This entry was posted on Sunday, August 30th, 2009 at 11:51 pm and is filed under Tech News . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
August 30, 2009
One of the weirdest gadgets to come on the market lately is called a ghost detector. This is a bogus invention because it is just a little screen. Apparently if you detect a ghost in the area the button on the little ghost shaped screen lights up. It is a bit like a radar detector and it is meant to be clipped to a cell phone or key chain.
Dog buns are some of the weirdest inventions to come along. These are costumes that are designed to encase your Daschund or other small dog so that they look like a wiener. The costumes are made of soft, lightweight molded foam and contain two strips of Velcro that attach to the elastic harness. Each costume weighs about twenty ounces and costs about fifty bucks.
The Flying Alarm Clock is the best idea for those people who don’t mind jumping up in the air and running around to shut off an alarm. At the sound of the alarm the spinning piece takes off into the air and flies around the room making a high pitch annoying noise. This means hat to try and put it back on the base. And if you hit snooze you have to do the whole thing all over again. It is about thirty five bucks.
The beer company Miller is now marketing a new can for their beer products/The I. C Can (Instant Cool Can) from Tempera Technology is a real self-refrigerating can. It has been proven to lower beverage temperature by a minimum of 30° F (16.7° C) in just three minutes! When activated the natural desiccant contained in a vacuum draws heat from the beverage through the evaporator into an insulted heat container, which then significantly drops the temperature of the beverage. No more sticking a beer in the fridge to expect it to be frosty. The Illuminated Umbrella from Bright Night, featured in In Style magazine, is an umbrella
It contains a bright white krypton bulb underneath the umbrella that lights your way and keeps you dry. It’s constructed of a combination of denier nylon, Teflon, chrome, silver, polycarbonate and it only weighs sixteen ounces. All you need is 4 AA batteries and it will be kept lit for about forty rainy days!
Watur, designed by Daniel Harper, is an actual door made of constantly flowing water. The water spills down the front in sheets. It consists of a frame with a catch basin at the bottom to catch the falling water. It will cost around two grand if you want to fit one on one of your own door frames.
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