October 9th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We all know the internet is not a big truck, and the rolling blackouts in California not that long ago showed our power grid isn’t either. Part of the solution could be a series of tubes, a new type of solar generator from a company called Solyndra that replaces the usual square solar roof panels with something that would make Senator Stevens proud. The company’s photovoltaic rods are able to catch rays from any direction, meaning they don’t need to be tilted to point at the sun. Also, since they’re not shaped like a silicon kite, they don’t need the same big, beefy installation brackets. This cuts installation costs in half and has helped to drive $1.2 billion in orders from eager would-be customers of this three-year-old startup. Want to see ‘em for yourself? Head on down to the Solar Power International Expo next week in sunny San Diego.
[Via Make]
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Posted in solar, electricity, green, solar power, SolarPower, eco-friendly, solar powered, SolarPowered, solyndra | No Comments »
October 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
In-home power consumption monitors are trendy pieces of kit lately, with a new one popping up every few months. But, while they’re all happy to just kick back and tell you what a wasteful pig you’re being, a new service from UK security company AlertMe could actually make you more efficient. Subscribers to the company’s monitoring plans, which start at about $260 plus another $17.50/month, will be able to purchase Smart Plugs for $43 each that can communicate wirelessly to an AlertMe Heating Controller. From there subscribers can monitor their energy usage online via computer or phone. That’s all standard stuff, but the service also includes keyfobs that will automatically turn down the heat and deactivate devices when you leave, and allows users to manually control the plugs and the thermostat by text message, meaning you’d never be more than a few thumb-presses (and a 20 cent service charge) away from a warm and inviting home.
[Via SmartPlanet]
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Posted in electricity, green, eco-friendly, conservation, eco, energy monitoring, EnergyMonitoring, green living, GreenLiving, outlets, AlertMe, alertme smart plug, AlertmeSmartPlug, smart plug, SmartPlug | No Comments »
September 27th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
Given how large the green bandwagon has become, it’s no real shock to see an energy-saving concept from the 1930s being exhumed and investigated further. Scientists at Oxford University have begun to take a closer look at an early invention from the great Albert Einstein in order to hopefully create refrigerators (and appliances in general) that could be used completely without electricity. Back in the day, Sir Albert created a mechanism that had no moving parts and used only pressurized gases to keep things chilly. Once compressors became more efficient in the 50s, however, the idea was tossed aside. Now, the idea obviously has greater appeal, and if things keep humming along nicely, a completed prototype should be erected by the year’s end.
[Via Physorg]
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Posted in university, prototype, electricity, green, science, eco-friendly, albert Einstein, AlbertEinstein, Einstein, global warming, GlobalWarming, Oxford | No Comments »
August 15th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
We’ve seen electricity-monitoring / controlling devices similar to the EnergyHub before, but few have provided such a handsome interface or modular, expandable options. The device uses a touchscreen control panel (familiarly referred to as a “dashboard”) to help gauge and adjust energy levels for satellite outlets that it communicates with. The data will be accessible and adjustable online, and users will also be able to compare their stats with other eco-tweakers or neighbors. The company claims the devices could reduce energy costs by 20 percent for homes that employ the system. There’s no word on a release date or pricing, but we’ll keep you abreast of any exciting developments.
[Via Inhabitat]
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Posted in electricity, green, eco-friendly, conservation, eco, energy monitoring, energyhub, EnergyMonitoring, green living, GreenLiving, outlets | No Comments »
July 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Not that mad scientists haven’t figured out a way to convert waste heat into energy, but a team from Ohio State University has developed a new material that does the same sort of thing… just way, way better. The new material goes by the name thallium-doped lead telluride, and at least in theory, it could actually convert exhaust heat from vehicles into electricity. According to a new report about to hit the journal Science, the material packs “twice the efficiency of anything currently on the market,” though it still seems as if it’s a good ways out from being ready for commercial applications. Nanotechnology geeks — you’ve got a real treat waiting in the read link.
[Via CNET]
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Posted in nanotechnology, electricity, green, science, heat, osu, thermoelectric, waste heat, WasteHeat, Ohio State University, OhioStateUniversity | No Comments »
June 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Sharp has certainly been an integral part of these solar installations before, but the latest endeavor by the city of Sakai and the Kansai Electric Power Company isn’t anything to sneeze at. The initiative will see a pair of “mega solar plants” constructed, one of which will crank out around 10,000 kW while the other outputs 18,000 kW. Once the plants go online in 2011, expectations are that CO2 emissions will decrease on the order of 10,000 tons per year. Of course, a staggering ¥5.0 billion ($46.5 million) will be coughed up in order to make it happen, but you can bet Mother Earth will certainly see it as money well spent.
[Via CrunchGear]
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Posted in japan, sharp, photovoltaic, solar, solar-powered, energy, power, electricity, green, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, solar power, SolarPower, solar-power, osaka, kansai | No Comments »
June 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Unlike Rock Port, Missouri, the entire state of Delaware won’t be 100-percent wind-powered after Bluewater Wind constructs a $1.6 billion wind park just off its shore, but the state will be able to “light about 50,000 homes a year” for the duration of the 25-year contract. Said agreement was just nailed down between the aforesaid firm and Delmarva Power, and it hopes to start powering homes via wind by 2012. The offshore site will sit around 12 miles off Rehoboth Beach, with a number of turbines to be planted 90-feet into the sea floor and sport three blades apiece measuring 150-feet long. It’s noted that vacationers and locals alike won’t be able to notice the park from the beach except on a few remarkably clear days, but if their energy bills sink because of it, we don’t really think they’ll mind, anyway.
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Posted in energy, power, electricity, green, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, wind, turbine, wind-powered, wind power, WindPower, Wind Powered, WindPowered, wind turbines, WindTurbines, delaware | No Comments »
June 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Look out 1366 Technologies, you’ve got yet another solar-based MIT spin-off company vying for business in the alternative energy sector. The company’s name is RawSolar, and in due time it could end up selling solar dish arrangements that could power factories or even heat / cool office buildings. Recently, a team of students and faculty celebrated as a prototype dish proved that it could concentrate sunlight by a factor of 1,000, which obviously bodes well for converting that into useful energy here on Earth. Another standout feature of the dish is its small size, and furthermore, the material required to build it is relatively inexpensive and accessible worldwide. Sounds like all the ingredients for a successful startup are there, now we’ve just got to wait and see if anything becomes of it. We’re watching you, RawSolar — don’t let us down.
[Thanks, Spencer]
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Posted in university, mit, research, solar, prototype, energy, electricity, RawSolar, solar dish, SolarDish | No Comments »
June 14th, 2008 by
Filed under: Displays, HDTV
Remember Green Plug? That universal connector we detailed last month which aims to replace wall warts and help Mother Earth out in the process? Turns out, said outfit has just landed its first real believer as Westinghouse committed to using the smart power technology. Even Darwin Chang, Westy’s CTO, admitted that his firm “wasn’t the largest, but somebody has to be the first.” Chang is hoping that utilizing said tech will help it cut costs by eliminating the need to ship power adapters with its wares, but we’d say that’s being pretty optimistic. Really, the only way that will go over well is if hordes of other firms jump on the (currently desolate) bandwagon in short order — any takers?
[Via PCWorld]
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Posted in lcd, energy, lcd tv, LcdTv, electricity, green, hdtv, power adapter, PowerAdapter, energy efficient, EnergyEfficient, eco-friendly, westinghouse, GreenPlug, AUPS, Green Plug | No Comments »
June 1st, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Converting residual industrial heat into something usable (read: electricity) has proven to be more than a novel concept on more than one occasion, and ElectraTherm’s giving the process one more vote of confidence by installing its Green Machine at Southern Methodist University. Just this past week, the firm flipped on its first commercial waste heat generator at the Dallas-based institution, with hopes to generate “fuel-free, emissions-free electricity at three to four cents per kW/hr during payback period and under a penny/kW hour thereafter.” The 50kW rig has so far exceeded expectations, and the firm is now forecasting that its units will have a “subsidy-free payback period of three years or less.” Of course, we aren’t told exactly how many zeros reside on the left of the decimal or anything, but folks in the area can get a tour of the installation later this month.
[Image courtesy of Jetson Green]
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Posted in electricity, green, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, generator, heat, ElectraTherm, Green Machine, GreenMachine, waste heat, WasteHeat | No Comments »
May 7th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Believe it or not, tesla coils are good for more than just creating lighting, protecting one’s laptop or cranking out a sweet tune — and the folks watching a dazzling demonstration at Maker Faire 2008 can attest to that. Apparently a group of prototype (1 / 12 scale, no less) coils were seen sparking up the evening in San Mateo, California, but it wasn’t the visual energy or unmistakable hum that caused all that saliva to form in the mouths of onlookers. Oh no, it was the fact that a dozen hot dogs were simultaneously roasted and made ready for safe consumption. Check out a video of the action right after the break.
Continue reading Tesla coils seen wowing onlookers, cooking hot dogs
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Posted in video, electricity, cooking, food, tesla, tesla coil, TeslaCoil, hot dog, HotDog | No Comments »
April 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
Solar-powered dresses are so two years ago. These days, dames in the know are all about that piezoelectric material, evidenced by the incredibly flashy Piezing. Dreamed up and designed by Amanda Parkes, this piece of garb is all set to steal the show at the 2ndSkin expo in San Francisco, and according to CNET, it features electricity-generating fabrics around the joints of the elbows and hips. When the wearer walks, bends or gets downright nasty on the dance floor, the mechanical stress conjures up energy which is stored as voltage in a built-in battery where it can presumably be used later for charging your favorite handheld gizmo. Sure gets our electrons flowing.
[Via textually, image courtesy of James Patten]
Read - 2ndSkin expo
Read - CNET article on Piezing
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Posted in art, design, energy, battery, electricity, generator, clothing, garb, clothes, motion, piezoelectric, 2nd skin, 2ndSkin, Amanda Parkes, AmandaParkes, dress | No Comments »
March 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We’ve seen self-healing materials and artificial arms, but a team of researchers hailing from UCLA have taken two fabulous ideas and wed them together to create “an artificial muscle that heals itself and generates electricity.” Put simply, the contracting / expanding of the material can generate a small electric current, which can be “captured and used to power another expansion or stored in a battery.” The scientists have relied on carbon nanotubes as electrodes rather than metal-based films that typically fail after extended usage, and in an ideal world, the research could eventually lead to (more) walking robots and highly advanced prosthetics. Integrate an AC adapter in there and we’re sold.
[Via CNET]
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Posted in university, health, medical, charge, charging, Nanotube, electricity, science, charger, carbon nanotubes, CarbonNanotubes, muscle, prosthetics, ucla, carbon nanotube, CarbonNanotube, Artificial Muscle, ArtificialMuscle, self healing, self-healing, SelfHealing | No Comments »
January 26th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
There have certainly been gizmos to surface throughout the years that react in some form or fashion to rain, but Jean-Jacques Chaillout and colleagues at the Atomic Energy Commission in France are fantasizing about using those diminutive droplets of water to actually power useful creations. After using computer models to find out just how much energy could be created by rainfall landing on piezoelectric materials, they determined that between 1 nanojoule and 25 microjoules of energy could be generated per drop. Granted, that won’t keep a WoW gamer crankin’ through the eve, but it could be used in everyday sensors that just need a smidgen of power in order to beam back results or data to ground control (or Major Tom). So yeah, these may not work so well in Death Valley, but we hear Amazonia could really benefit.
[Via NewScientist, image courtesy of ABC]
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Posted in research, energy, power, electricity, piezoelectric, rain, raindrop, raindrops | No Comments »
January 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones, Wearables
We’ve heard of firms tinkering with the idea of converting excess heat directly to energy, and apparently, a team of scientists from the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California at Berkeley have done just that. Oddly enough, the researchers admit that they’re still unclear on how their findings actually work, but they’ve nevertheless discovered how to increase the conversion efficiency of converting waste heat to energy “by a factor of 100.” The authors of the report suggest that clothing constructed of material embedded with thermoelectric modules could one day “recharge mobile electronic devices off the heat of one’s body,” and while we’re certainly stoked about the idea, we’re already conjuring up awful images in our minds about what this garb will actually look like.
[Via textually, image courtesy of FourEyesJokeShop]
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Posted in university, research, charge, charging, energy, electricity, nanowires, body heat, BodyHeat, nanowire, thermoelectric | No Comments »
January 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We know, hackers tend to get a pretty bad rap these days, but with some of ‘em out there creating ginormous gridlocks in Los Angeles and shutting down networks in enemy territories, we sort of understand the sentiment. Most recently, it seems that hackers are being blamed for “penetrating power systems (sound familiar?) in several regions outside the US, and in at least one case, causing a power outage affecting multiple cities.” That’s according to Tom Donahue, a CIA official, who failed to dole out critical details such as where or when the attacks occurred nor how many folks were actually left in the dark. ‘Course, Bruce Schneier, CTO of security firm BT Counterpane, warns that these attacks could in fact be aided by individuals with administrative access to said systems, implying that “human vulnerability” could share at least some of the blame. Don’t worry guys, we’re faxing CTU right now, they’ll be right on it within 72 business hours.
[Image courtesy of WPS]
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Posted in energy, power, electricity, hackers, hacker, power grid, PowerGrid | No Comments »
January 6th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
By this May, the UK government wants to provide free clip-on electricity meter devices designed to show residents exactly how much they’re spending on electricity, with the goal of encouraging them to reduce their consumption when they’re made aware of the cost of the electricity they use. Of course, the government doesn’t want to foot the bill for the project themselves, they’d like to see the energy companies pick up the tab. The energy companies, however, say the program is a stopgap on the way to more sophisticated “smart meters.” Call us old-fashioned, but we prefer to break out the calculator and figure out the energy usage of our electronics manually, just like our great-great-grandfathers did.
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Posted in energy, electricity, uk | No Comments »
November 20th, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

We’ve seen our fair share of diminutive power generators, but rather than worrying with vibrations or hyperventilating, Millennium Cell and Horizon Fuel Cell have teamed up to deliver an iteration that’s water-activated. The pair has been working together on this technology for some time now, and apparently, it’s readying a beta that will be demonstrated at next year’s CES. The portable power generator incorporates a “unique water-activated cartridge system,” which is designed to quietly provide clean energy to consumer products in emergencies and when far, far away from an electrical outlet. Reportedly, the device will provide an AC socket alongside two USB connectors, an operating time of over 16-hours, infinite shelf-storage life and 400-watts of instant juice by just adding H2O. Regrettably, we still have no idea what this thing actually looks like, but considering that CES is less than two months away, we’ll soon be seeing what this $400 gizmo can do up close and in person.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in fuel cell, FuelCell, energy, battery, electricity, generator, Horizon Fuel Cell, HorizonFuelCell, Millennium Cell, MillenniumCell, portable power, PortablePower, water, water power, water powered, WaterPower, WaterPowered | No Comments »
November 16th, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets, Wearables

Looking for power in hard to reach places? Perhaps M2E Power can lend a hand. The company — recently infused with a pile of money from venture capitalists — is in the business of creating power through the kinetic motion of everyday human and / or mechanical movement. The idea is that by simply walking or driving, energy can be produced that will power devices on-hand, obviating the use of outside sources — an idea that will be of particular use to soldiers on duty, as the technology could reduce their load by up to 30-pounds. The devices also contribute to efforts towards clean power and extended mobility on the consumer side, efforts your DS-playing kids will go bonkers for. For those down with the Faraday Principle (energy produced via motion of a magnet through a wire coil), you’ll be happy to know that someone is putting the concept to good use — for the rest of us, well, we’ll just be happy if we can get a few more minutes out of our mobile phones.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in power, electricity, startup, clean energy, CleanEnergy, faraday principle, FaradayPrinciple, kinetic energy, KineticEnergy, m2e, m2e power, M2ePower, michael faraday, MichaelFaraday, start up | No Comments »
October 28th, 2007 by
Filed under: Wearables
We’ve seen a plethora of shirts made for more than just satisfying a core necessity in life, but a team of scientists over at the CSIRO’s Energy Technology Division are hoping to have “power shirts” at your local flea market (or other fine establishments) within five years. By using piezo electrical materials, the garb could reportedly “produce electricity as you move,” enabling users to juice up their DAPs, mobiles and air conditioned pants just by staying active. Other potential applications include powering battlefield-related equipment on soldiers and monitoring systems on the elderly, but making sure it can handle the oh-so-intimidating wash cycle remains a challenge.
[Via PopGadget, image courtesy of CSIRO]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in energy, power, electricity, CSIRO, invention, clothing, garb, power shirt, PowerShirt, shirt | No Comments »
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