The original FuelBand was launched in February of 2012 and has reached users across the United States and the UK through their online store. Distribution has been centered in this new launch around the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. For those of you that’ve never used it, this device gives you a NikeFuel score for the activity you do during the day while you’re wearing it. You can also display time, calories, and steps based on the basic information the device is able to capture with it’s built-in sensors.
This futuristic Invader Jet Trike was a personal project inspired by the mix of modern designs in Italy. It looks like something Batman would ride, unfortunately there’s no interior rendering images, we expect something spectacular inside as well. From these photos, we can tell there are 2 small side mirrors, however, we’re not really sure if those mirrors can see anything at the rear due to the huge side body that might block them.
Denmark’s Bang & Olufsen has been making some of the world’s most stylish home electronics gear for decades, but usually they’re cool and discreet, rather than loud and in your face. That can’t be said of the new BeoPlay A9 speaker, which kind of makes it look like you’re trying to pull in some North Korean TV channels.
Originating from the ‘pure plate’ structure occurring in natural structures such as sea urchins, and based on a hexagonal geometry, the Spaceplates Greenhouse is being used for the first time this term by horticultural staff and students at City of Bristol College’s South Bristol Skills Academy in Hengrove Park, Bristol. Designed by N55, with Architect, Anne Romme, the project is constructed using an innovative building system based on aluminum and polycarbonate and accommodates work, growing and teaching space. More images and architects’ description after the break.
The cleverly named Thermite is a small firefighting robot that does jobs humans can’t, or at least probably shouldn’t do. While there can be no doubt that Thermite is cute for a robot, we have yet to learn if it will also displace firefighters from their traditional role on office calendars.
Following on from news out of the University at Buffalo earlier this year that a graphene varnish could significantly slow the corrosion of steel, researchers from Monash and Rice Universities have used a graphene coating to improve copper’s resistance to corrosion by nearly 100 times. The researchers say such a dramatic extension of the metal’s useful life could result in significant cost savings for a wide range of industries.


