Once we leave school pretty much our only education comes in two ways, through learning from our mistakes and what we see or read in the media.
I don't wish to share my mistakes but, as an avid reader, I have recently learned a number of things in my reading, even though it is a higgeldy-piggledy mixture of trivia and not any lesson in one educative category, and I will share selected choices, in concise thumbnail bits, that intrigued me from that.
The Melon, innovated by Arye Barnehama, is a new headband that monitors your brain waves to help you stay focused. Sensors measure brain activity, then sync that data with your laptop or mobile device via Bluetooth and alerts you if your mind is wandering. (Can't you just imagine entire classes of students in years to come all wearing these and becoming geniuses!)
Spritz, which co-founder Mark Maurer launched in Spring 2014 on the Samsung Galaxy S5 and
Gear2Smartwatch, is another new learning aid. With this device, which exploits something called the optimal recognition point - the area that the brain uses to process a word, users can digest text up to 1,000 words per minute (about five times average).
The Juno Jumper is a compact, iPhone-sized jump starter (for $100 from Junopower.com, cables sold seperately) that needs only an overnight charge to be use ready. For those of us who have occasionally had to jump-start cars with dead batteries this is neat.
Pensa is a free-to-use public streetside charging station featuring plug-ins for a variety of different mobile devices, topped by three electric-generating solar panels. The pilot program in New York and on college campuses has been sponsored by AT&T and Goal Zone, a solar device company.
The GPS Smartsole ($299) is a waterproof shoe sole with built-in GPS tracking chip that can instantly map the wearer anywhere in the world. It works with a variety of smart phones, computers and tablets. Sounds ideal for dementia sufferers, kids who wander and executives fearing kidnapping. The battery lasts five days and is easily recharged, like a cell phone.
The Zubie, costing $100, has a small "key" that plugs into the 16-pin diagnostics port hidden in your car's dashboard, syncing to a smart phone app that pinpoints the vehicle's location at all times, thereby defeating its theft. It also includes a gas price and mileage tracker, as well as a battery and engine monitor that sends alerts if either is malfunctioning. It also "tracks" how you drive (a headache saver for parents with teens drivers).
Alex Klein co-founded the Keno DIY (DoItYourself) Computer Kit (Keno.me $99) that is said to be "as intuitive as a Lego set" and will de-mystefy the inner workings of our favorite gadgets. Once assembled, Keno syncs with a monitor or TV screen, and a very simple manual gets kids, of all ages, coding software.
Dentistry Today reports Kings College London is developing a technique that uses "electrically accelerated and enhanced remineralization...to heal teeth without drilling and filling cavities". The procedure uses a small electrical current to push the mineral to the tooth from the damaged site.
UCBerkeley, MIT and Microsoft researchers recently introduced a prototype that can make a digital screen correct a user's vision. A filter is clipped onto a phone, tablet or other device, and the user downloads software to input his or her individual prescription. The filter then interacts with the screen.
People blinded by the degenerative disease retinitis pigmentosa can now purchase the Argus II, a bionic eye that can be safely, surgically implanted and is paired with video camera-equipped glasses to help patients distinguish objects around them.
California-based VoiceVault gives business and consumers the option of attaching "vocal signatures" to documents by speaking into the receiver following a telephone prompt. Great for executives closing big deals, banking transactions and government "need-to-know" stuff.
Funomena, based in San Francisco, is part of an emerging "deep games" movement where players "win" by becoming more enlightened, empathetic people. A new crop of mostly small studios have released wildly inventive games that focus on narrative, aesthetics, and the exploration of intimate emotions rather than fast-paced action, competition and tricky game play.
Travis Kalanick, CEO of Uber, the company that promotes "share the ride" in cities, was riding a $40 million evaluation high when he promised to take 400,000 vehicles off the roads in Europe to fight traffic gridlock and over-the-top air pollution. Then Uber was ordered to stop operations in South Carolina and Madrid and was even indicted in South Korea for providing "illegal" rides.
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