October 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Digital Cameras
You may think you know everything there is to know about Canon’s marvelous EOS 5D Mark II, but have you heard of this tidbit? Hailed as the first DSLR to “manage” multiple batteries, this here camera includes technology to read up to six separate LP-E6 batteries and display data about them right on the rear LCD. The LP-E6 cell includes an embedded microchip with a unique 8-character serial number; after it’s installed once and “registered” in your EOS 5D Mark II body, the camera then displays each cell’s serial number, the last time it was charged, the number of shots taken since the last charge, its remaining capacity in 1% increments and its recharge performance. It’s a small inclusion, sure, but for pros who go 18+ hours on a single set, we can imagine this coming in handy when trying to select which battery to use on the next excursion.
[Thanks, Peter]
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Posted in canon, energy, battery, dslr, 5d mark II, 5dMarkIi, eos 5d mark II, Eos5dMarkIi, battery pack, BatteryPack, 5d, LP-E6 | No Comments »
October 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Wearables
For shame. We know good and well engineers can concoct energy-generating garb that actually looks good enough to wear, but evidently those fashion-minded gurus weren’t hired for this project. Granted, we have all ideas the image you’re quizzically staring at above is NTT’s first go at a pair of power-packing sandals, but there’s clearly a good ways to go before these things are cute / safe enough to wear on the streets. Might we suggest shoving all that hardware inside of something? The “all hanging out” look just isn’t working here.
[Via TokyoMango, image courtesy of AFP / Getty]
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Posted in japan, charge, charging, energy, ntt, ntt DoCoMo, NttDocomo, green, charger, turbine, shoes, shoe | No Comments »
September 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
It’s a common issue, really. Having to peel that sticky, icky silicon skin from the Wiimote each time you try to swap out the batteries or plop it down in a recharging station is a real pain, but TeknoCreations has a better way. By utilizing a contactless induction charging system, its InCharge remote charger can actually reinvigorate Lithium Polymer battery packs that are encased within those newfangled silicon grips that the Big N recommends so heavily. The system reportedly offers a 25-hour battery life, and unlike contact-based chargers, the aforementioned dirt and grit won’t gum up the juicing process. The InCharge Wiimote charger should be available real soon for $34.99, and for PS3 owners feeling all left out, fret not — the company just received certification to go forward with a similar product for the SIXAXIS.
[Via Nintendo Wii Fanboy]
Read - InCharge Wiimote
Read - InCharge PS3 certification
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Posted in Nintendo, Wii, wiimote, charge, contactless, energy, power, charger, wiimote charger, WiimoteCharger, charging stand, ChargingStand, incharge, Induction, TeknoCreation | No Comments »
September 19th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
It’s a common issue, really. Having to peel that sticky, icky silicone skin from the Wiimote each time you try to swap out the batteries or plop it down in a recharging station is a real pain, but TeknoCreations has a better way. By utilizing a contactless induction charging system, its InCharge remote charger can actually reinvigorate Lithium Polymer battery packs that are encased within those newfangled silicone grips that the Big N recommends so heavily. The system reportedly offers a 25-hour battery life, and unlike contact-based chargers, the aforementioned dirt and grit won’t gum up the juicing process. The InCharge Wiimote charger should be available real soon for $34.99, and for PS3 owners feeling all left out, fret not — the company just received certification to go forward with a similar product for the SIXAXIS.
[Via Nintendo Wii Fanboy]
Read - InCharge Wiimote
Read - InCharge PS3 certification
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Posted in Nintendo, Wii, wiimote, charge, contactless, energy, power, charger, wiimote charger, WiimoteCharger, charging stand, ChargingStand, incharge, Induction, TeknoCreation | No Comments »
August 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
Texas Instruments has a lot to do with the original microchip, if for no other reason than being the employer of inventor Jack Kilby. Now, however, TI is looking to produce chips and other related gizmos that require an infinitesimally small amount of energy to operate. The overriding theme guiding the engineers is “energy scavenging,” which alludes to grasping power from even the most unlikely of places — vibrations from a bridge as cars pass over, capturing wasted exhaust from a car or bottling up all that frustration your sibling shows when you own him / her again in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. The possibilities are just about endless, with networked battery-free smoke alarms, solar-powered mobiles and gaming laptops that feed off of extraordinarily focused brain waves in the mix. Okay, so that last one is still eons from reality, but at least we’re headed in that direction.
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Posted in Processor, cpu, microprocessor, energy, power, birthday, green, Texas Instruments, TexasInstruments, chip, microchip, eco-friendly, ti, low power, LowPower, milestone, anniversary, Jack Kilby, JackKilby | No Comments »
August 24th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
In the never-ending quest to make even the smallest devices on Earth a touch smaller, a talented team of MIT engineers have developed a method for creating and installing microbatteries, which could eventually power a plethora of diminutive devices including “labs-on-a-chip and implantable medical sensors.” It’s bruited that this is the first time in which “microcontact printing has been used to fabricate and position microbattery electrodes and the first use of virus-based assembly in such a process,” and while you’d likely have to be a colleague to even digest that, the take away is that these gurus are one step closer to generating battery-powered Scrubbing Bubbles. And your shower could use ‘em.
[Via PCMag]
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Posted in cell, university, mit, medical, energy, power, nanotechnology, battery, sensor, sensors, batteries, implantable, microbatteries | No Comments »
August 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
AMD’s going through some rough times, no doubt about it, but for fanboys of the CPU maker (wait, do CPU fanboys still exist?) here’s your feel-good story of the year. The always-thorough Tom’s Hardware has pit Intel’s 1.6GHz Atom 230 processor against AMD’s Athlon 64 2000+, and the results just might surprise you. The 1GHz Athlon (with a core voltage of 0.90 volts and a power draw of just 8 watts) managed to best the aforementioned Atom in both energy consumption and processing power tests. The gurus at Tom’s credited the more modern 790G platform and the highly efficient K8 architecture as big players in the Athlon’s strong showing, finally deeming said chip “more economical, faster and quieter” than the Atom. We know you’re in disbelief — good thing there are 14 pages of proof waiting in the read link.
[Thanks, Carl]
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Posted in Intel, Processor, amd, athlon, cpu, energy, power, atom, power consumption, PowerConsumption, athlon 64, Athlon64, energy consumption, EnergyConsumption | No Comments »
August 15th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Just under two years ago, researchers at Boeing-Spectrolab managed to achieve 40.7% solar cell efficiency. Two years later, scientists at the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory have demonstrated their nerve by trumpeting an all new world record… one that’s 0.1% points better than the last. Yes, your new record now sits at 40.8% — tremendous progress, wouldn’t you say? Looking outside of the numbers, you’ll find that these cells differ “significantly” from the prior record holders, which enable them to be thinner, lighter, cheaper and altogether swanker. That’s it for now folks — come back in a couple years, we hear 40.9% is just around the bend.
[Via CNET]
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Posted in world record, WorldRecord, photovoltaic, solar, solar-powered, energy, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, science, solar power, SolarPower, Efficiency, solar cell, SolarCell, efficient, Efficiency Record, EfficiencyRecord, NREL | No Comments »
August 8th, 2008 by
Mitsubishi’s i MiEV electric car has spent some serious time on the streets of Japan, but before long, the fuel-shunning vehicle will be roughin’ it here in the US of A. The auto maker is teaming up with Southern California Edison and PG&E in order to see how it fares in LA traffic and how to best integrate it with the power grid. As of now, the whips should be cruising down the carpool lanes in Q4, though a few modifications may be needed in order to comply with US laws. Plans are to test the i MiEV for three solid years, and hopefully the $30,000 ride will be made available for purchase shortly thereafter (or earlier, if we’re fortunate). What now, MINI?
[Via Wired]
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Posted in energy, green, alternative energy, alternative fuel, AlternativeEnergy, AlternativeFuel, electric car, ElectricCar, mitsubishi, california, testing, i miev, IMiev, eco-friendly, trial, PGE | No Comments »
July 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets, Transportation
The rain in Spain may fall mainly on the plain, but the summer sun drenches the entire country nearly every day. General Motors intends to make the most of it, covering the roof of its largest manufacturing plant in Europe with 85,000 solar panels, a whopping 2,000,000 square feet of them. That’s 10 megawatts of clean electricity, enough to power 4,600 households — or to build a bunch of Opel sub-compacts. What’s not consumed by the robots on the assembly line will be sold back to the grid, funding future rooftop installations at 19 other locations across Europe. We’re thinking GM should maybe invest a little of that into powering the cars themselves via solar, or risk getting beaten to the punch by Toyota again.
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Posted in solar, energy, gm, solar power, SolarPower, eco-friendly, spain, opel | 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 »
May 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We’ve seen a number of locales pipe in quite a bit of energy from eco-friendly sources, but the community of Rock Port, Missouri is claiming to be 100-percent wind-powered. The gloating is due to four wind turbines erected on agricultural lands within the Rock Port city limits, and while the town is expected to consume around 13 million kilowatt hours of electricity this year, the aforesaid turbines will produce 16 million kilowatt hours. Excess energy generated will be pridefully sent out for purchase by the Missouri Joint Municipal Utilities, where it will eventually be consumed in less thoughtful areas. Of course, the town has been operating in such a manner for a small tick now, but it just recently found the energy to throw a party for itself to commemorate the accomplishment. Can we get an invite next year or something?
[Thanks, Yossi]
Read - Rock Port release
Read - Rock Port video
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Posted in energy, green, wind, missouri, wind power, WindPower, rock port, RockPort, wind power town, WindPowerTown | 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 »
April 3rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Curious designs and solar-powered wares seem to go hand in hand, but honestly, the PowerCube 600 is going to be hard to top. In what appears to be a ginormous (and inexplicably uncomfortable) recliner, the creators have managed to shove enough solar panels in this foldable, “portable” generator to crank out 600-watts of power. You’ll also find 3,500-watts of continuous inverter output, 2,400 amp hours of battery storage and a rugged / watertight case. Even when closed up, this beast measures 72- x 124- x 50-inches, and while it technically is a mobile solution, 2,000-pounds isn’t exactly what you want to lug around each time you feel like hosting a LAN party in Zzyzx, California. Forget the fact that you’ll need to phone up Reluminati in order to acquire a price — just think of the shipping!
[Via MAKE]
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Posted in solar, solar-powered, energy, power, green, alternative energy, AlternativeEnergy, solar power, SolarPower, powercube, powercube 600, Powercube600, reluminati | No Comments »
March 20th, 2008 by
Filed under: Transportation
While oil prices continue to soar to new heights, the gurus at InnovaTek are peering into the future. After years of work, said company is finally testing its hand-sized microreactor that can reportedly “convert virtually any liquid fuel into hydrogen, producing a portable hydrogen stream for use in adjoining fuel-cells.” In a perfect world, the technology would come built-in to vehicles, where we’d bypass the dangerous act of transporting hydrogen and instead convert biodiesel (or similar) right within the confines of the car. As it stands, the outfit has already signed a half-million dollar joint development agreement with Chevron to “pursue fuel processing technology for hydrogen refueling stations,” and while this stuff isn’t apt to be an option on any showroom models next year, InnovaTek is still aiming to commercially license the microreactors by 2009.
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Posted in fuel, fuel cell, FuelCell, energy, power, alternative energy, alternative fuel, AlternativeEnergy, AlternativeFuel, biodiesel, biofuel, InnovaTek, microreactor | No Comments »
March 18th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets, Household

It’s far from the first energy monitor we’ve seen, but this new so-called Ewgeco device does look to be one of the more sophisticated offerings so far, with it not only promising to keep tabs on your electricity use, but your water and gas consumption as well. That’s apparently done with the aid of sensors that wirelessly transfer readings to the main device, which translates the information into easy to read bars that light up green, red, or amber depending on your level of consumption. Unfortunately, the device is only being sold to businesses at the moment, and it’s not exactly plug-and-play either, with one of the company engineers required to install it, and a week needed for the Ewgeco to get used to your normal usage patterns.
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Posted in energy, energy monitor, EnergyMonitor, ewgeco | No Comments »
March 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Household
Apparently, traditional powerstrips are in dire need of an overhaul, as the Eject Powerstrip is just one of many replacement concepts we’ve seen float by in the past several months. Nevertheless, this brilliantly engineered design essentially allows users to eject plugs leading to devices not currently in use in order to keep consumption of “vampire power” to a minimum. Additionally, any ejected socket is automatically turned off in order to keep your meddling youngsters safe from electrocution. Now, if only we weren’t so ashamed about leaving our current strips out in the open, we’d really be infatuated with this idea.
[Via GizmoWatch]
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Posted in energy, power, green, concept, PowerStrip | No Comments »
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