical analysis of an elderly lady. Watson was able to diagnose the 60-year-old with a rare form of leukaemia that had been incorrectly identified previously. It did so by comparing her medical records with a large database of 20 million cancer research papers to provide a proper diagnosis that led to her life-saving treatment.

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Bullet-deflecting smartphones

There are a surprising number of stories about smartphones saving lives.

FromNokiatoHTCtoApple, phones all over the place have been saving people from life-ending bullets.

The owners are no doubt incredibly lucky and we’d certainly not recommend trying to deflect incoming rounds with your phone or replacing a bullet-proof vest with a coat stuffed full of mobiles. Nonetheless, the stories are fairly fantastic and are brilliant examples of accidental life-saving technology.

Woman’s life saved by taking selfies

In 2018, a lady named Juanita Branch thought she was having a stroke. She took to snapping some selfies to see if her face was falling on one side.

Those photos were crucial in treating her condition as the time they were taken helped doctors diagnose and treat her and may havehelped save her life.

Perfectly timed ejector seat

This snap captures the moment a pilot of an RAF Harrier Jump Jet miraculously escapes a blazing fireball of disaster as their plane crashes on the runway.

The image was captured at Kandahar Air Base, Afghanistan and no doubt shows on lucky pilot using technology to escape almost certain death at the very last second.

An arrow stopping iPhone

An Australian man arrived home to find a man in his driveway wielding a bow and arrow in a menacing fashion.

The victim grabbed his phone to start filming and quickly found his iPhone pierced by the arrow. The tip managed to catch him on the chin, but he was otherwise unharmed. The iPhone was worse for wear, but still a smashing story of technology saving lives.

Life-saving thermal imaging drone

When a man crashed his car in depths of a freezing night in Lincolnshire, he was thrown from his vehicle and lost in the cold.

He was fortunately found and rescued from the icy grip of hypothermia thanks to the use of a police drone equipped with a thermal imaging camera.The footage from that droneshows the police officers locating the man via his body heat. He was found 500 feet from his car and was lucky to survive.

Apple Watch predicts a heart attack

Another story of technology helping with medical problems comes from Atlanta where a 61-year-old man was alerted by his Apple Watch that his heart rate unusually high despite being inactive.

There’s a setting within the Heart Rate app which lets users know if there’s an unusual heart rate detected despite the wearer being inactive for 10 minutes.

David Gilley received the alert and, knowing he already had health issues, took himself to hospital. Good thing he did too, because by the time he got there, his heart was failing but doctors were able to give him the treatment he needed and he was able to go home a few days later.