Apart from the droolworthy Aston Martin DBS that Bond totaled in Casino Royale, this ride is next on our hot list. If you're a pistonhead and movie buff with pockets of spare change, Suzuki's concept XL7 Flix (a word play on flicks, geddit?) is a home-theater-in-a-car. Why go for tiny LCD panels at the back of the headrests when you can impress the hell out of your passengers by opening the clamshell roof and elevating a 60-inch projector screen? The front roof panel vents hide a high-intensity digital projection system, while the rear quarter windows swivel to create interior and exterior sound wings. It keeps getting better: Floor strip lighting for a movie-going effect, buckets seats that pivot 180 degrees, high-def DVD player with integrated hard drive for massive A/V storage. And if you want to relive the drive-in era, just aim the projection system toward the side of a building or wall. Batmobile? Ptwah!
More USB upgrades, although this is the best little idea yet that we've seen. Designer Vicky Wei has a workaround for your numerous collection of USB thumbdrives. Link them together and get one big expanded portable drive. Her concept, Memory Infinite, does this by sticking a female connector on one end with a male connector on the other. What's more, Wei's given her own uber-chic treatment by employing the idea of fun, colorful bendies. On a more practical vein, there's the question of whether there'll be sufficient juice to power such a daisy chain of USB drives. Still, this rocks. "Add" infinitum?
More gems from annual design competition designboom, with this interesting product entry from Germans Müller Johannes and Moritz Willborn. The name's a dead giveaway, taking a trio of simple household items and giving them a "more than" twist. "more than chopsticks" adds branches to make life a lot easier for chopstick idiots, while looking good enough to make you want to pick them up. "more than a straw" is a little disappointingly obvious. The finale is a "more than a toothpick" which gets more party snacks onto those sticks than the usual variant. No quibble with that there from us. Reviewers are always hungry people. Amen to that.
It's just a concept at the moment, but hopefully this takes off as it's way too cool to end up on the ideas dump. Part mood décor, part wall-mounted screen and part gadget, the Square CD should give sonic chic leader Bang & Olufsen a run for its money. The magic happens when the player is turned on, morphing from innocent wall tile to backlit player with a lighted interface you can maneuver just like a touch-sensitive screen. From what we understand, the corian-like surface works like one giant speaker, thanks to a little "magnet" created by smart materials specialist Feonic, which transforms the entire face of the player into a speaker. If this plays MP3s and DVDs as well, all the better. Price, what price?
Step aside, Umbrella Photo Browser. Here comes the musical brollie. Only a matter of time this popped up, Korean designer Bong Kyu Song's invention is at least far more sensible than attempting to watch a projected movie on the insides of your canopy while on the move. However, it can't get anymore original considering Bong's choice of name for his creation--Music in the Rain. According to writeups, the dome structure acts as an amplifier, while the handle (where else?) contains the controls to music playback. What's a little more nifty is the forward/backward modes. You spin the brollie right for forward and left for reverse. Just watch who you splatter. As a final touch, you can dock your umbrella when not in use in a cradle and continue to play off it. No word, though, on the power source, battery life or how heavy this little player is as we had some issues accessing Bong's Web site. But at least Gene Kelly wont' be the only oddball singing in the rain.