Pages

Sunday 7 August 2016

TASTY TECH EYE CANDY OF THE WEEK XCVI



Tasty Tech Eye Candy of the Week (Aug. 6)
By Tracy Staedter,
Seeker, 6 August 2016.

Robotic race car, a fog catcher and an award-winning cargo drone round out this week's gallery.

1. Rose Pavilion

wpsDE3D.tmp

A building that blooms like a bouquet of roses is really a conceptual design for a pavilion by Russian architect Vasily Klyukin. The glass and metal façade would change colour based on interior lighting.

2. Solar-Electric Car

wps91BF.tmp

This summer, Chinese solar power company, Hanergy Holding Group, unveiled four prototype solar-powered cars. Each one is covered in a thin-film solar cell that generates 8 to 10 kWh of energy, which gives the car a range of about 50 miles.

3. Dew Harvester

wps2AB4.tmp

This little cactus-shaped device called Dewpoint collects and stores water vapour from the air for later use. It was designed by students at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago for the Biodesign Challenge. The students took their inspiration from actual cactus leaves, which also store water to survive.

4. Nissan Bladeglider

wps4FCD.tmp

At the Rio Olympic Games, two Nissan prototype Bladeglider cars are being used to shuttle around VIPs. The all-electric three-seater goes 0 to 62mph in 5 seconds and has a 118mph top speed.

5. Second Skin

wpsA865.tmp

For rescue workers and first responders, finding lightweight, breathable clothing that’s also protective is nearly impossible. But scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory have turned to nanotechnology for a solution. They’ve developed a flexible polymer membrane that contains carbon nanotubes aligned to function as tiny pores. The pores breathe and also can be engineered to neutralize biological and chemical agents.

6. Cargo Drone

wps6619.tmp

For his design of a vertical take-off drone meant to carry cargo, Alexey Medvedev won first place in the Airbus Cargo Drone Challenge, sponsored by Local Motors. Medvedev named the drone Zelator and is now US$50,000 richer.

7. Rolling Robot

wpsFB45.tmp

This rolling robot named Ourobot is made up of 12 linked segments that each have a motor and a pressure sensor. On flat ground, it rolls like a wheel. But to move over uneven ground or obstacles, it flattens out and works more like a tread on a tank. It was designed by a team of computer engineering students at Germany’s Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences. Ourobot comes from the Egyptian symbol called Ouroboros, which shows a serpent curled around in a circle.

8. Honeycomb Morphing

wpsD7B7.tmp

Kirigami is an ancient Japanese art form similar to origami. It involves cutting and folding paper to obtain 3-D shapes. Now researchers at the University of Bristol have found a way to use Kirigami to transform 2-D sheet materials into complex 3-D shapes. The technique could be used to improve robotics, morphing structures for aircrafts and space vehicles, as well as microwave and smart antennas.

9. Roborace

wps860B.tmp

Roborace is a new kind of car racing event being planned to take place in tandem with the Formula E in the 2016/17 season. Ten teams will compete in identical cars and so for this race, the car isn’t the muscle - it’s how the data is processed from a huge array of sensors and cameras get processed.

10. Pin Gun

wpsC199.tmp

To prevent theft and to reduce the chances of an accidental shooting, San Diego-based start-up Safety First Arms created the self-locking Smart 2 pistol, which has a built-in PIN pad and an anti-theft alarm.

Top gif image: The Zelator drone. Credit: Alexey Medvedev.

[Source: Seeker. Edited. Top image and some links added.]

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please adhere to proper blog etiquette when posting your comments. This blog owner will exercise his absolution discretion in allowing or rejecting any comments that are deemed seditious, defamatory, libelous, racist, vulgar, insulting, and other remarks that exhibit similar characteristics. If you insist on using anonymous comments, please write your name or other IDs at the end of your message.