Top new innovations that could change the future into a new level:
![]() |
| Top inventions |
Wind Towers that save birds and bats:
One of the biggest complaints about wind towers that generate electricity have the huge blades that birds and bats often fly through them. Another complaint stems from the sounds these wind towers make as their larger-than-life airplane-like props spin, as people living next to these devices prefer not to listen to the noise generated from them. But one man, an 89-year-old retired engineer tool decision to change that. He innovated a new kind of wind tower. In his design, which calls, "Catching Wind Power," the offending moving equipment sits inside a barrel, which shields birds and bats from the dangerous blades. The barrel also reduces or mutes any sounds the spinning blades make from those the blades.
Save Face,Save Time:
Despite of having a key card to get into secure buildings or using a credit or bank card to pay for purchases, face-reading technology could change the way you conduct these transactions. Called facial recognition technology, financial transactions in some places in China now use this innovation to proceed business. The artificial intelligence(AI) of the product takes multiple images of your face from multiple angles to show that it is indeed you, making it impossible to duplicate from a simple two-dimensional picture. The main problem with this technology is the loss of privacy.
![]() |
| Growing Bike |
The Bike that grows:
Every parent knows a child's first bike – if the child enjoys riding bicycles – won't be the last. As children age, they outgrow their bikes, just like they outgrow their clothes and shoes and other personal accessories, causing an added monetary strain for parents who must replace the old bike with a new one.
But inventors at a Spanish bicycle manufacturer, Orbea, decided to give parents a break by developing the new Grow bike, which needs replacement less often than traditional bikes – at least five to seven years instead of two or three. The designers at the company made the bike with components that lengthen as needed: stem, crossbar and seats.The company recently won a Spanish award for the bike's design, which is available in three sizes for children.
Smart Carpets:
For the elderly, one of the biggest fears is falling and not being able to get up. This is especially true for those who live alone. But scientists in the U.K. have developed a way to help seniors in this situation by creating a smart carpet with backing that wirelessly communicates with a computer. It can send an alert if a person falls on the rug, and it can also create a security alert if intruders break into the home and step on the carpet. The researchers also hope to use it to detect mobility problems in patients, such as those undergoing physical therapy.
| Pixel earbuds |
Pixel Earbuds:
You don't have to live in a future where you shove a yellow Babel fish in your ear to translate other languages, unless you're a character from the science fiction film or book, "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." Building on this theme, Google developed the Pixel Earbuds, which essentially perform the same function: translation in almost-real time of non-native languages.
To use these language translation earbuds you need a Pixel smartphone paired with the Google translation app. It works like this: One person holds the phone, and the other person wears the earbuds, speaking in their native language. The app on the smartphone translates what the speaker says by voicing it aloud through the phone. The earbuds are currently available.


No comments: