Monday, February 7, 2011

top 10 inventions 2010

Inventor Of New Baby Pacifier Finally Gets To His Own 'Super Bowl'


Most inventors have to wait a long time to see their products on the market, if they ever get there.  That''s why two of the critical character traits of an inventor must be persistence and patience.  Dr. John Davis, a Roanoke, Virginia pediatric dentist, waited 10 years to see his PreVent pacifier on the shelves and online stores of Baby's R Us.  That was finally his Super Bowl.



Some of us may be snowed in right now; if not, we're waiting for the next storm, andthen we'll be snowed in.  Well, three years ago, industrial designer John Mosher was snowed in, in Hopington, Massachusetts,, and he went out with his snow blower to clear the driveway.  It broke down.  A 160 foot driveway is tough to clear with a shovel, and Mosher made it half way when he saidthat's it!  The rest made shovel history!




Two years ago, when the deluge of the bedbug became the scourge of the day, Chris Goggin, a mechanical engineer, wondered if he could create a machine as sensitive to odors as a dog.  The particular sensitivity would be to the pheromones emitted by bedbugs.




FirstLego® League (FLL®) is calling for all young inventors between the ages of 9 and 16 (9 and 14 years old in the U.S. and Canada) to compete for the New Global Innovation Award presented by the X Prize Foundation.  Kid teams will compete for the opportunity to win a cash reward of $20,000 that would go towards patent and development costs for their new invention.




Thirteen when he applied for his first patent, Kansan Zachary Smith just received it at the age of 15.  His invention? A sports chair that comes with its own blanket and carrying case that apparently no one had thought of before.  Now, with patent in hand, Smith is looking to make the most of it.






Stupid.  That's what you say to yourself when you read about Smartfish's patented ErgoMotion technology. Then you say, 'Of course! It's so obvious that for designs to be really ergonomic, they have to move withyour body.



Yes, of course, inspirations can come from anywhere. But is BAE Systems takingcartoon-mimicry just a little too far with its Batman-inspired tank?




Deadlines are upon us for Everyday Edisons Season 4 submissions.  Don't even worry if your idea is not prototyped yet; the online submission can even be sketched out on a napkin!


One inventor, Andrew Lewis of Harlem, has come up with a way to keep the eyesore saggies above the butt.  It was a trend many of us hoped would go away, but it has actually caught 'on fire' in urban neighborhoods.  Saggy pants.  The fat workman's 'crack,' so often hyperbolized as the height of grossness, is now consideredfashion among school kids and even those in their twenties! 

top 10 innovation nominated for 2010 edison awards

                 1. OneBreath: An Inexpensive Portable Ventilator

OneBreath portable ventilator system with inventor Matthew Callaghan: image via PopSci.com


Inspired by the need to help more patients in a crisis situation, such as a pandemic, postdoc fellow at Stanford University, Matthey Callaghan developed a no-frills ventilator that runs on a 12 volt battery that works for up to 12 hours and can be easily transported. 
Because hospital ventilators typically cost from $3,000 to $40,000, hospitals generally would not have enough ventilators for patients who need them in a pandemic.  Callahan and a few fellow students took on the ventilator project so that hospitals would be prepared... just in case. Their device uses a $10 pressure sensor like one you would find in a blood pressure monitor.  It pumps air into the chest through the mouth and a sensor monitors how much air is in the lungs.  Sensor data is fed into a software program to calculate the data, letting the ventilator know when the patient needs air again.

2.  KOR-fx: Ultra Sensation Gaming Device

KOR-fx shown by inventor Shahriar S. Afshar: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com


A visiting physics professor at Rowan University, Shahriar S. Afshar is living in campus housing, which makes him subject to the bass vibrations from surrounding gamers' rooms.  The interference made it pretty hard for Afshar to get his work done.  An inventor since childhood, Afshar invented the KOR-fx as self protection.
The KOR-fx is a device that connects to gaming consoles, PCs, or music players.  It sits around the shoulders, and the two transducers that lie on one's chest  translate stereo sound into stereo vibrations.  That way, gamers can feel complete immersion in their games without involving others who are not playing.  “We can induce the sensation of rain, wind, weight shift, even G-forces,” he said.  His company, Immerz, is in talks with several studios to add these effects to films.

3. SmartSight: A Third Eye For Assault Rifles


SmartSight outfitted rifle, inventor Matthew Hagerty: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com

After 10 years and many prototypes, inventor (and perfectionist) Matthew Hagerty finally is close to what he wanted his invention, the SmartSight, to be: a third eye for soldiers that enable them to see around corners and even behind their backs without putting themselves in the line of fire.  SmartSight's latest design includes a 1.5 pound video camera positioned under the end of an assault rifle, a tiny computer that receives the video transmission attached to a soldier's vest,  and a tiny display monitor worn on a soldier's protective glasses that receives video images in real time from the computer.
The whole device weighs only three pounds, and though Hagerty says he would like to make the device even lighter, his SmartSight invention, as it is, can save thousands of soldiers' lives from ambushes.  Just think about being able to point and shoot a weapon at a target without even physically facing it.  

4.  EverTune: Guitar Tuning Revolutionized

EverTune, inventors Cosmos Lyles and Paul Dowd: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com

Guitar players and their audiences are in for a shock.  Cosmos Lyles and Paul Dowd have invented a guitar tuner you only tune once.  Right.  Not in the middle of a song, not between songs, not between sets.  Just once.  EverTune, the pair's invention, is a bridge that keeps your strings in place by the action of six springs and levers that keep the strings' tension, even if your tuning pegs loosen or tighten accidentally.   For guitarists, here's a video that explains the EverTune far better than I can!
Lyles and Dowd are in talks with guitar makers to embed EverTune in new guitars, but EverTunes will be made separately to fit many older guitars. I'm just wondering what guitarists will do to buy some extra time between sets now... drink some more water, I suppose.

5.  SoundBite: Non-Surgical Bone Conduction Hearing Aid For One-Sided Deafness



SoundBite invented by Amir Abolfathi:Image by Paul Wooten via PopSci.com


Hearing aids amplify external sounds for those that have some residual hearing. But when the cochlea (the auditory portion of the inner ear) doesn't function, hearing aids don't do any good.  For single-sided cochlea-involved deafness, there is a transplantable titanium deviceimplanted to the base of the skull nicknamed BAHA.  But Amir Abolfathi, former Invisalign vice president, came up with a new idea while sitting in traffic one day. (That's when inventors get their best ideas!)
Knowing that teeth are excellent sound conductors to bone, he thought why not create a bone conduction aid from the mouth.  With the help of an otolaryngologist, Abolfathi developed the SoundBite, an acrylic tooth insert (a custom-molded retainer) with a receiver that picks up sound from an in-ear microphone and then transmits the sound from the teeth to the bone up the jawline to the cochlea.  
In clinical trials, typical reports from patients in tests if the device were that the SoundBite restored 80 to 100 percent of their hearing.

6.  Groasis Waterboxx:  A Biomimetic Planter

Groasis Waterboxx, inventor Pieter Hoff: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com


In his past life as a flower exporter, Pieter Hoff often oversaw the evening activities of his lilies. He noticed that the plants collected condensation on their leaves and the water droplets were sucked in by the leaves as they cooled. Mimicking nature's efficient watering system, Hoff developed a planter that could capture water in the same manner to foster sapling trees even in harsh conditions.
The Groasis Waterboxx is designed as a plant incubator, which cools faster than the night air, allowing water to condense and flow into it along with rainwater to keep the plant and its roots hydrated and protected. Hoff's tests of the Waterboxx in the Sahara have been quite successful; after one year of growing saplings in the desert, 88 percent of the trees he planted had green leaves, while 90 percent of those planted in the local method died from the scorching sun.  Check out groasis.com and help test these Waterboxxes!



7.  Zoggles: Anti-Fog Device





Zoggle inventors Don A Skomsky and Valerie Palfy: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com




The device you see on Don Skomsky in the above photo is a Zoggles, but Zoggles is actually a whole technology that Skomsky and Valerie Palfy invented to keep fog from forming on lenses and windows.  The pair created a device with a humidity sensor and a temperature sensor that would stay colder than, say, a windshield, so they would sense when fog was coming and would turn on an automobile's defroster.
But Skomsky was able to use an obscure formula to predict when fog would form based on the temperature and humidity, so that the bulky controls could all fit on a chip.  The Zoggles now operate with that chip, which calculates when the lens needs to be heated and activates a heater that shuts off when it is no longer needed.  Palfy and Skomsky are planning to license their technology to manufacturers of motorcycle helmets, windshields, scuba masks, and military gear.


8.  Mini Infuser: Foolproof Programmable, Disposable Infusion Drug Pump


Mini Infuser invented by Mark Banister: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com


Mark Banister wasn't on his way to developing the first programmable infusion drug pump, but while investigating another idea, the infusion pump idea grabbed him. After working with an incubator program at the Arizona Center for Innovation, he was able to develop this drug pump in a way that could save hospitals money and make patients feel a whole lot more secure.
The Mini Infuser is the only disposable drug pump that can be programmed to dispense drugs continuously.  Taped to the patient's chest, a microprocessor inside the pump sends dosage information to the polymer that Bannister developed to deliver the correct dosages.  Upon receipt of dosage information, this special polymer will expand and displace the proper dosage from the reservoir within the pump where the drugs are stored.


9.  ECO-Auger: Fish-Saving Tidal Energy Turbine


ECO-Auger, invented by W. Scott Anderson: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com

Windmill turbines that convert tidal energy into electricity are costly and involve permanent installations that may harm marine life.  W. Scott Anderson, an industrial engineer, invented a simpler, less invasive tidal energy converter that's less costly and more marine-friendly.  It uses an auger, a spiral-shaped device that has tapered ends, so as not to harm fish.  When the current spins the auger, it induces a hydraulic pump in the nosecone of the device to pump high pressure oil that turns a generator outside of the water.
Though Anderson had made several small prototypes of the ECO-auger to test function and safety around fish, he has hand-crafted his first large prototype that has a two-foot diameter and a polyurethane/ fiberglass auger.  In a test, Anderson said it captured 14 percent of the water's energy, which is not as much as the windmill turbines, but Anderson says the percentage will go up as the diameter of the augers increase.  He is sure that ultimately the ECO-Auger will be more cost effective and just as productive as the windmill turbine.

10.  RAD Technology: A Drag-Ready Snowmobile



RAD Technology, invented by Shawn Watling: Photo: John B. Carnett, image via PopSci.com


Shawn Watling, a self-taught engineer, has created the first rear-drive, adjustable rear suspension snowmobile that is faster, safer, and more efficient than the snowmobiles produced today.   Snowmobile racing since he was only 9 months old (presumably as a passenger), the 35 year old Watling decided to put together his own snowmobile out of a scrapped ATV, a 130 horsepower snowmobile motor and transmission to drag race on his local drag strip.
The 'Frankenstein' was fast, and a dynamometer test revealed that 85 percent of its engine power was delivered to the ground, while a typical snowmobile only hit about 55 percent.   This result led him to discover that it was the rear suspension on front drive manufactured snowmobiles that increased rolling resistance and prevented adequate track tension.
Since Frankenstein, Watling's rear-drive prototypes have been numerous, but five years later he has made corrections in everything that slows a snowmobile down, and his RAD (rear-axle-drive) Technology has also produced a safer snowmobile that's more fuel efficient.






issue in chemistry :)


IUPAC has published a special issue of Chemistry International magazine devoted entirely to Marie Curie. This special 48-page, 12 article issue (Jan-Feb 2011 CI, vol. 33, issue 1) will be distributed widely throughout the year beginning with the Opening Ceremony in Paris on January 27.
When the United Nations declared that 2011 would be the International Year of Chemistry, it did so in part because the year 2011 coincided with the 100th anniversary of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry awarded to Madame Marie Curie—an opportunity to celebrate the contributions of women to science. With this in mind, IUPAC has published a special issue of Chemistry International devoted entirely to Marie Curie.
In addition to the eminent specialists who contributed articles, this issue features two authors with firsthand knowledge of Marie Curie: Hélène Langevin-Joliot, granddaughter of Marie and Pierre Curie, who coauthored the first article, and guest editor Jerzy Kroh, a former student of one of Marie Curie’s coworkers—in essence a grandson-through-science of Marie Curie.

This issue of Chemistry International will help illuminate the life and career of Marie Curie. In addition, it should prove inspirational to young scientists everywhere. The legacy of Curie is that talent, combined with perseverance and hard work, can lead to exceptional results

technological innovations

Technology innovation is the process through which new (or improved) technologies are developed and brought into widespread use. In the simplest formulation, innovation can be thought of as being composed of research, development, demonstration, and deployment, although it is abundantly clear that innovation is not a linear process - there are various interconnections andfeedback loops between these stages, and often even the stages themselves cannot be trivially disaggregated. Innovation involves the involvement of a range of organizations and personnel (laboratories, firms, financing organizations, etc.), with different institutional arrangements underpinning the development and deployment of different kinds of technologies; contextual factors such as government policies also significantly shape the innovation process. In the energy area, technology innovation has helped expand energy supplies through improved exploration and recovery techniques, increased efficency of energy conversion and end-use, improved availability and quality of energy services, and reduced environmental impacts of energy extraction, conversion, and use. Most energy innovation is driven by the marketplace, although given the public goods nature of energy services (and reducing their environmental impacts), governments invest significantly in energy research and development programs as well as demonstration and early deployment of selected energy technologies. Still, most investments in energy innovation are targeted towards technologies with clear commercial applications and financial returns, with only marginal investments (at least in relation to the need) towardsenergy innovation for helping provide modern energy services to the two billion poor people worldwide who don't have access to such services.




rueterdiel@yahoo.com.ph

advantages and disadvantages of chemistry

The advantages of chemisty are so many that it's impossible to give more than a brief outline: Almost *all* medicines were discovered by *chemists*, not by physicians. (The latter are merely practicianers.) Food safety is dependent upon chemistry. Without chlorine (a chemical) water supplies would give typus rather than quench thirsts. Modern life, as we know it, could not exist without chemistry. Chemistry is the basis of *all* sciences.
The disadvantages are based on one factor alone: Too many people are science illiterate and *misuse* chemicals.


Chemistry has so many uses in our daily lives that we could barely survive without it. Chemistry knowledge and methods are used to make: Detergents, Drugs and medicines, Textiles, Dyes and pigments and Fertilisers, to name only a few products.



==Answer== 

A major disadvantage of chemistry is that matter changes when it comes into contact with another. Mostly we use that quality to an advantage--such as drugs, converting elements into energy, food, cleaners and so on. Sometimes, though, the elements can be used to wage war (chemical warfare, explosive devices) or may be accidentally mixed when used for a reasonable purpose. For example, using ammonia and clorine together has "gassed" many a housewife while cleaning.


rueterdiel@yahoo.com.ph

Scientific Progress (project in chem)

Science is often distinguished from other domains of human culture by its progressive nature: in contrast to art, religion, philosophy, morality, and politics, there exist clear standards or normative criteria for identifying improvements and advances in science. For example, the historian of science George Sarton argued that “the acquisition and systematization of positive knowledge are the only human activities which are truly cumulative and progressive,” and “progress has no definite and unquestionable meaning in other fields than the field of science” (Sarton 1936). However, the traditional cumulative view of scientific knowledge was effectively challenged by many philosophers of science in the 1960s and the 1970s, and thereby the notion of progress was also questioned in the field of science. Debates on the normative concept of progress are at the same time concerned with axiological questions about the aims and goals of science. The task of philosophical analysis is to consider alternative answers to the question: What is meant by progress in science? This conceptual question can then be complemented by the methodological question: How can we recognize progressive developments in science? Relative to a definition of progress and an account of its best indicators, one may then study the factual question: To what extent, and in which respects, is science progressive?


rueterdiel@yahoo.com.ph

autobiograph :)

ako po si chikki fancubilla pinanganak noong november 5 1995 :) grade 1 ako ng mamatay ang papa ko  laging ina-away ng mga kapatid ng papa ko ang mama ko , may mabait naman e :) gusto akong kunin ng anti inday ko para sila na lang daw mag alaga sa akin dahil hindi daw kaya ng mama ko na buhayin ako kaya kaya umuwi kami sa lola ko kasi baka soon daw mabuhay nya ako kaya doon ako nag aral sa lebak sultan kudarat at doon ako nag grade 2 pero sabi ng mama ko habang lumalaki daw ako lalong lumalaki ang bayaran ko sa school kaya naisip ng mama ko na mag abroad iniwan nya ako sa kapatid ng papa na mabait sa cotabato kaya doon ako nag grade 3 , 4 tapos nun mga baksyon sinundo ako ng lola ko sa cotabato kasi bakasyon naman daw kaya pinasama ako ng anti ko :) pero ang hindi ko alam uuwi pala ang mama ko galing saudi kaya nagulat ako pero bumalik din sya pero sa ibang bansa naman  sa jordan :) at ito na ako :)

about chikki fancubilla

chikki hates plastic :)
at lalong lalo na yung pinapahiya ako :)
then yung nakakabad trip ::)