April 15, 2014
Futuristic Highway
Some really great ideas here for the highway of the future.
These are the inspiration of interactive artist Daan Roosegaarde.
To save energy and increase safety, there are four concepts presented:
- Glow in the dark road markings (i.e. lane dividers) with photo-luminescent paint that charges during the day and lights up at night.
- Weather symbols on the road with temperature-responsive paint, so for example, when the temperature falls below a certain level, the roads show snowflake symbols to indicate that they may be icy.
- Motion-interactive lights on the highway that light up when cars approach and are powered by the draft of the moving cars.
- Induction lanes that can charge car batteries as they run along them and reenergize the cars for further travel.
Already, there is a 500 meter stretch of road in Oss, Netherlands with the glow-in-the-dark road markings--these are almost radioactive green in color and give a futuristic Tron look to the roads.
Now the question is when can we get these high-tech upgrades for I-495?
What an awesome high-tech display befitting our nation's capital and maybe it would help with traffic as well! ;-)
April 14, 2014
How Do You Kill A Pothole?
Even the phone number tells the story...dial 1-877-Fix Road.
All American too - red, white, and blue with the stars and stripes.
Bang, Bang. Pothole Dead. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
How Do You Kill A Pothole?
February 14, 2014
I Quit, And Here's My Clothes
Apparently some people threw off their Costco jackets (I think with name tags and all).
One jacket was on the train floor next to the heating vents and the other lying on the seat next to the window,
They were not neatly folded, but sort of angrily shoved there.
As people got on the train looking for a seat, over and over their eyes did a widening and they paused, some said, "What's that? Did someone leave their clothes on the train?"
Two teenage girls and a boy started laughing and pointing.
No one would actually go near these--maybe they were afraid of germs or to get involved in whatever happened here.
Well Costco, if you're looking for some of your long white jackets with emblem (one from your tire center), you may want to contact the lost and found in WMATA.
As for the employees, I don't think they are coming back. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
I Quit, And Here's My Clothes
February 13, 2014
Combat Tires 4 Commerical Use
I love these combat-level tires on the Polaris Sportsman All Terrain Vehicle (ATV).
These tires are non-pneumatic, never go flat, and are nearly indestructible.
They were developed for the military to absorb combat damage, navigate difficult terrains, and take lots of impact.
No spare needed!
Can I have these James Bond tires on my family car? ;-)
Combat Tires 4 Commerical Use
December 8, 2013
Amazon Delivery - By Crunk-Car, If You Like
But really how is a dumb drone delivering an order of diapers or a book so exciting.
Aside from putting a lot of delivery people at USPS, UPS, and FedEx out of work, what does the consumer get out of it?
Honestly, I don't care if if the delivery comes by Zike-Bike, Crunk-Car, Zumble-Zay, Bumble-Boat, or a Gazoom, as Dr. Seuss would say--I just care that it gets here fast, safely, and cheaply.
Will a drone be able to accomplish those things, likely--so great, send the drone over with my next order, but this doesn't represent the next big technological leap.
It doesn't give us what the real world of robotics in the future is offering: artificial intelligence, natural language processing, augmentation of humans, or substitution by robots altogether, to do things stronger, faster, and more precisely, and even perhaps companionship to people.
Turning surveillance and attack drones into delivery agents is perhaps a nice gesture to make a weapon into an everyday service provider.
And maybe the Octocopters even help get products to customers within that holy grail, one day timeframe, that all the retailers are scampering for.
It's certainly a great marketing tool--because it's got our attention and we're talking about it.
But I'll take a humanoid robot sporting a metallic smile that can actually interact with people, solve problems, and perform a multitude of useful everyday functions--whether a caregiver, a bodyguard, or even a virtual friend (e.g. Data from Star Trek)--over a moving thingamajig that Dr. Seuss foresaw for Marvin K. Mooney. ;-)
Amazon Delivery - By Crunk-Car, If You Like
July 24, 2013
Hyperloop Takes Us Supersonic
Now his concept of the Hyperloop is once again breaking all preconceptions of travel on Earth.
Forget planes, trains, automobiles, and boats--Musk's promised open source plans would take us from New York to Los Angeles in under 45 minutes!
The system would be built based on the following premises:
- Safer in that it never crashes and is immune to weather
- Faster than any Earth transportation available today
- Cheaper than air travel
- Better using self-powered solar panels and energy storage
In business school, we were taught to think in terms of better, faster, cheaper--what's amazing about Musk is he has a track record of not just thinking it, but making it so.
While the Hyperloop doesn't exist today, I find it awfully exciting to think that one day, it will.
On the plus side, Elon Musk makes George Jetson our reality; on the minus side, now we have no reason not to visit the in-laws. ;-)
(Source Photo: here with attribution to booknews)
Hyperloop Takes Us Supersonic
March 6, 2013
Really Smart Cities
This is unbelievable design work by Jacque Fresco--architect, futurist and only 96-years old!
As you watch this video, you just have to ask yourself, why didn't we think of that sooner?
His design for the city of the future just seems so intuitive--and in aggregate looks almost like the Internet with a mesh design of interlocking cities working together harmoniously.
Great concepts:
- Circular cities--with a city center or central hub of essential services (medical, fire, police, etc.) and shopping, and radiating bands of living quarters, agriculture, and recreation.
- Build from the ground up--rather than build piecemeal, you build the entire architected city from the ground up--first underground infrastructure then building foundations, structures, and all modular, interlocking, interchangeable, and constantly maintained.
- Transportation Conveyers--transport up, down, and around by speedy conveyers or between city hubs by underground maglev trains.
- Recycle Everything--this is an environment where nothing is wasted and everything gets recycled.
- Energy Sustainability--all buildings have photovoltaic or solar cells for generating their own renewable energy resources.
- Clean Water/Air--vital resources like water and air is piped in, cleaned, and constantly monitored for safety.
Wow, this is a day and night difference from any city that I have ever seen--wouldn't this be the type of place you'd like to raise your family in the future.
Maybe there are times when starting over with a fresh architecture perspective versus just tinkering with the old is necessary to make a bold leap forward--do you think this one of them? ;-)
Really Smart Cities
December 22, 2012
Still An Innovation Nation
Yesterday, according to the Mayan calendar, we were to have seen the end of the world. Today professors like Robert J. Gordon in The Wall Street Journal (22-23 December 2012) unfortunately continue to spread doom and gloom.
According to Gordon, "for more than a century, the U.S. economy grew robustly thanks to big inventions; those days are gone."
Gordon seems to think predominantly from 20/20 hindsight, seeing the innovations of the past -- such as the electric light bulb, running water and the jet airplane -- as the last major vestiges possible of human advancement.
As Gordon states: "Only once would transport speeds be increased from the horse (6 miles per hour) to the Boeing 707 (550 mph). Only once could our houses be replaced by running water and indoor plumbing. Only once could indoor temperatures, thanks to central heating and air conditioning, be converted from cold in winter and hot in summer to a uniform year-round climate of 68-72 degrees Fahrenheit."
Gordon’s pessimism is bad enough (“The future of American economic growth is dismal”) but his arrogance is even worse.
How sad that he cannot see past our momentary troubles and imagine better, greater things to come.
- Is 707 miles per hour really the fastest that humans can travel? I guess Gordon hasn't been following the land speed record in Scientific American (5 November 2012) that has an English project pushing the 1,000 mph barrier and already projecting hitting 1,600 mph or Virgin Galactic (just the beginning of our space journeys) reaching more than 4 times the speed of sound (>3,000 mph!).
- Is indoor plumbing really the last great innovation when it comes to water? Please don't tell that to almost a billion people worldwide who live without potable water. However, thanks to innovators such as Vestergaard-Frandsen, whose Lifestraw water purification tools "removes 99.9999% of bacteria through a superfine filtration process" for only about $6 each (Mashable), many others may soon have access to safe drinking water.
- Is central air is the end of the temperature innovation cycle?--You've got to be kidding me. In the context of global warming and the resulting "storms and other (weather) extremes," there are considerable challenges ahead of us to be met. Someone ought to tell Mr. Gordon that sustainable energies are coming online (solar, wind, wave, and geothermal) that can help stem global greenhouse gases thought to be a major cause. In fact, whole new "green" high-tech cities like Masdar City are being developed to operate with low environmental footprints.
Gordon may think all major innovations have arrived, and probably thought the same before the Internet and smartphone were created.
In his op-ed, Gordon calls on skeptics to “rebut” his innovative idea that robust innovation is over. But perhaps he is actually asking them for help. Because such pessimism and small thinking are a prison of his own making. Unfortunately, he is professionally considered an “educator.” But it’s lessons like this that our young people – facing one of the most economically challenging times in modern history - can do without. ;-)
(Source Photo: here with attribution to Paul Townsend)
Still An Innovation Nation
December 11, 2012
Escaping From A Submerged Vehicle Gets Easier
Of all things, here's an innovation to the seat belt.
In the movies, we've all seen cars plunging into the water and submerging with people trapped inside.
Wired Magazine (11 December 2012) reported on a new escape belt that helps people get out of the vehicles and to safety.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administation, almost 400 people die a year from car accidents that result in accidental drowning.
Now Dutch company, Fijen TMLS has developed a seat-belt that releases when water goes in the interior and dissolves a salt pill in the latch.
The mechanism costs as little as $40 and according to the company's website can "be assembled on all seatbelt releasers in just a few simple steps."
From the pictures of the assembly instructions, I am not sure it is quite so easy.
Also, it is unclear how long the device is good for, since on one hand, their website states that the "Escape Belt lasts 6 months" and on other hand that "the cartridge will need to replaced after 2 years."
In any case, I think the idea is a good one as long as the belt remains secure when not submerged and will not release accidentally with any simple spill or splash. ;-)
Escaping From A Submerged Vehicle Gets Easier
October 17, 2012
Getting Around Town--Washington D.C.
You sort of have to (safely) weave in and out between these to get to your meetings and events or hop on one to get there, perhaps, more quickly and enjoyably.
Anyway, as you can tell, D.C., like many a big city (ah, reminds me of the Big Apple) has many a colorful characters in the downtown.
It adds to the charm--sometimes--and can make for a nuisance at others.
But, it's never quite boring.
Hope this gives a good flavor of what's like to work, and play, in The Capital. ;-)
(Source Photos: Andy Blumenthal)
Getting Around Town--Washington D.C.
August 24, 2012
Military-Style ATV For Pleasure Or Kicking Butt
This is a very cool all-terrain vehicle (ATV) modeled after the Segway, that is built with military or extreme sports in mind.
According to Bloomberg Businessweek, the DTV Shredder runs on tank treads, has a motocycle throttle, and the mobility of a skateboard.
The Shredder is made by BPG Werks and can go up to 30 miles per hour, has a three-foot turning radius, can haul up to 800 pounds over rocky terrain, and costs only $4,000.
This is a cost-effective, energy-efficient, rugged transportation mule can carry people, equipment, or supplies through friendly or hostile terrain, and it can even be used through a remote controller.
A precursor transit device from this company was the Uno--a very cool looking, self-balancing, all-electric unicycle--that won Intel's International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in 2007, was on the cover of Popular Science Magazine (2008), and secured $1.25 million from angel investors.
When we talk about mobile technology, everyone first thinks of smartphones and tablet computers, but new and improved modes of personal transportation can also be innovative and high-tech with applications for everything from snowmobiling to beach patrol and hunting to overseas deployments.
End of the world scenarios come to mind too--with a mobile device like this...outmaneuver, outwit, outlast.
Of course, having to stand for the whole ride can be a bummer, and an open ATV certainly does not imply all-weather, so practicality limits its usefulness, but this is still my cool gadget of the week for fighting or for fun. ;-)
Military-Style ATV For Pleasure Or Kicking Butt
June 21, 2012
"Plastered" On The Metro
Fires, delays, overcrowding, doors not closing, people screaming, trains being unloaded and taken out of service.
Today, the trains were so packed, this one guy (pictured) was literally "plastered" up against the glass, practically holding on for dear life.
Forget about any air conditioning, with the heat in the city reaching 96 degrees today, one train that I was on actually seemed to have the heat going.
The people were drenched in sweat, fanning themselves, trying to gulp in some air at the station stops, and generally praying the train didn't get stuck in the tunnel to top it all off.
It is almost unbelievable that this the public transportation in The Capital of the United States of America!
Luckily, I met a friend on the train and at least had some good conversation and laughs to make the otherwise dismal ride go by faster.
This must be the week for crappy transportation for me--what did I do wrong? ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)
"Plastered" On The Metro
June 3, 2012
Raising The Bar On Cybersecurity
Good video by the The Washington Post (2 June 2012) on the importance and challenges of cybersecurity.
There are 12 billion devices on the Internet today and this is projected to soar to 50 billion in the next decade.
Cybersecurity is paramount to protecting the vast amounts of critical infrastructure connected to the Internet.
There is a lot riding over the Internet--power, transportation, finance, commerce, defense, and more--and the vulnerabilities inherent in this is huge!
Some notable quotes from the video:
- "Spying, intrusions, and attacks on government and corporate networks occur every hour of every day."
- "Some sort of cyberwar is generally considered an inevitability."
- "Cyberwar although a scary terms--I think it is as scary as it sounds."
- "Right now the bar is so low, it doesn't take a government, it doesn't take organized crime to exploit this stuff--that's what's dangerous!"
We all have to do our part to raise the bar on cybersecurity--and let's do it--now, now, now.
Raising The Bar On Cybersecurity
March 3, 2012
In The Year 2032 And Beyond
There is a Cisco Visual Networking Index (VNI) Forecast for 2010-2015 that projects global IP traffic (voice, video, and data) and the numbers are ginormous!
Here are some highlights from their highlights for where we will be in only 3 years--by 2015:
- Annual global IP traffic will reach one zettabyte (which is about 100 million x all printed material in the U.S. Library of Congress (which is 10 terabytes)).
- Devices connected to the network will be 2 for 1 for every person on this planet (and many people who live in 3rd world conditions do not have any devices, so what does that say for how many devices the rest of us have?).
- Non-PC traffic (from TVs, tablets, smartphones, more) will reach 15% and is more than doubling every year (makes you think about when you fridge and toaster are going to be connected to the Internet).
- Mobile Data traffic is practically doubling (or 92%) annually meaning a growth of 2,600% over 5 years (and according to the New York Times (5 Jan 2012) "The Top 1% of Mobile Users Consume Half of The World's Bandwidth" and the top 10% of users consume 90%!).
- Video traffic (TV, Video on Demand, Peer to Peer, etc.) will be almost 2/3 (or 62%) of all consumer internet traffic (and services like YouTube, Skype, FaceTime, Hulu are WebEx all play a role as we want to see as much or more than hear what is going on).
The takeaway for me from all this is that truly information transmission is exploding over the Internet, and we will continue to need more advanced technologies to "pipe" it all to where its going and do it faster than ever.
However to build on these forecasts, over the longer term (further out in time, so more risky, of course)--say 20 years or so--some of my colleagues and I studying at National Defense University project the following:
- Rather than transmitting voice, video, and data over the Internet, we will be focused on transmitting thoughts (mental activity rather than spoken) and transmitting matter (like the Transporter on Star Trek).
- Transmission of thoughts will occur in real-time, through persistent connections, probably implants in teeth, glasses, subcutaneous, etc.
- Safety and health will be monitored through these same "connections" and medicine or other physiological treatments for routine things will be administered remotely through the same.
- Education will be through instantaneous zaps of information to your brain (like in The Matrix) from a universal database, rather than through traditional in-class or online courses.
- Like now, the contextual policy and legal issues will be around privacy and security--and you will need to pay dutifully for each in a world where not only what you say and do, but rather what you think, can get you in lots of trouble.
Okay, for these things to happen by 2032 is probably a little aggressive, but don't rule any of them out over time. ;-)
In The Year 2032 And Beyond
January 20, 2012
Clean Water From A Bicycle
Love this product called The Aquaduct for helping people in developing countries get clean water.
Using the power of pedaling, water that is loaded into the back of the bike is "cycled" through a filter and run into the clean container in the front.
This can be done by actually riding the bike home with the water or refilling the clean container in stationary mode.
The Aquaduct reminds me of some similar products that I saw and blogged about in July at a Peace Corps exhibit that used bicycles for shelling corn and charging cell phones.
What's great about The Aquaduct is that is a simple, all-in-one solution that transports, filters, and stores water--it was the winning entry (out of 102) in the Google Innovate or Die competition.
For 1.1 billion people without clean water in the world, The Aquaduct solves the problem for transporting and sanitizing water.
In Judaism, we say "Mayim Chaim"--that water is life, and this innovative pedal-powered transit and filtration machine can help bring life-saving water to the masses.
Clean Water From A Bicycle
October 2, 2011
Robots Are Not Just For Fighting
Robots Are Not Just For Fighting
April 15, 2011
A Combat Vehicle That Rocks and Rolls
A Combat Vehicle That Rocks and Rolls
October 6, 2010
A Flying Boat, Machine Gun Included
A Flying Boat, Machine Gun Included
September 28, 2010
What's Next an Escalator to Heaven?
Introducing the Levytator—or escalator replacement.
It is a creation of Jack Levy, Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering at University of London.
Rather than just go straight up and down, this baby can go any which way—and even around curves.
Potentially a new mode of inner city transportation?
Take the Levytator to the gym and spend another half an hour on the treadmill!
What's Next an Escalator to Heaven?
August 23, 2010
Putting the Donkey Before the Cart - Or Is He Sleeping Inside?
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry when I saw the "Bufalino" mini RV by designer Cornelius Comanns, profiled in DVICE.
Putting the Donkey Before the Cart - Or Is He Sleeping Inside?