Cool Gadgets

Tiny Camera Helicopter

This small helicopter looks like a great spy machine. Fly it anywhere by using the built in camera. “Power raising the super thin-shaped ultrasonic motor, when it improves largest lift to 17g, simultaneously, it loads the worldwide smallest most lightweight gyro sensor of mass of former 1/5, actualizing light weight conversion two CPU which include the Epson original 32bitRISC micro-computer “S1C 33Family” with high density mounting. It succeeded in building

Ultimate Gaming Touch Screen

If you have some cash burning a hole in your pocket and play lots of video games you have to watch this video! “Developed by Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories (MERL), this interactive multi-input panel allows users to control games or applications with an array of antennas embedded in the touch surface. Basically, a receiver connected to each user’s chair, gets signals from antennas near the touch point. The displays are

Bottle Opener

Seems like there is never a bottle opener around when you need one for cracking open a nice import beer. Well look no further than this wall mounted bottle opener that is mounted in a convenient place!

DIY Web Server not using a Computer

Sylvain Ferrand from France has made a Web server that you could build and stuff in your pocket. No hard drive, monitor, CD-Rom drive etc. Just a handful of components and some code. Take a look at his site for the schematic and components you need. “The ENC28J60 is a single chip 10mb Ethernet controller easy to drive by a microcontroller with SPI bus. It’s a cheap low pin-out (28

Hibiscus Rescue Bot

David Ponce of OhGizmo posted a robot that I can only hope is available is I am ever trapped in a collapsed building and need to be rescued. “Being trapped beneath a pile of rubble is a bad way to spend your weekend. And while people in earthquake prone areas are more likely to benefit from the Hibiscus rescue bot (a design of Chiba Institute of Technology), rescue agencies worldwide

Top 10 Strangest Clocks

TechEBlog has a cool top 10 list of strange clocks. The Giovannoni Timesphere looks neat, and seems to be a bargain at the price. “Priced at $150, the Giovannoni Timesphere is a nifty alarm clock that is capable of projecting the time onto any surface via a wireless orb.”

Two Foot Walking Linux Robot

Seems like Linux is finding its way into everything. You can now include robots to the list… Original non translated page. “The industrial technology research institute of independent administrative corporate body (the product entire research) May 26th, 2 foot walking robot “HRP-2m Choromet which loads real time Linux ([chiyoromete])” it announced. The product entire research recognition venture and the like develops jointly, sells to the university and the like as