The Perfect Desk
May 30th, 2009 by admin
Called the Perfect Desk, this installation was created for the Emotionalize Your Light competition, and features a host of LEDs. It measures 160 x 140 x 80cm and will have PC-controlled lights installed in the near future.
Loaded up with LED lights, it looks like something out of a spaceship rather than something you’ll sit at while playing World of Warcraft
Jet Pack World Record Attempt
May 22nd, 2009 by admin
Developed by Jet PI LLC, the 800hp Go Fast Jet Pack can travel
a quarter mile horizontally at a maximum altitude of 300-feet and weighs a hefty 135-pounds.
Having said that, 30 or 40 seconds worth of fuel is easily enough time to get me to the grocery store and back at 60 mph. I just have to root around under the couch cushions for a quarter million dollars.
Volvo Gets Equipped with Water Cannon
May 20th, 2009 by admin
Ford researchers strapped a gigantic water cannon onto a Volvo
“to help study how to enhance stability control technology, reducing risks to test drivers and damage to test vehicles.” Video after the break.
“It’s a very effective test that demonstrates the ingenuity of our engineering team to think outside the box,” said Jeff Rupp, manager, Ford
Active Safety Systems Engineering. “We know of no other automaker doing anything quite like it.”
Inside Microsoft’s Future Home
May 20th, 2009 by admin
BBC gives us a look inside Microsoft’s
Future Home, which “manages to piece together a realistic vision of our homes on a 5 to 10 year horizon.” To sum it up, you’ll see lots of Microsoft Surface-style devices. Continue reading for the video.
As such, it’s no surprise to find dwellers interacting with the environment through gestures and voice to control interactive cooking surfaces in the kitchen and the digital wall paper in the kids’ room.
Lost Robot Can Ask for Directions
May 19th, 2009 by admin
Researchers at the Technical University of Munich have developed the ACE (Autonomous City Explorer) robot, which “uses cameras and software to detect humans nearby, based on their motion and upright posture.” Continue reading to see just how it uses that information to find its way.
After 5 hours and 38 interactions, ACE reached its destination. I have to wonder, though, if we really want robots to be asking people for directions.
Body Check Ball
May 19th, 2009 by admin
The Body Check Ball from Japantrendshop basically “lets you get an accurate, detailed picture of your health, anytime, anywhere — has sensors to read your body fat, bone density, and muscle percentages, and displays them all on an easy-to-read LCD screen
.”
The ball supports up to 10 different user profiles, and I assume it will keep track of past measurements for comparison. It also doubles as an alarm clock.
BUGlabs Modular Gadget Factory
May 18th, 2009 by admin
The BUGlabs Modular Gadget Factory from ThinkGeek is basically “a set of tools that lets you create personalized gadgets and devices; it’s open-source and modular, letting you literally snap together the device you need.” Video after the break.
Unhappy with Google maps street view? Snap on the GPS module and the camera, and code your BUG to take geotagged photos at specific intervals and roll your own.
Pole-Climbing Robot
May 17th, 2009 by admin
Boston
Dynamics’ RiSE v3 is essentially a “28-inch long quadruped robot [that] can make its way up vertical terrains at a rate of 21cm (a little more than 8 inches) per second.”
Created for use in search and rescue missions, reconnaissance and surveillance, the four-legged robot has claws crafted from surgical needles, letting it grip vertical surfaces.
Microsoft Zune Phone
May 17th, 2009 by admin
This Microsoft Zune Phone concept features a sleek interface, 5.0-megapixel camera, and even a touchscreen display. No word yet on if Microsoft will actually be releasing a Zune phone.
Until they actually confirm, check out the Zune Contact concept by Adam Huffman. He’s revamped the interface, made the body madly thin, slapped on a 5 MP camera and went all touchscreeny.
Roomba Mod Adds Robotic Grasping System
May 13th, 2009 by admin
This nifty Roomba mod adds a robotic grasping system to the device, allowing it to “pick up foreign objects and deliver them to you at about waist height.”
The system was 95 percent effective in picking up objects of all sizes and shapes during trials, and it was apparently quite simple to build and code.