Shared posts

10 Aug 12:36

Expiring Drugs with Expiring Labels

by Editors

drug packs Expiring Drugs with Expiring Labels

Some people, especially elderly, either forget or don’t care enough to look at the expiry date of their medications, but some chemicals can lose potency over time and may even become counterproductive. Designers Kanupriya Goel and Gautam Goel propose a new design for pill blister packs that will display a message not to take the drugs once enough time passes.

The material would consist of two layers, with the top containing the original drug’s info label and a bottom layer with ink that slowly seeps into the top. After enough time passes, the warning message will become clear and the patient will immediately know to get a fresh refill.  The Self Expiring, as the design concept is called, won a 2013 red dot design award.

Link: Self Expiring red dot award…

(hat tip: Gizmodo)

06 Aug 17:14

Kickstarting Rubbee: Electric Bicycles for Everyone!

Rubbeeview1.jpg

Wouldn't a world where we could retrofit everything be amazing? Maybe... maybe not. When it comes to adding a souped up engine to just about any transportation device, contraptions like this come to mind. Likewise, when it comes to added utility there's often the notion that we should just throw it out and upgrade for 'fully integrated' design. The Rubbee however, is a neat little gadget for the casual bike enthusiast looking to add some juice to their ride. At roughly the size of a loaf of bread, the device allows you to give your bike all of the perks of being electric with only about a minute of installation.

Rubbeeviewside.jpg

The Lithuanian company behind Rubbee set out to fill a gap in the market for an easily installed and flexible electric conversion kit for bikes. As some of you may know, converting your tried and true two-wheeler into a super-charged electric ride requires users to switch out a tire and hook up a battery cable—not an entirely quick fix for the casual cyclist looking to bounce between the traditional and electric. The Rubbee requires only that you clamp the box on the seat post, remove the fixation pin to enable suppression system, connect the throttle and turn the system on. You can also ride with without the drive engaged and pedal normally by replacing the fixation pin. On the whole, it seems like a pretty simple bike hack... though many normal conversion kits only take about four minutes more to install and offer double the speed.


Installing the Rubbee

(more...)
    


04 Aug 06:11

23 3D Printers to Drool Over

by Ken Denmead
This is our 3D printer shoot-out weekend at MAKE HQ, and we're putting all the newest machines to the test in our labs. But we thought we'd give you a little preview.

Read more on MAKE

04 Aug 06:10

"Lonely Seats" are Popular in Japanese University's Engineering Cafeteria

by Alex Santoso


Photo: Asahi

Friends? Engineering students from the prestigious Kyoto University of Japan have got no time for friends!

Thankfully, university officials recognize that fact and installed a series of screened seats called "bocchi seki" or "lonely seats" in the engineering school campus lunchroom. According to Asahi News, the seats turned out to be quite popular with the forever aloners:

"If you are sitting at a big table by yourself it's like you don't have any friends and that is embarrassing," said one 22 year-old male student. "When I don't have much time or I'm in a hurry, the lonely seats are convenient," said a 22 year-old female student.

Via Kotaku

03 Aug 16:41

This Is a Heat Map of a Single, Living Cell

by George Dvorsky

This Is a Heat Map of a Single, Living Cell

By using a microscopic diamond and some gold nanoparticles, researchers at Harvard have measured the internal temperature of a living human embryonic cell. This groundbreaking new ‘nanothermometer’ could lead to therapies in which specific cells are treated.

Read more...

    


03 Aug 16:11

Turning a Cat Into Totoro in the Easiest Way Possible

by Rusty Blazenhoff

Totoro

Japanese Twitter user bump_take tweeted a photo of a gray cat that has been brilliantly turned into Totoro (the title character from Miyazaki’s classic My Neighbor Totoro) using only a piece of white paper.

via Kotaku, Archie McPhee’s Endless Geyser of Awesome

03 Aug 15:46

Google to launch Android Device Manager to help find lost phones

by John Callaham
Google has announced it will launch Android Device Manager later this month for all Android 2.2 and above smartphones to help their owners find their lost phones or erase the device's data remotely. Read more...
    


03 Aug 13:47

Google Street View Reveals What Makes Our Cities Feel Safe

by Vanessa Quirk

“We found images with trash in it, and took the trash out, and we noticed a 30 percent increase in perception of safety. It’s surprising that something that easy had that large an effect.” So Phil Salesses, one of the authors of a PLOS ONE paper studying the perception of safety, class and uniqueness in city streets tells The Atlantic Cities. By comparing images from Google Street View of Boston and New York in the US and Linz and Salzburg in Austria, and photoshopping out individual elements (such as trash or graffiti) to fine tune the results, Salesses and his collaborators have gathered quantitative evidence to answer an often subjective question: what makes citizens feel safe? Learn more about Salesses’ research at The Atlantic Cities and read the paper here.

03 Aug 07:13

Bug-A-Salt gun ~ fill it with table salt, and...

by NOTCOT



Bug-A-Salt gun ~ fill it with table salt, and obliterate flies, mosquitos, etc effectively up to 3ft away?

(Want more? See NOTCOT.org and NOTCOT.com)
02 Aug 18:44

Does Your Name Affect Your Lot in Life?

by Brian Clark Howard
A. Kachmar

no shit

Choosing a name—as the royals are discovering—is serious business. But how do our names impact who we become?
02 Aug 13:38

Poang²

by Jules Yap

Materials: 2 Poangs and a shockabsorber

Description: Bolted two Poangs to each other and turned an armrest into the very needed third support-leg and another piece into a holder for the shock absorber. After all, the Poang is known for its comfort.. This shock absober is somewhat too hard, so if I come across a softer one...



Meanwhile, I got a very comfy two-seater.

~ farlakes, the Netherlands
02 Aug 13:32

iGrow Hair Growth System from Apira Science Gets FDA Green Light

by Editors
A. Kachmar

So the FDA approves this! What a shame

tinfoil hat iGrow Hair Growth System from Apira Science Gets FDA Green LightApira Science of Boca Raton, Florida received FDA 510(k) approval for its iGrow hair growth system for men with androgenetic alopecia, or male pattern baldness. The system purports to reverse hair loss by projecting red light onto the scalp using a laser and LEDs built into the helmet-like device, what the company calls Low-Level Light Therapy (LLLT).

The therapy takes four to six months of wearing the cap in the privacy of your home, something you’ll appreciate since others might think you’re wearing a high-tech tin-foil hat. It has a standard 3.5 mm connector to plug in your phone or music player, so you can listen to tunes, or even meditate on the activity of your hair follicles.

Product page: iGrow…

Press release: Apira Science’s iGrow In-Home, Hands-Free Hair Growth System Earns FDA Clearance

02 Aug 13:21

Baladéo G-Series Ultralight Pocket Knives are...

by NOTCOT



Baladéo G-Series Ultralight Pocket Knives are amazing. Weighing in as light as 15 GRAMS... yet also strong, feel great in your hand, and they pride themselves on combining “an excellent grip and the pleasure of the perfect cut.”

(Want more? See NOTCOT.org and NOTCOT.com)
02 Aug 13:20

Preteen Boy Holds Up Lemonade Stand with a BB Gun

by Neetzan Zimmerman

Preteen Boy Holds Up Lemonade Stand with a BB Gun

Police in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, say a 12-year-old boy armed with a BB gun robbed a local lemonade stand being run by a group of younger boys.

Read more...

    


02 Aug 13:18

The Last and Final Argument Against Crocs

by Camille Dodero

The Last and Final Argument Against Crocs

Ariel Castro.

Read more...

    


01 Aug 20:24

Learn Modern Architecture Principles with New LEGO Kit

by Steph
A. Kachmar

I liked the Zome mathematical kit, a lot of potential, but it's a bit too skeletal, very different than lego though

[ By Steph in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

LEGO Architecture Studio 1

If you’ve always wanted to design modern buildings, but don’t have any plans to attend architecture school, LEGO has just the tool you’re looking for. The toy company has revealed a LEGO Architecture Studio kit aimed at adults with an interest in design, which includes over 1,200 white and transparent blocks in 73 shapes along with a 272-page guide book full of architecture designs and tips from leading contemporary architects.

LEGO Architecture Studio 2

LEGO Architecture Studio 3

Endorsed by REX Architecture, Sou Fujimoto Architects, MAD Architects, Tham & Videgård Arkitekter and Safdie Architects, the set features techniques, examples and hands-on exercises to strengthen your design sensibilities. It could also be used by working architects to build models.

LEGO Architecture Studio 4

While there are some sample designs in the book, the idea is for you to put your imagination to work and come up with your own masterpieces. Among the topics explored in the book are modules and repetition, creating surfaces, working in a context, mass and density, and symmetry.

Lego Architecture Studio 5

The set retails at $149.95 and will be available for purchase on the LEGO website on August 1st.

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[ By Steph in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

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01 Aug 19:15

Are LEED Skyscrapers Our Biggest Energy Hogs?

by Vanessa Quirk

In an excellent article for The New Republic, Sam Roudman brilliantly tackles many of the same, timely issues as Michael Mehaffy and Nikos Salingaros in “Why Green Architecture Hardly Ever Deserves the Name.” Roudman unpacks the loop-holes of LEED, most notably how it ignores a building’s intended use, which often make a building anything but sustainable at all. Read the whole article at The New Republic.

01 Aug 18:26

A Day In The Life Of A New York Post Headline Writer

by Dorsey Shaw

Best job in the world.


View Entire List ›

01 Aug 11:44

Spooky two-sentence horror story

by Cory Doctorow


A Reddit thread called What is the best horror story you can come up with in two sentences produced this damned spooky entry by justAnotherMuffledVo:

I begin tucking him into bed and he tells me, “Daddy check for monsters under my bed.” I look underneath for his amusement and see him, another him, under the bed, staring back at me quivering and whispering, “Daddy there’s somebody on my bed."

(via Super Punch)

(Image: Goldilocks Nightmare, a Creative Commons Attribution (2.0) image from rockandrollfreak's photostream)

    


01 Aug 11:42

Elevator of H.M.S Mauretania, 1906/1907 (by SMU Central...



Elevator of H.M.S Mauretania, 1906/1907 (by SMU Central University Libraries)

01 Aug 11:33

Bodyscapes, Landscapes Made Out of Human Bodies

by EDW Lynch

Bodyscapes by Carl Warner

The curves and contours of the human body form scenic landscapes in the clever photo series “Bodyscapes” by photographer Carl Warner. Warner has also created landscapes out of food in his series “Foodscapes.” Prints of his work are available here.

Bodyscapes by Carl Warner

Bodyscapes by Carl Warner

via UFunk.net, PetaPixel

01 Aug 11:33

Famous Guns, The Iconic Firearms of Fictional Characters & Historical Figures

by Kimber Streams

Famous Guns

Italian designer Federico Mauro has created “Famous Guns,” a minimalist series collecting the iconic firearms of movie characters and historical figures from Han Solo to John Herbert Dillinger. More famous firearms can be found at Mauro’s website. Previously, we posted about his “Famous Eyeglasses” and “Famous Guitars” collections.

Famous Guns

Famous Guns

Famous Guns

images via Federico Mauro

via Gizmodo

01 Aug 10:53

Leisure Dives: Planking Meets Parkour & Midair Photography

by Urbanist
[ By WebUrbanist in Global & Urbex & Parkour. ]

leisure dive suit drink

Parkour and free-running are fine for athletic types, while planking and the lying-down game are great for lazies, but suspended somewhere in between we find the leisure dive.

leisure dives with cocktails

Blending the action-packed art of diving and cavalier nonchalance of sipping a cocktail, the actual site (Leisure Dive) started as a Facebook phenomena with a few pictures and spiraled out of control from there.

leisure dive newspaper jump

Variants include: hopping off a bike in mid-jump, or holding something other than a drink. Other details aside, though, appearance is critical – the less you look like someone prepared to splash into a pool (or other body of water, or hard-packed dirt) a few moments after your photograph is snapped, the more convincing the effect.

leisure dives various photos

For those wishing to get in on the game, the instructions are as follows: (1) Grab some friends, a decent camera, and head somewhere chill near a body of water. A swimming pool works. A lake will do. A river? You crazy. (2) Put on a bathing suit. Or a linen suit. Or a koala suit. Anything leisurely. (3) Grab something that says you are just a chilled out individual. A piña colada. A pitching wedge. A harpsichord. Whatever. We all unwind differently. (4) Find a nice perch from which to jump. Make sure you have a leisurely backdrop and a safe landing. (5)Now jump in, and embrace the leisure. Tip your glass. Pop your elbow. And most importantly, look at the camera with a face that says, “Does this suit make me look awesome?” The answer is yes. And, SNAP.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Global & Urbex & Parkour. ]

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01 Aug 08:58

Architecture & Design in the Movies

design-in-movies-02.jpg

I recently saw the Tom Cruise flick Oblivion, which people apparently hated; but one thing I really dug was the shot you see above. Director Joseph Kosinski, depicting New York City in the year 2017, gives us our first glimpse of the completed One World Trade Center. The movie was released in April of this year, but as we saw earlier, in reality it wasn't even until May that the spire was raised. And just this morning, I looked up to see the real deal still has glasswork to be done, and still has a construction elevator running up its side. Oblivion was the first convincing depiction I'd seen of the completed structure.

Kosinksi is an architect by training, and until recently was still teaching 3D modeling as an adjunct assistant prof at Columbia, so it's no surprise that he took the time to get One WTC right. (Amusingly, had he swung the camera just a bit to the left in the shot above, we'd see Gehry's ugly 8 Spruce Street; thankfully the framing precludes it, and I wonder if it was intentional.) But even directors with no architectural background are in a prime position to educate, or at least familiarize, the general public with different styles of architecture. With that in mind Architizer's Zachary Edelson has written "A Brief History Of Modern Architecture Through Movies," where he ticks off a list of flicks with such iconic backdrops that any layperson who's seen them can get an instant frame of reference for what Art Deco, Art Nouveau or Modernism looks like.

By necessity Nelson's list is far from complete, but it makes me wonder what films you guys would use to describe not just architecture, but entire design movements to laypeople. I first saw Blade Runner, with Deckard chilling out in the Ennis House, before I even knew who Frank Lloyd Wright was.

design-in-movies-03.jpg

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01 Aug 06:35

Graffiti Removal Guy Becomes Street Art

by EDW Lynch

Graffiti Removal Guys Becomes Street Art

Back in May, artist DS put a Hello Kitty stencil up in London only to watch a worker remove it just 8 hours later. DS photographed the worker and turned the man into a stencil, which the artist then put on the wall the next day. According to DS the worker found the stencil portrait shortly thereafter and posed next to it for photos. The stencil was still up as of late July.

image via Streetsy

via Colossal

31 Jul 19:50

'Parasitism is the most popular lifestyle on Earth'

Parasites are all around us – humans alone have 100 – yet they receive little attention. That should change, says ecologist Kevin Lafferty
    


31 Jul 17:05

Do We Need Fewer Architects?

by Rory Stott

In an article by the Architects’ Journal, Tony Fretton is quoted as saying there ought to be fewer architecture schools in the UK, with more difficult entry requirements and a higher failure rate. “There should be a shortage of architects in the UK,” he says, “fewer bad architects, fewer good architects”.

Citing Switzerland and the Netherlands as countries which do well with just 2 or 3 major architecture schools, he believes that architectural education should be concentrated into just a few schools in order to give students more access to the best tutors.

Read more about Fretton’s proposal after the break

Fretton’s argument is particularly relevant in the UK right now, as the Architects Registration Board (ARB) is considering a radical change to the process of architectural education. In a separate opinion piece, the AJ’s editor Christine Murray says that “the current system is flabby, and, at £9,000 a year for tuition fees, flabby isn’t fair.”

She points out that the current education system leaves little opportunity for graduates saying that “too many of these students are simply unemployable.” This would certainly seem to support Fretton’s argument that we should be producing fewer architecture graduates in the first place.

However, it is interesting to note that in many developing countries, such as Thailand, there is a severe shortage of architecture graduates, as revealed by this article in The Nation. Perhaps one response to the current crisis in UK architectural education is to better prepare graduates to find work abroad (and, judging by the popularity of our post “The 9 Best Countries for Architects to Find Work,” many graduates are already making this leap).

Should there be fewer architects? More architects abroad? Let us know what you think in the comments below…

31 Jul 17:03

Controversial study finds that big and famous hospitals aren’t always the best for surgery

by Reuters

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Patients going to a hospital for surgery care about many things, from how kind the nurses are to how good the food is, but Consumers Union (CU) figures what they care about most is whether they stay in the hospital longer than they should and whether they come out alive.

In the first effort of its kind, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports magazine released ratings of 2,463 U.S. hospitals in all 50 states on Wednesday, based on the quality of surgical care. The group used two measures: the percentage of Medicare patients who died in the hospital during or after their surgery, and the percentage who stayed in the hospital longer than expected based on standards of care for their condition. Both are indicators of complications and overall quality of care, said Dr John Santa, medical director of Consumer Reports Health.

The ratings will surely ignite debate, especially since many nationally renowned hospitals earned only mediocre ratings. The Cleveland Clinic, some Mayo Clinic hospitals in Minnesota, and Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, for instance, rated no better than midway between “better” and “worse” on the CU scale, worse than many small hospitals. Because CU had only limited access to data, the ratings also underline the difficulty patients have finding objective information on the quality of care at a given facility.

Nevertheless, “this is a step in the right direction,” said Paul Levy, former president of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, who was not involved in the project. “To whatever extent you can empower patients to get better care and become partners in pushing the healthcare system to make improvements is to the good.”

CU’s ratings are based on Medicare claims and clinical records data from 2009 to 2011 for 86 kinds of surgery, including back operations, knee and hip replacements, and angioplasty. The rates are adjusted to account for the fact that some hospitals treat older or sicker patients, and exclude data on patients who were transferred from other hospitals. These are often difficult cases that, CU felt, should not be counted against the receiving hospital.

Although the ratings do not explicitly incorporate complications such as infections, heart attacks, strokes, or other problems after surgery, the length-of-stay data captures those problems, said Santa.

Some of the findings are counterintuitive. Many teaching hospitals, widely regarded as pinnacles of excellence and usually found at the top of rankings like those of U.S. News & World Report, fell in the middle of the pack.

“This isn’t the first time we’ve seen this sort of surprise,” said Dr Marty Makary, a surgeon at Johns Hopkins Hospital and author of the 2012 book, “Unaccountable: What Hospitals Won’t Tell You and How Transparency Can Revolutionize Health Care.” “For a complex procedure you’re probably better off at a well-known academic hospital, but for many common operations less-known, smaller hospitals have mastered the procedures and may do even better” with post-surgical care.

NOT ‘A TRUE PICTURE’

The Cleveland Clinic’s chief quality officer, Dr Michael Henderson, said CU’s methodology, which gave his hospital a middle-of-the-scale rating below that of such Ohio hospitals as the Fulton County Health Center in Wauseon and the Institute for Orthopaedic Surgery in Lima, “doesn’t give you a true picture” of the quality of surgical care. Much better, he said, is actual outcome data – how well patients undergoing any given procedure fare – which Cleveland is a pioneer in making public via its website.

Experts at other big-name hospitals whose CU ratings fell short of their reputations also questioned the methodology. “The accuracy of claims data,” like that CU used, “is very low or unknown,” said Dr Peter Provonost of Hopkins.

CU also found that several urban hospitals did well despite serving many poorer, sicker patients, including Mount Sinai Hospital in New York and University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland. Rural hospitals did better, on average, than other hospitals, and many hospitals practically unknown beyond their zip code outranked famous ones, including Kenmore Mercy near Buffalo, New York; Arrowhead in Glendale, Arizona; Sacramento Medical Center in California; and Arkansas Heart in Little Rock.

Hospital choice matters more for some procedures than others. Length of stay for hip and knee replacements and back surgery varied widely, for instance, while hospitals’ scores for colon surgery and hysterectomy were more similar to one another.

Like other experts pushing for greater “medical transparency” – that is, reporting data on how patients fare after treatments – CU’s Santa said available data, including that used by CU, is far from perfect.

The American College of Surgeons collects data on surgical outcomes, such as the rate of infections at the surgical site and urinary tract infections, through its National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. The group will not release the data to the public because it promised confidentiality to hospitals providing the data, said Dr Clifford Ko, a cancer surgeon at UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center who is involved in the project. However, 102 of about 500 participating hospitals voluntarily report some of their data to the federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

“I think the public would be surprised at all the data they’re not allowed to see,” said Santa. “One of the reasons we did this was to stimulate debate and irritate people” enough to force hospitals and others to be open about the quality of care they provide. Many critics of CU’s methods agree with that goal. Hopkins’ Provonost, for instance, has called for a medical version of the Securities and Exchange Commission to require hospitals to report patient outcomes, just as the SEC requires public companies to report financial data.

Until and unless that happens, the lack of transparency can be expensive, not only in lives but also in dollars. Last week the Leapfrog Group, whose employer-members provide health insurance to workers, released a calculator of “hidden hospital surcharges,” the amount that errors, accidents, infections and injuries cost payers.

On average, said Leapfrog president and chief executive Leah Binder calculates, a patient treated at a hospital with a grade of “C” or lower on an A-to-E scale of safety incurs $7,780 in costs due to medical errors.

The CU report is available at www.ConsumerReports.org/cro/hospitalratings0913.

(Reporting by Sharon Begley; Editing by Prudence Crowther)

31 Jul 14:19

G. K. Chesterton

"The Bible tells us to love our neighbors, and also to love our enemies; probably because they are generally the same people."
30 Jul 22:59

Food aid doesn't work because the primary goal isn't aid

by Maggie Koerth-Baker
At Nautilus, Jonathan Katz applies a systems-level perspective to the problem of food aid. Every year, the United States spends billions (although much less than it used to) sending shipments of food to countries where people are going hungry. The problem: That aid doesn't solve their hunger as a long-term thing, it just creates a stop-gap measure — and we do it in a way that costs more than it would likely cost to support programs that actually help those people change their lives. Why? Katz argues that it's because food aid evolved more for the benefit of American companies than the long-term benefit of feeding people.