Here are 10 of the most outré technological
advances from recent years -- inventions that push the boundaries of
innovation, yet seem unlikely to gain widespread acceptance. Enjoy them with a
caveat: There were people who scoffed at the notion that the motorized carriage
would ever replace the convenience of having a horse, and others who figured
that nobody would ever need or want to carry a telephone around in their
pocket. Enjoy.
10
The helmet used by the U.S. military
has changed dramatically over the years. In World War I,
the M1917/M1917A1 helmets, also known as "Doughboy" or
"dishpan" helmets, protected the heads of American infantrymen. They
were replaced in 1941 by the M-1 "steel pot," the standard-issue helmet
in World War II, the Korean conflict and throughout the Vietnam War. By the
1980s, U.S. military helmets had evolved into a one-piece structure composed of
multiple layers of Kevlar 29 ballistic fiber.
The
helmet of the near future, however, may contain something more than extra
protection from flying shrapnel. An Arizona State University researcher,
working under a grant from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA), is trying to develop a military helmet equipped with technology to
regulate soldiers' brains. The technology is transcranial pulsed ultrasound, which
delivers high-frequency sound waves to specific regions of the brain. Under the influence of these sound
waves, neurons send impulses to their targets, exerting control over them. On
the battlefield, this has enormous implications. Using a controller, a soldier
could release ultrasound pulses to stimulate different areas of the brain. For
example, he or she might want to be more alert after being awake for many hours
or relax when it's time to catch some shuteye. The soldier might even be able
to relieve stress or
become oblivious to pain, eliminating the need for morphine and other
narcotics.
Of
course, some people think this type of neurotechnology is pure science fiction.
Others worry that Uncle Sam is trying to take over the minds of its soldiers.
After all, it's one thing to have a drill sergeant yelling in your ear. It's
another thing completely to have one inside your head [source: Dillow].
U.S. businesses use about 21 million tons
(19 million metric tons) of paper every year -- 175 pounds of paper for each
American, according to the Clean Air Council. This has led to office recycling programs, "please think before
you print" e-mail signatures
and printers that offer double-sided printing. Now a trio of Chinese inventors hopes to add another device to the
cubicle environment: the P&P Office Waste Paper Processor, which
turns paper destined for recycling into pencils. The machine, looking a bit
like a three-hole punch crossed with an electric pencil sharpener, was a
finalist in the 2010 Lite-On Awards, an international competition that seeks to
stimulate and nurture innovation.
Here's
how the pencil-making gadget works: You insert wastepaper into a feed slot. The
machine draws the paper in, rolls and compresses it, and then inserts a piece
of lead from a storage chamber located in the top of the device. A small amount
of glue is added before -- voilà -- a pencil slides out from a hole on the
side. It's not clear how many pieces of paper form a single pencil, but you
figure the average office worker could generate a decent supply of pencils in a
month.
And
that seems to be the biggest drawback to the pencil-producing gadget. How many
No. 2 pencils can an office really use, given that most workers take notes on
their tablet PCs or laptops? And how much glue and lead
core do you need to buy to keep up with the overflowing paper recycle bin? Too
much, we would suspect, which is why you may never see this gadget in your
office supplies catalog [source: Bonderud].
Printing has come a long way
since the computer landed on the desktop. First, there were daisy-wheel
printers, then dot-matrix printers, then inkjetand laser printers.
The problem with all of these output devices, of course, is that they require
paper -- lots of it -- and expensive consumables, like toner. Why can't someone
invent an inkless, tonerless printer that allows the operator to reuse paper?
As it turns out, this isn't a new idea. Xerox has been
working with so-called electronic paper since the 1970s. Its most promising
solution is a type of paper called "Gyricon." A Gyricon sheet is a
thin layer of transparent plastic containing millions of small oil-filled cavities.
A two-colored bead is free to rotate inside each cavity. When a printer applies
a voltage to the surface of the sheet, the beads rotate to present one colored
side to the viewer, offering the ability to create text or pictures. The images
will remain on the paper until it's fed through the printer once again.
A Japanese company, Sanwa Newtec, is offering its
version of inkless, tonerless and rewritable printing technology. Its product
is called the PrePeat rewritable printer, which, like the
Xerox solution, requires plastic paper. But PrePeat uses a different technique
to produce an image. Each sheet of paper comes embedded with leuco dyes, which
change color with temperature -- colored when cool and clear when hot. The
PrePeat printer, then, heats and cools the paper to first erase an image and
then create a new image in its place. According to the company, a single sheet
of paper can be reused 1,000 times before it needs to be replaced.
What's the catch? A single PrePeat printer costs
almost $6,000, while a pack of 1,000 sheets of paper costs more than $3,300. If
you're running a printing-intensive business, you might be able to recoup your
investment over time. But the average PC user likely won't be willing to shell
out that kind of money to replace a standard printer [source: Miller].
A NAV will be a lot
smaller than the EMT Aladin airborne reconnaissance drone this German soldier
is using for close area imaging during patrol on Oct. 17, 2010, in Afghanistan.
MIGUEL VILLAGRAN/GETTY IMAGES
Many people don't know it, but USPTO can apply a secrecy
order to a patent if
patent office staff and their military advisers think the idea could be used to
threaten national security. Once the USPTO decides that a technology is no
longer a threat, it can publish the patent and pave the way for
commercialization. Some patents may remain cloaked under a secrecy order for
one or two years; others languish for decades. More than 5,000 patents -- inventions we
may never know or see -- currently have secrecy orders attached to them
[source: Marks].
That's not the end of hush-hush inventions. Each year, the
Pentagon sets aside billions of dollars to develop top-secret military weapons.
This so-called "black budget" has grown tremendously since the Sept. 11 attacks,
surpassing even the funds spent at the height of the Cold War. Some of that
money has gone toward the development of nano air vehicles (NAVs),
remote-controlled micro-drones that could easily infiltrate enemy territory. We
all know how the U.S. military has used larger drones to conduct
reconnaissance, transport supplies and even target individuals. Unfortunately,
the larger attack drones, such as the MQ-1 Predator, can result in unwanted
civilian casualties.
Lockheed Martin's Samarai micro-drone could
solve that problem. Weighing a mere 5.29 ounces (150 grams) and boasting a
12-inch (30-centimeter) wingspan, the Samarai looks like a maple-seed
whirligig, except this one comes with a miniature jet engine to
provide thrust and a tiny flap on the trailing edge of the wing to control
direction. In the near future, this nature-inspired micro-drone will snap
photos using a camera mounted on the gadget's central hub. But the longer-term
goals are to turn the Samarai or other similar micro-drones into armed attack
vehicles capable of killing a single individual with little or no collateral
damage [source: Weinberger].
Mercedes Benz has been an innovator for decades. You can thank
the German auto manufacturer for diesel and supercharged
engines on passenger
cars, antilock brakes, electronic stability systems
and more. But nothing could be more innovative than the BIOME
concept car, unveiled at the Los Angeles Auto Show in November 2010. Here's
how the official press release described the vehicle: "The Mercedes-Benz
BIOME grows in a completely organic environment from seeds sown in a nursery.
Out on the road the car emits pure oxygen, and at the end of its lifespan it
can be simply composted or used as building material."
Engineers
from the Mercedes-Benz Advanced Design Studios in Carlsbad, Calif., created the
car as part of the Los Angeles Design Challenge, which called for a safe and
comfortable compact car of the future that could accommodate four passengers,
demonstrate good handling and weigh only 1,000 pounds (454 kilograms). The
BIOME represents the Mercedes-Benz vision. It is made from an ultralight
material called BioFibre so that the finished vehicle, though wider than a
typical car, only weighs 876 pounds (397 kilograms). If you think that sounds
too good to be true, then get this: The BIOME isn't assembled. It grows from
two seeds -- one that forms the interior and one that forms the exterior. The
wheels germinate from four additional seeds placed in the nursery.
Of
course, you won't find the BIOME at your local Mercedes-Benz dealer. That's
because the far-out design is a vision of the future -- a concept carthat's
decades ahead of its time. As such, it couldn't exist today. But it might be as
common as a Corolla after 20 or 30 years of innovative thinking and inspired
engineering [source: Leavitt]
5.Body
Armor With Built-in Stun Gun, Flashlight and Cameraphone Charger
The Armstar Bodyguard 9XI-HD01 looks a bit like that scary
black body armor that Christian Bale wears in the recent Batman movies.
And it is kind of like that, actually.
The Bodyguard, which was patented by a California inventor
in 2007 under the title of "wearable shield and self-defense device,"
is designed to be a shield, a non-lethal weapon and a communications device all
in one [source: Justia.com].
The flexible arm, which is armored with Kevlar and hard plastic, contains a
rechargeable lithium battery pack
that powers an "electronic deterrent" device built into the arm's
artificial skin. All the user has to do is pull a pin, and an assailant who
grabs his or her arm is going to get zapped with electricity. The
Bodyguard is also equipped with a bright LED flashlight, an HD camera capable
of transmitting pictures, and a charging slot into which an iPhone apparently
fits nicely.
We could see this gadget becoming an indispensible tool for
law enforcement officers and bodyguards of the future, but given that you have
to inquire about it to get a price quote, we're guessing that it'll be too
costly to make much of a dent into the everyday suburban adventurer market
[sources: Armstar.net, Inventionreaction.com].
·
4. Bat
Suit
Wingsuit flyers, like
the one pictured, need to jump out of an airplane or off a cliff to fly.
OLIVER FURRER/GETTY IMAGES
Have you ever wanted to leave the ground and soar like a
bird -- or perhaps a bat? In January 2012, a Connecticut-based inventor was
granted a patent for
what the application describes as "a completely dynamic human powered
flying suit" that is modeled after the bat's style of aviation. The
inventor explains in the patent application that bats are fellow mammals and
the flying creatures "most closely related to human beings."
The device consists of a pair of strap-on batlike wings with
rigid and non-rigid portions that can be manipulated by the wearer once aloft.
Initially getting off the ground is a bit trickier: Unlike bats, who simply
do what comes naturally, the wearer of the flying suit would have to be towed,
or ride on a bicycle, skis or rollerblades down an incline and then assume a
leaning-forward flying posture and leap into the air at the appropriate moment
[source: USPTO].
The question is: Would this really work?
·
· 3.Portable Cat-toy Park
·
·
Think about it.
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DC PHOTO/DIGITAL
VISION/GETTY IMAGES
·
Comedian Steve Martin used to have a routine in which his pet cat figures out
how to imitate his voice and orders $3,000 worth of cat toys from a mail-order
company. The bit certainly resonated with cat owners, who know how easily
felines can get into mischief when they're trying to alleviate boredom. In
2009, a New York-based inventor was granted a patent for one
possible solution: a fold-up "cat toy park" equipped with a
scratching post, a tunnel for crawling through, a hanging chew toy, and most
ingeniously, a tube equipped with a fan that blows colored balls around a mesh
tube, a game that's "devised to occupy one or more cats" [source: USPTO].
·
While cat fanciers may applaud the ingenuity of the concept,
cats are notoriously fussy and capricious, and there's no guarantee they would
choose to play with such a toy rather than, say, claw your antique furniture.
Also, the value of having a portable cat entertainment center is questionable,
since we've never seen a cat who was a willing traveler.
·
· 2. License Plate Flipper
·
·
The Aston Martin DB5 driven by James Bond in
the film "Goldfinger"
·
MATT CARDY/GETTY IMAGES
·
Remember James Bond's tricked-out Aston Martin in the 1964 movie
"Goldfinger" -- the one equipped with hidden machine guns,
pop-out razor rims to slice pursuer's tires and an ejector
seat? Wouldn't you love to outfit your Toyota Yaris with some of that stuff?
·
The high-powered weaponry, alas, probably is a bit impractical,
not to mention dangerous. But there is a company that offers an electronic
license-plate flipper of the sort that Bond used to conceal his identity from
prying eyes. The $79.00 Vehicle Plate Flipper doesn't allow you to impersonate
a Swiss or French driver, but it does flip down at a 90 degree angle at the
press of a button to display a message on an underlying plate for the driver
behind you. There's also a special $74.99 version for motorcycles.
·
We're not sure that this gadget will ever become widely popular,
though, in part because some of the device's conceivable uses -- hiding your
identity from red light cameras and police, or provoking tailgaters with
taunting messages -- could get drivers in a lot of trouble. Indeed, the company
that sells the device attaches a disclaimer to its Web site, warning that the
gadgets are "STRICTLY intended for off-road use
only" and informing potential customers that they take responsibility
"for all liabilities associated with the use or misuse of our
product" [source: Plateflipper.com].
·
·
1. Robot That Devours Insects and Rodents
·
·
An old-fashioned mouse trap
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JOE
FOX/PHOTOGRAPHER'S CHOICE/GETTY IMAGES
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At this point, robotic vacuum
sweepers, singing androids and mechanical dogs are old hat. But
British inventors Jimmy Loizeau and James Auger have made a quantum leap with
the Carnivorous Domestic Entertainment Robot, an automaton that would stalk and
devour mice and insects, and then eat them and digest their bodies to produce
its own power.
·
They've come up with five different concepts, including the
mousetrap coffee table robot, which is designed to lure unwary vermin onto its
surface, which contains a trap door triggered by motion sensors. Rodent victims
trapped by the device would be chemically dismantled and fed to a microbial fuel cell.
A light on the side of the device would inform the owner of how much energy is
being produced by the auto-extermination. Other configurations include the
Lampshade Robot, which would lure flies and moths to their doom, a Cobweb Robot
that would trick spiders into weaving webs and then extract and feed them into
its fuel cell, and the Flypaper Robotic Clock [source: Scott].
·
Right now these robots are still just concepts, which you might
say is good thing: Realistically, who wants to watch their coffee table devour
a mouse?
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