Ninth-grader’s environment-friendly invention would help the homeless
Worcester Telegram, MA - 11 hours ago
The gifted 12-year-old won first place in the national Trash to Treasure contest with his invention, called The Home Dome. The easy-to-assemble dwelling is
Design Squad, the Intel Foundation, and BKFK Announce the Grand PR Web (press release)
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Source: Ninth-grader’s environment-friendly invention would help the homeless – Worcester Telegram

 
The mother of (re)invention
SmartBrief, DC - 14 hours ago
Reinvention isn't just for one-name pop stars like Madonna and Cher. Companies of all sizes have to reinvent themselves, too, whether in response to a

Source: The mother of (re)invention – SmartBrief

 
Mountain Scent Is Mother's Invention From Necessity
State Journal, WV - 17 hours ago
ALBANS — Necessity, we have been told, is the mother of invention. This is the story of a Kanawha County mother whose necessity was to help ease the

Source: Mountain Scent Is Mother's Invention From Necessity – State Journal

 
REVIEW: Jonah Bokaer's The Invention of Minus One at DiverseWorks
Dancer Universe, NY - 18 hours ago
With the highway traffic of I-10 roaring nearby, Jonah Bokaer took a turn as performer in False Start, a brief prelude to his feature work The Invention of

Source: REVIEW: Jonah Bokaer's The Invention of Minus One at DiverseWorks – Dancer Universe

 
Lowboz — Part Quirky Conversation-Piece, Part Practical Invention
MarketWatch - Dec 2, 2008
Mayer Frankel parlayed his moment into one of the most exciting, quirky — and practical — inventions to come along in a while.

Source: Lowboz — Part Quirky Conversation-Piece, Part Practical Invention … – MarketWatch

 
U invention could have big impact on world sewage
KSL-TV, UT - 22 hours ago
It's the first full-scale test of a major invention from the University of Utah. If it works, it could have worldwide significance and will save people here

Source: U invention could have big impact on world sewage – KSL-TV

Dec 042008
 

I have always believed that everything we need to live and thrive can be found on the earth and I don’t mean just food and shelter.  It just takes someone with the ability to see what is already there to make it happen.  I think we dismiss nature too much in favor of man made technology and ignore simple and effective solutions to problems that have already been solved, by nature.

Some interesting examples:

How Fishy Technology Could Power the Future

Think like a fish not like a bird, say researchers trying to harvest energy from water currents. Their new fish-inspired power generator can work in slow-moving currents where traditional turbines are less effective.

Tidal streams and moving rivers in the United States could generate 140 billion kilowatt-hours per year, or about 3.5 percent of the nation’s electricity demand, according to the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI).

Most of the attempts to tap this potential have employed underwater windmills. These so-called tidal turbines use the force of lift to turn their blades.

“We live in air so we are used to lifting surfaces that support birds, sail boats and airplanes,” said Michael Bernitsas of the University of Michigan.

In water, however, Nature has devised a different strategy. Most natural swimmers — from tiny sperm to giant whales — create vortices (or little whirlpools) that they push off of to propel themselves forward.

RoboClam


The simple razor clam has inspired a new MIT robot that could lead to a “smart” anchor that burrows through the ocean floor to reposition itself and could even reverse, making it easier to recover.

The so-called RoboClam is being developed to explore the performance capabilities of clam-inspired digging, as well as to shed light on the behavior of the real animal.

© 2012 Head Blaze