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Personal, Portable Air Conditioning Could Save Money & Energy

wristac1Scientists at MIT took a nod from Psychology 101. One of the basic things you learn in any intro to psychology course is a concept known as “just noticeable difference.” You’re driving down the road, jamming to your favorite song, with the speakers cranked up all the way… you stop the car, get out and go into work. Hours later, you hop into your car to head home and when you start the car, you about jump out of your skin because the radio is so ridiculously loud, you can barely stand it. It is no higher in volume than what you listened to on the way to work – but the just noticeable difference is what makes you lunge toward the volume dial at mach speed.

The Wristify team used this principle to make a wearable device that can be worn like a watch or bracelet that can heat or cool the person wearing it. By sending cool or warm pulses along the blood flow in the wrists, the person wearing the device gets the feeling of being warmer or cooler than they would normally. They are working on finalizing real products you can buy and wear. Whether it’s being used by a menopausal woman going through hot flashes, or an athlete that needs a post-workout cool-down, the Wristify has some very practical applications. It uses far less power than a personal electric heater or a window-unit air conditioning unit, and can be effective a lot quicker than those methods.

You can read more about the project on MIT’s news site.

MIT’s Tangible Media Lets You Shake Hands – Physically – Across the World

Every geek that saw Minority Report wanted that computer that Tom Cruise was using.

Every geek that saw Minority Report wanted that computer that Tom Cruise was using.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Tangible Media group created a new type of input and output device for interacting with people and programs. It looks weird – like a bunch of Tetris-infused sugar cubes… Max Headroom had a bad dream kinda thing – but it’s really quite amazing and could be the first step in Minority Report type of interfaces.

The input device is basically a bunch of cameras and scanners that recognize your hand movements like a Kinect system on steroids. The output device, on the other flashlight_tableend, can interpret your hand movements (or computer input of any type) into tangible shapes that can manipulate its environment.

The mechanism that makes it happen is almost Steampunk due to all the levers and gadgetry beneath the actual output table. They are calling it the inFORM display and they are working on different applications for its use.

Minus a full grip, the interface would allow you to literally shake hands with someone across the globe – your hand movements in real time. Perhaps a soldier in Iraq could hold his baby for the first time this way? Although, there is no haptic feedback for the sender right now.

Check out the video below to get an idea of how this works.

You can view their paper for all the geeky details here.

inFORM – Interacting With a Dynamic Shape Display from Tangible Media Group on Vimeo.