T-post has got to be one of the most original ideas in publishing (and a sign of how inexpensive production has become). Subscribers get T-shirts printed with a topical illustration on the outside, a summary of a news story on the inside. [coolhunting]
Monthly Archives: October 2006
Underwater Ingenuity
Using the ocean to generate power is an old idea, but one that so far hasn’t spat out its ‘killer app’. Until now, perhaps – enter biomimetic ocean power. These are devices designed to react to ocean waves in the most effective and efficient way possible, by mimicking the form and motion of things that belong in that environment, like kelp and fish tails. Seriously – it sounds a little leftfield at first, but it looks like they’ve really thought this through.
Metaverse Mash-ups
Yet more weirdness from the metaverse. Firstly, you can now view meteorological data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association in real-time from a location in Second Life – which could be useful for checking if it’s raining outside without having to turn away from the flatscreen. Secondly, and in case that’s a little too ‘meatspace’ for you, go check out a new ecosystem simulation which has an open API that allows you to create your own critter and add it to the foodchain. I just wish I had enough time in my life to spend a few hours a day playing god…
Science Fiction and Climate Change
Seed thinks science fiction might be more than entertainment for pre-teens. A recent spate of science fiction that imagines a world warped by climate change can help envision the future that might be, and the path to avoiding it.
Chalk Another One Up For SF Visionaries
There are plenty of examples of technologies thought up by science fiction authors long before they were even plausible as real products – so much so that there’s a site dedicated to keeping track of them. Well, here’s another one for the list. Frank Herbert’s classic novel Dune featured a life-support system called a ‘still-suit’ which enabled its wearer to survive the ferocious arid desert climate of the planet Arrakis by recycling all bodily fluids in a closed system. It seems the NASA brainstormers thought that was a pretty elegant idea, and are basing a prototype ISS system on the same theory.