Here's one that promises to unleash you from your crappy phone that goes on strike once you are out of your country. Designed by Vadim Kibardin, the Freedom Phone is a small pre-paid handset that allows you to chat for 60, 100 or 200 minutes. There's no room for your SIM card, so you will be spared roaming charges, and along with it, your number as well. According to Yanko Design, the Freedom Phone charges in just 10 minutes. That means you don't have to wait until the cows come home if you decide to pick one up from the stores. Not bad for a concept, but it should just stay as that. It's probably a better idea to buy a local calling card, though we might still consider using the phone as a paper weight.
With the impossible competition in the mobile phone business, it's not
surprising that some manufacturers would try something a little crazy to
distance themselves from pack. But we didn't think they'd be this
crazy.
First we saw a weird design from NEC for a "Flask" handset that's apparently powered by some kind of liquid fuel. Now, just a day later, we find
that Hitachi is introducing a phone that sports a 2.7-inch E-Ink display on the back that's destined for the Japanese market. Gizmodo says the Silhouette
Screen, which comes with 95 graphics, appears only ornamental because it
doesn't display any handset data. It does, however, have a regular 2.8-inch
display on the front, a 2-megapixel camera, and 2GB of built-in memory. All of
which makes us wonder why no one has stepped up to market a shoe phone to mark the release of the upcoming Get Smart.
If the pictures of the P-Per don't move you into owning one, we seriously don't know what else would. Yeah, we know P-Per looks weird, but if you say it aloud, it's actually a very personable name. Like people? This concept phone consists of just four layers of material: A printed circuit board, extruded polycarbonate, recycled titanium and a flexible haptic LED touchscreen that wraps around the 7mm-thin handset. Who cares if it takes just 2 minutes to recharge and the 3-megapixel camera that's supposed to come with it. We want one already.
According to a recent announcement, Toyota has
developed an enhancement to its Pre-Crash safety system that can determine
whether or not a driver's eyes are open.
The system relies on a
driver-monitoring camera and image-processing computer, which determine the
position of the driver's upper and lower eyelids. The development follows
Toyota's existing face-monitoring technology--available on the Lexus LS600h--which tracks the orientation of the driver's face and sounds a
warning if it detects a sustained period of inattention.
The eye-monitoring system is scheduled for launch in Japan "in the near future", according to
Toyota.
Here's a nifty idea. Since plants can't talk, designer Samgmin Bae has come up with the Roly-Poly Pot which allows the flora to articulate their thirst... By falling over. Of course, if you do nothing about it, this could get to be a sadly permanent state of affair. Bae has employed the simple idea of using water as a counterweight. As water levels dip, the pot slowly tips. Although if you're planning to head off for a long vacation, do leave the poor plants with a neighbor for some TLC. Else these'll roll over and play dead for good. A concept for now, though one we'd love to see happen.