31.3.12
Multipurpose Mixing Bowls - The 'SmartMix' Makes Baking Faster and Easier
30.3.12
Handpresso Auto Machine
28.3.12
25 Creative and Stylish Salt-and-Pepper Sets
Posted by Adam Ott
Design Concepts: The Future of Birth for the Babies in Your Future
Superyacht design concept Blue Dream II
hydrogen vehicle concepts
27.3.12
Everyday Edisons
Everyday Edisons si now in Hulu!!
What Is Everyday Edisons?
Emmy Award-Winning show in it's 5th season!
Everybody has a great idea that could change the way we work, the way we live or the way we play. Sometimes these ideas never make it past a sketch on a napkin. From thousands of hopefuls screened through online casting calls on www.EdisonNation.com, ten ideas were selected for the fourth season of Everyday Edisons. Tune in as we take you from idea to store shelf and show how extraordinary ideas can come from ordinary people.
http://www.everydayedisons.com/
Posted by Melissa LeMieux
Boulder Guys on Kick Starter with great idea
26.3.12
Not Just Another Pretty Wall
Dent Cube is a 3D porcelain stoneware cladding that can be used to create interior and exterior walls with a unique indented pattern that offers endless possibilities for customization. Pictured here is a version with glass inserts that bring shades of yellow, pink, red, blue and green together in a eye-catching patchwork of color. What’s more is that the innovative ceramic tile can absorb toxic particles, improving the quality of air.
Big, Bold, and Buzz-Worthy Buildings in 2012
The global financial crisis has slowed the pace of building in much of the world, ensuring that 2012 won’t exactly go down as a boom year for architects. But there are plenty of eagerly anticipated projects slated for completion, and Architectural Digest has compiled a shortlist of 12 key buildings for 2012. A couple of high-profile American projects made the list, almost as much for controversy (the new Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia) and cutbacks (the new Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill, New York) as for their noteworthy architecture. In the Middle East, the lately bustling construction hubs of Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Doha didn’t make the cut, but Amman, Jordan, did. So did, a bit farther afield, Baku, in the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan. It’s no surprise that many of the showstoppers are in China—and not just in Beijing and Shanghai. An eclectic array of audacious structures is popping up in the fast-growing metropolises of Chengdu, Shenzhen, Dalian, and Guangzhou. “The next two decades in China could present the most momentous migration in human history,” says Steven Holl, whose Sliced Porosity Block high-rise complex in Chengdu is included. “The unique situation there calls for unprecedented architectural and urban prototypes to redirect rapid urbanization.” Still, when it comes to skyscrapers in the taller-is-better mold, it’s a gleaming 72-story tower by Renzo Piano that takes the crown this year—in low-slung London of all places.
Interesting Take on Emotion in Product Design: "Soap" vs. "Perfume"
It's nice to see even mainstream news organizations paying attention to the chronically underexposed design departments of major corporations. These days guys like Ralph Gilles and of course, Jonathan Ive get a lot more ink than we'd have seen a decade ago. Most recently Reuters got inside the design department at Samsung Electronics to talk shop with Lee Minhyouk, Samsung Mobile's design veep.
While the meaty article looks at the expected areas of business differences between Samsung and chief rival Apple (the former manufactures their own components, the latter must outsource, etc.) and examines the mutual sue-fest the companies have recently engaged in, what most caught our eye was this analogy about product design:
To become a truly innovative company, Samsung needs to explore the art, as well as the science, of what it does, critics say."Samsung is like a fantastic soap maker," said Christian Lindholm, chief innovation officer of service design consultancy Fjord based in Finland. "Their products get you clean, lathers well. However, they do not know how to make perfumes, an industry where margins are significantly higher. Perfume is an experience. Perfume is meant to seduce, make you attractive and feel good. You love your perfume, but you like your soap."
One point hinted at in the article seems to be that Samsung is viewing design as a science that can be learned, but that they have not managed to harness capital-A Art. That's a thorny problem that every design university Dean has grappled with, and Apple's mastery of this issue creates as much profit as it does envy.
That doesn't mean Samsung doesn't understand the problem; it just means they're not there yet. But at least one fun fact in the article shows they are trying to get there: Samsung's designers get sent on inspirational trips to places like Iguazu Falls in Brazil and the Incan city of Cuzco in Peru! Now that's a sweet gig, and for the sake of overworked ID'ers everywhere, I hope that becomes recognized as a recipe for design success!
Posted by Rachel Briggs
21.3.12
Students Design Inflatable Solar Light For Disaster Relief
Called the LuminAid, the light consists of a waterproof outer shell complete with a dot-matrix design used to diffuse light, as well as a thin solar panel, two rechargeable batteries, an LED light, and an inflatable core. The LuminAid can provide five hours of light and takes six hours to charge.
The inflatable design allows the light to float in water, but also makes it easier to ship, as it takes up very little space when uninflated.
"Sustainable lighting solutions, including photovoltaic cells coupled to rechargeable batteries, are an ideal approach to providing on-demand lighting with no operating cost," the LuminAid website reads.
"However, current solar-charged light solutions are expensive and difficult to manufacture and transport. This makes them unattractive for large-scale deployment. The LuminAid solar light addresses these issues while providing a useful and portable form of light for disaster victims."
The lights are expected to be used in places like Haiti and Pakistan.
20.3.12
Wine Rack
The Ex
2011 Invention Awards: A Portable Motorized Body Board
Kymera Motorized Body Board
John B. Carnett / Popular Science
The lightweight Kymera Body Board is Jason Woods's solution for a timeless problem (for lucky people): how to have fun at the lake without the hassle of lugging a boat around. The latest version of his motorized body board hits speeds of 25 mph
The PrintBrush
2011 Invention Awards: A Landing Pad For Skiers
Six years ago, Aaron Coret, a 20-year-old engineering student at the University of British Columbia and an aspiring pro snowboarder, launched from a 50-foot jump at Whistler Blackcomb. “I remember coming off the lip of the jump and dropping my shoulder too hard. Right then I knew that I had lost control,” he says. “The second I touched down, I lost feeling in my entire body. I slid 60 feet to the end of the landing and stared up at the sky, wondering what my life is going to be like now that everything had changed.”
Paralyzed from the neck down after crushing two vertebrae, Coret resolved to increase the safety of the sport he loved. For his final project in an engineering course, he teamed with fellow student and snowboarder Stephen Slen to create a safe landing pad for ski and snowboard tricks. Working from the back of a sail-manufacturing shop, they created a 15-by-20-by-5-foot vinyl-and-nylon landing pad that contained two inflatable chambers. The upper chamber was sealed, while the four-foot-high lower chamber had valves that released a controlled amount of air on impact. Unlike most landing pads, which give so much that they envelop the athlete, the prototype remained firm enough to land on and ride off of, but it had enough give to reduce the risk of injury.
How It Works: Landing Pad: When a snowboarder hits the pad’s firm vinyl surface, the lower chamber releases a small amount of air through vents on the sides, ensuring a soft, upright landing without enveloping the rider Blanddesigns.co.ukTo test the invention, Coret and Slen went to the top of the Blackcomb glacier. Still completely unsure if the pad was fit to ride, Slen took a deep breath, sailed off a jump, landed on the pad—and slid down it perfectly. By the end of the year the inventors patented their design, formed a company (Katal Innovations, named for a unit of catalytic activity), and began looking for someone who knew how to build large inflatables. They settled on a company that makes custom bouncy castles.
But the new models didn’t have the amount of give that made the first version safe and rideable. “We had to pull out the old prototype and have our friends jump on it while we analyzed why it was working,” Slen says. It turned out that the pad didn’t dump air the way they had thought. In their field tests, the prototype’s valves had released some air upon inflation, so when a rider jumped on it there was immediately “some cushioning movement,” Coret explains. That slight, unintentional deflation was crucial to the design. To replicate it, the inventors used blowers and vents in the new version to continuously add and release air.
Within a year after Coret and Slen had finished their new models, Canadian officials called the pair to a meeting to ask them to use the Katal pad in the opening ceremony of the Vancouver Winter Olympics. It was a triumphant moment, and in the past year Katal pads have been demoed in Alberta, California and Colorado. “We had it on the mountain for five months, and there was big buzz surrounding it,” says Bryan Rooney, the manager of racing, terrain parks and special events on Vail Mountain, “X Games gold medalists and Olympians were lining up. It is a different animal than other airbags.”
Name:Kstal Landing PadInventors: Aaron Coret and Stephen SlenTime: 6 yearsCost: Undisclosed
3D Street Art - New World Record
GROVE’S FELT + BAMBOO IPAD CASE
18.3.12
World's Smallest Race Car Sets Record for Fastest Nanoscale 3D Printing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5y0j191H0kY&feature=player_embedded
13.3.12
Measurement Device
The Smart Finger is a measurement device concept, uses the signals relayed between the two finger points to calculate the measurement. It can measure length, breadth, and volume in a very intuitive way through simple button operations. The measured distance is displayed through LED.
Research Projects
The Stanford/Berkeley Testbed of Autonomous Rotorcraft for Multi-Agent Control (STARMAC) is a multi-vehicle testbed used to demonstrate new concepts in multi-agent control on a real-world platform. STARMAC consists of six quadrotor vehicles that are equipped with sufficient sensing and computing power to enable completely autonomous operation, from low level tasks (e.g. waypoint and trajectory following) to high-level optimal control strategies (e.g. information theoretic cooperative search and rescue).
Flying Humvee
Plucky Carter Aviation Technologies has flown its proof-of-concept Personal Air Vehicle (PAV), which incorporates the slowed-rotor/compound (SR/C) technology that AAI has licensed for use in VTOL unmanned aircraft - and DARPA's Transformer (TX) flying Humvee.
Bicycle Design Contest
The winners of the 16th annualInternational Bicycle Design Competition (IBDC) were announced at the Taipei Cycle Show last week. From over 800 total entries and 20 finalists, Taiwanese designer Larry Chen took the Gold award this year for his Velocity electric bike design. The pedal assist city bike features a “power core” consisting of a battery, motor, and control unit that slides into the vertical section of the frame from the top. The bike can be used as an e-bike with the power core inserted or as a standard bike with it removed (saving a lot of weight). You can read more about the Velocity, and see several photos of the prototype, at Cycling Satin Cesena.