View Full Version : اهم مخترعات 2005(بالصور)
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 04:58 PM
اقدم لكم اهم مخترعات 2005
رغم انها مشروحة بالغة الإنجليزية لكن اعتقد انها مفهومه
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:03 PM
Posted Sunday, Nov. 13, 2005
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_tire.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Airing It Out
Inventor: Michelin
Availability: Now for the IBOT; about 2020 for cars
To Learn More: michelinman.com (http://michelinman.com/)
A wheel without an inflated tire may seem old-fashioned—think wooden buggy wheels—but the Tweel from Michelin is anything but retro. A shock-absorbing rubber tread band distributes pressure to dozens of flexible polyurethane spokes. The spokes in turn are supported by an aluminum center. Because the Tweel is airless, it is more rugged than a pneumatic tire and never goes flat. The Tweel has been tested on the IBOT robotic wheelchair and military vehicles. But you won’t see it on your Honda anytime soon. Michelin says it is still too noisy for automotive applications.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:03 PM
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STOCKILL FOR TIME
Clean Machine
Inventor: Intelligent Energy
Availability: In early 2007, for less than $10,000
To Learn More: envbike.com (http://envbike.com/)
The ENV bike looks like a muscular motorcycle but runs more like a moped. Weighing in at 200 lbs., the aluminum bike travels at speeds of up to 50 m.p.h. on its hydrogen-powered fuel-cell engine. Project director Andy Eggleston says that proprietary technology allows the fuel cell to produce more energy than is typical. The ENV runs silently on a 5-oz. canister of hydrogen that costs about $4 and can power the bike for 100 miles. The drawback? California is the only state with hydrogen fueling stations, so filling up outside the Golden State could be tough
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:16 PM
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JUN TAKAGI FOR TIME
Handles Like a Dream
Inventor: Yoshiaki Kato of Toyota
Availability: Prototype only
To Learn More: www.toyota.co.jp/en/news/04/1203_1e.html (http://www.toyota.co.jp/en/news/04/1203_1e.html)
The i-unit is a four-wheel personal-transportation system that looks like a space-age sports car. "This is designed to be an extension of the human body," says Yoshiaki Kato, chief engineer of the fully electronic, drive-by-wire concept vehicle, which is powered by lithium-ion batteries and has an exterior made of biodegradable, plant-based materials. The 3-ft.-wide, leaf-shaped i-unit is nearly 6 ft. tall when positioned upright but drops its center of gravity and reclines into a sports-car position for traveling at speeds of up to 25 m.p.h. Sensors allow the vehicle to detect obstacles. Place the steering unit to the left or right—or even at the feet of those with special needs
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:19 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_sonypsp.jpg Power Player
Inventor: Sony Computer Entertainment
Availability: Now, $250 for PSP; $15 to $50 for games and movies
To Learn More: www.us.playstation.com (http://www.us.playstation.com/)
If you thought portable game systems were just for kids, the PlayStation Portable (PSP) will change your mind. This slick black wonder, about the size of an eyeglasses case, has a gorgeous widescreen display, which is great not only for games—including holiday titles like SOCOM: U.S. Navy Seals and NeoPets—but movies too. Some 300 films are available for the Universal Media Disc format. Built-in wi-fi makes multiplayer gaming a breeze. What's more, the PSP (which accepts 1-GB Memory Sticks) can double as a Web browser, photo album, music player and e-mail device.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:20 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_sleeptracker.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Rise and Shine
Inventor: Lee Loree
Availability: Now, $149
To Learn More: sleeptracker.com (http://sleeptracker.com/)
Ever wonder why you feel groggier some mornings than others? It may be because your alarm went off when you were in the middle of a deep sleep. The Sleeptracker watch solves this problem by waking you only when you are in a light sleep. Equipped with a built-in motion sensor, the watch can tell whether you are in a deep or a light slumber. (The more restless you are, the lighter your sleep.) To ensure an optimal waking time, allow a window of 20 minutes or so when it would be O.K. to get up. Then Sleeptracker's alarm will go off when it senses that you are best ready to face the day.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:21 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_tomatoes.jpg Hanging Gardens
Inventor: Bill Felknor, Felknor Ventures
Availability: Now, $19
To Learn More: topsyturvys.com (http://topsyturvys.com/)
No longer will you have to cage, stake or weed your tomato plants or battle cutworms and other ruinous critters to put fresh tomatoes on the table. The Topsy-Turvy planter allows you to grow beefsteaks, cherries or any other variety upside down on your balcony or deck. Simply fill the bag with potting soil, add a young seedling—almost any vine-growing fruit or vegetable will do—and let the leafy part hang out. Mount the hook, add water and fertilize. A young plant in a warm climate takes about a month to bloom and another month to bear fruit.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:22 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_beertap.jpg JOHN B. CARNETT / TIME4MEDIA, INC
Perfect Brew
Inventor: Matthew Younkle, Laminar Technologies
Availability: Businesses can lease it for $99 a year per tap; keg-cooler version costs $209, kegerator, $179
To Learn More: turbotap.com (http://turbotap.com/)
Nothing kills happy hour like a big head. Now bartenders and concessionaires pulling pints can rely on TurboTap to keep things neat. The device, a stainless-steel spout that attaches to an existing tap, changes the flow of the beer so that it hits the bottom just so, eliminating the need to tilt the glass or slow down the pour. (The tail end, shaped like a Hershey's Kiss, feathers the liquid out to the sides; it takes only eight to 10 seconds to fill a pitcher.) Got a kegerator in the garage? You're in luck: home kits are now available.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:23 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_pearstattoed.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Fruit Tattoos
Inventor: Greg Drouillard
Availability: Now, on a trial basis
To Learn More: durand-wayland.com/label (http://durand-wayland.com/label)
Goodbye, pesky stickers. A growing number of produce packers and distributors are experimenting with natural-light labeling, a new process that uses a laser to etch identifying information (country of origin, variety, etc.) into the skins of fruits and vegetables without bruising or causing other damage. In our taste tests with pears from Southern Oregon Sales, the labeled areas proved entirely edible, if oddly textured. The process allows suppliers to attach more specific data to individual items—such as when a peach will be ripe enough to eat and other handy tidbits—in a way that won't stick to your hair.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:24 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_sprays.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Tastes Great, Less Filling
Inventor: David Burke
Availability: Now, online, $5.95 a bottle
To Learn More: www.flavorspraydiet.com (http://www.flavorspraydiet.com/)
Looking for a way to add taste while cutting calories? Chef David Burke, known for his Willie Wonka–like creations at New York City restaurant davidburke&donatella, has created a line of flavor sprays that mimic the taste of high-cal foods but have no fat, calories or carbs. Available in 18 varieties—such as Memphis BBQ, pesto and chocolate fudge—the sprays are concoctions of natural and artificial flavors. A shot of bacon can make scrambled eggs seem like a full breakfast feast, while root-beer-float or marshmallow spray may make you crave rice cakes.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:25 PM
NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Uncorked
Inventor: G&eactue;rard Michel, Laurent Villaume
Availability: Now, $59.95
To Learn More: tasting-international.com (http://tasting-international.com/)
Have you ever popped the cork on a fine Bordeaux or Chardonnay only to encounter a bitter taste and noxious aroma? About 5% of all bottled wine is tainted by a molecule in some corks known as trichloroanisole (TCA). Now a French company has devised a way to extract the TCA and restore the wine's bouquet. Pour the wine into the Dream Taste glass pitcher and insert a bunch of white plastic grapes, included in the kit. The faux fruit acts as a filter, absorbing the TCA in about an hour. Then pour a fresh glass, sit back and enjoy.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:25 PM
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http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_supportrobot.jpg Follow the Leader
Inventor: Toshiba Corp
Availability: Prototype only
To Learn More: www.toshiba.co.jp/about/press/ 2005_05/pr2001.htm (http://www.toshiba.co.jp/about/press/2005_05/pr2001.htm)
Robots may not invade anytime soon, but there's no denying that they're getting smarter. The ball-shaped ApriAlpha uses advanced voice-recognition technology to distinguish between voices coming from different locations. When Alpha hears a voice, it fixes its steely digital-camera eye on the person speaking. The taller ApriAttenda can identify a person in a crowd by the color of his clothes and shape of his body, and then follow its target. It even bleeps when it loses track of its subject.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:27 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_walkingturtlerobots.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Turtle Dance
Inventor: Takara
Availability: Now, only in Japan; about $12 each
To Learn More: takaratoys.co.jp (Japanese only) (http://takaratoys.co.jp/)
It's small, it's cute and it sashays across your desk, tail wriggling. To program Walkie Bits, simply tap its shell with your finger. It can remember and mimic a rhythmic pattern of up to 15 clicks. In song mode, it bleep-bleeps Leopold Mozart's Toy Symphony. But the most fun you can have with these tiny turtle robots is to race them against each other. In basic walk mode, the Walkie Bits' pace is unpredictable, so you never know which one—peach? melon? pineapple? mint?—will win. Each one runs on a watch battery and comes in a canister. Three can fit in the palm of your hand.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:28 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_catrobot.jpg Cool Cat
Inventor: Philips Research, Eindhoven, the Netherlands
Availability: Prototypes for research only
To Learn More: www.hitech-projects.com/icat (http://www.hitech-projects.com/icat)
The notion of robot as home companion is nothing new, but iCat adds a human dimension to the job: an expressive face. Tell her to go away, and iCat will look sad. Praise her, and she will beam. Internal microphones can be used to record sounds and assist with speech recognition—iCat is multilingual—and 13 electric motors move her eyes, eyebrows, eyelids, mouth and head to produce the appropriate emotional response. iCat can also connect to the Net and display online info on your TV or read it aloud. One thing she won't do is rub against your leg.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:29 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_nuvorobot.jpg Sit, Nuvo, Sit
Inventor: ZMP Inc.
Availability: Now, starting at $7,000
To Learn More: nuvo.jp (http://nuvo.jp/)
Tired of coming home to an empty nest each night? Try Nuvo. This 15-in., two-legged bot can dance, talk, play music, tell time and even shake your hand. It can respond to 40 simple commands (like "Nuvo, let's dance") in a Japanese-accented female voice and take pictures with the Cyclops lens mounted on its head. The 15 motorized joints in its body allow Nuvo to perform tricks like headstands and head rolls, as well as to roam freely around the house. Nuvo will even take photos and zap them to your cell phone.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:29 PM
Dancing Machine
Inventor: Tohoku University, Nomura Unison Group, TroisO Co. Ltd.
Availability: Prototype only
To Learn More: www.irs.mech.tohoku.ac.jp/top.html (http://www.irs.mech.tohoku.ac.jp/top.html)
With a face modeled on Marilyn Monroe's and a long, flowing skirt to hide its three wheels, the Partner Ballroom Dance Robot is a 5-ft. 5-in. waltzing humanoid. Available in hot pink or blue, it has upper-body sensors that allow it to "predict" its partner's next steps. Dancing is just one application. "By interpreting users' movements to estimate what they want, care robots will be able to provide better service for the elderly who may be too sick or handicapped to give verbal orders," says bioengineering and robotics professor Kazuhiro Kosuge, one of the creators.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:30 PM
Shades
Inventor: Alan Reichow at Pacific University for Nike
Availability: Now, $60 for box of six lenses. Purchase requires fitting by a professional; monthly replacement recommended.
To Learn More: nikevision.com (http://nikevision.com/) & bauschlomb.com (http://bauschlomb.com/)
These amber-tinted MaxSight contact lenses from Nike filter out blue light to reduce glare and improve the visibility of baseballs, tennis balls and other moving targets. A gray-green version gives golfers an edge by enhancing the dips and curves of a distant putting green. Orioles second baseman Brian Roberts credits his MaxSights with boosting his batting average last season; Michelle Wie wore them during her professional debut. The lenses, like those in any decent pair of sunglasses, also filter out ultraviolet rays.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:31 PM
DENNIS GALANTE FOR TIME
Just Smashing
Inventor: Fischer
Availability: Now, $170 at tennis-warehouse.com. The 105-sq.-in. model is recommended for beginners; the 98-sq.-in. one is for more advanced players.
To Learn More: www.fischer-tennis.com (http://www.fischer-tennis.com/)
Fischer's Magnetic Speed tennis racquet won't fix your forehand, but hit the sweet spot, and you'll feel the difference. During normal play, a racquet's frame deforms slightly on impact before springing back. With the M-Speed, two unipolar magnets positioned in opposite sides of the head help speed the recovery so the ball is catapulted back over the net with extra oomph. Anna-Lena Groenefeld of Germany and other pros compete with it. Tennis anyone?
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:31 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_medicine.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Drugs Over Easy
Inventor: Deborah Adler
Availability: Now, at Target pharmacies
To Learn More: designforall.target.com (http://designforall.target.com/)
From the mass retailer that put Philippe Starck styles in dorm rooms comes another evolution of design, this time for the medicine cabinet. Called ClearRx, Target's new prescription-drug packaging system—originally conceived by a student at the School of Visual Arts in New York City—turns the traditional amber-colored cylinder on its head. ClearRx bottles are not only upside down but also flattened out, so patients can read labels without rotating the package. Colored rings—say, blue for Mom, green for Dad—help prevent mix-ups, and labels display crucial data, such as drug and dosage, clearly at the top. On the flip side are warnings and a pullout card with medical info. It makes health care almost fun.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:32 PM
[DENNIS
GALANTE FOR TIME
Clear Water Revival
Inventor: Vestergaard Frandsen Group
Availability: Early 2006; $3 and up
To Learn More: lifestraw.com (http://lifestraw.com/)
The price of a caffe latte—about $3—really can save a life. The LifeStraw, a beefed-up drinking straw designed by the Swiss-based company Vestergaard Frandsen, uses seven types of filters, including mesh, active carbon and iodine, to make 185 gal. of water clean enough to drink. It can prevent waterborne illnesses, such as typhoid and diarrhea, that kill at least 2 million people every year in the developing world. It can also create safe drinking water for victims of hurricanes, earthquakes or other disasters.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:33 PM
NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Can You Hear Me Now?
Inventor: Randall Roberts
Availability: Now, at audiologists' offices; up to $299
To Learn More: starkey.com (http://starkey.com/) & elihearing.com (http://elihearing.com/)
This device makes it easier for hearing-aid users to go cellular. The tiny ELI plugs into the bottom of most behind-the-ear hearing aids, essentially turning them into wireless cell-phone headsets and eliminating the static that often occurs when hearing aids and mobile phones interact. A miniature microphone transmits the wearer's voice back to the phone. And for people who use in-the-ear hearing aids, there's another version of ELI that hangs on a cord around the neck.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:34 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_bioimplant.jpg MATT FLYNN/COOPER-HEWITT MUSEUM, ELLIS DEVELOPMENT
Patchwork
Inventor: Ellis Developments Ltd.
Availability: Now, in England only
To Learn More: ellisdev.co.uk (http://ellisdev.co.uk/)
It may look like a delicate doily, but the Bioimplantable Device is a rugged internal bandage that helps patients recover swiftly from shoulder-joint-replacement surgery. Made of standard polyester surgical thread, the device has an embroidered pattern that gives it strength and flexibility while imitating human tendons. Once implanted between muscles and bones, the device is never removed; it becomes part of the body as cells grow over it. This technology is also being used to replace slipped disks in the neck and to aid in clavicle-replacement surgery.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:34 PM
UNIVERSITY OF TSUKUBA / CYBERDYNE INC.
Walk Man
Inventor: Yoshiyuki Sankai, University of Tsukuba
Availability: Near future, $14,000–$19,000
To Learn More: sanlab.kz.tsukuba.ac.jp (http://sanlab.kz.tsukuba.ac.jp/)
Enter ... Mecha-Grandma! Japanese researchers have developed a robotic exoskeleton to help the elderly and disabled walk and even lift heavy objects like the jug of water above. It’s called the Hybrid Assistive Limb, or HAL. (The inventor has obviously never seen 2001: A Space Odyssey.) Its brain is a computer (housed in a backpack) that learns to mimic the wearer’s gait and posture; bioelectric sensors pick up signals transmitted from the brain to the muscles, so it can anticipate movements the moment the wearer thinks of them. A commercial version is in the works. Just don’t let it near the pod-bay doors.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:35 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_tent.jpg RAY NG FOR TIME
Pumped And Ready
Inventor: Cam Brensinger
Availability: Now, $395 for two-person Hypno tent
To Learn More: nemoequipment.com (http://nemoequipment.com/)
Tired of fumbling with tent poles as the sun goes down at some campsite in the woods? Nemo Equipment's inflatable tent has two supporting beams that are virtually pop-proof and are inflated with a foot pump to give the tent a rigid structure without aluminum poles. Designed by Cam Brensinger, a consultant for a NASA project designing spacesuits for Mars, the Nemo tents bring aerospace technology to the great outdoors. The company says the tents can be erected in less than a minute—in our test it took 48 seconds!
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:36 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_surfboard.jpg New Wave
Inventor: Mark Itnyre and Peter Mehiel
Availability: Now, $850 to $1,200
To Learn More: hydroepic.com (http://hydroepic.com/)
After decades of riding waves on boards made of foam and fiberglass, surfers have a high-tech alternative. Hydro Epic boards are hollow on the inside but have an extra-sturdy shell made of a carbon fiber–Kevlar composite and a thin aluminum honeycomb. To keep the air in the board from expanding and contracting in extreme heat or at high altitudes, there is a small vent at one end that lets air pass through while keeping water out. The radical design makes Hydro Epics stronger, faster and up to 30% lighter (the short board weighs 51⁄2 lbs.) than other boards. More important, the board has more flex, for better maneuverability
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:37 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_landroller.jpg BILL SCHLUETER
Big Wheels Keep On Turnin'
Inventor: LandRoller
Availability: Now, $249
To Learn More: landroller.com (http://landroller.com/)
A pair of skates with wheels that are angled inward may seem terribly wrong. But the oversize wheels on the new LandRollers are aligned in such a way that they help you keep your balance, especially on a cracked pavement or an uneven surface. Because the wheels' tilt is offset by the weight of your foot, the skate actually feels sturdier than most inline skates. Experienced skaters may find the LandRollers a little clunky and heavier than other popular skates, but for beginners longing to roll with the rest of the crowd, these two-wheelers do an admirable job of reducing the fear factor.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:37 PM
DENNIS GALANTE FOR TIME
Get Down And Boogie
Inventor: Now, $217 at ebodyboarding.com (http://ebodyboarding.com/)
Availability: Now, $249
To Learn More: moreybodyboards.com (http://moreybodyboards.com/)
Morey's Taloa III boosts bodyboarding's cool quotient by letting you hit the gnarliest waves with cutting-edge technology: a stiff, lightweight polypropylene core and graphite rod for strength, and mesh reinforcement for optimal flexibility (too much and you lose projection; too little and the board snaps back in heavy surf). Designed with intermediate and advanced bodyboarders in mind, the Taloa sports a retro shape that's appropriate no matter how you ride—prone, drop-knee or stand-up like the pros.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:39 PM
DENNIS GALANTE FOR TIME
Cheap Movies
Inventor: Pure Digital Technologies
Availability: Now, at CVS and Rite Aid; $30 plus $13 for processing
Now you can immortalize special moments without hauling out the heavy hardware. The One-Time-Use Video Camcorder is compact and easy to handle, with enough bells and whistles to give you your money's worth—like the bright 1.4-in. LCD color screen and the playback button that lets you view the last bit you captured and delete it if it's rubbish. The casing is sturdy for a throwaway; the sound and video quality are perfectly acceptable (if a tad grainy at times). Once you have shot the full 20 minutes, you return the device to the store to have the footage burned to a DVD. The camera is then recycled.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:40 PM
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http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_underwaterdigitalcamers.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
League Of Its Own
Inventor: Pure Digital Technologies
Availability: Now, at dive and photo shops, $550
To Learn More: sealife-cameras.com (http://sealife-cameras.com/)
The bijou camera eliminates the traditional bulk of underwater cameras, measuring a mere 3.5 in. by 5.5 in. and weighing just under 17 oz. But there's no sacrificing image quality. The SeaLife DC500 captures ultrasharp, high-resolution pictures and overcomes underwater photography challenges including poor light, waterborne particles and quick-moving subjects. And it's good for a deep dive. The camera is waterproof down to 200 ft. and also has six modes for land.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 05:46 PM
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http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_robotskinn.jpg TAKAO SOMEYA GROUP / UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO
The Right Touch
Inventor: Takao Someya
Availability: Prototype only
To Learn More: www.ntech.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp (http://www.ntech.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/)
The key to making artificially intelligent robots lies in giving them plenty of ways to gather information about their environment. Takao Someya, a researcher at the University of Tokyo, has created an electronic film—made up of bendable, shock-resistant transistors embedded in plastic—that can detect pressure and temperature. The sheet, known as a "large-area sensor array," is flexible enough to cover small objects and could give robots a sense of touch. Another potential use: smart carpet or furniture upholstery that can automatically adjust its temperature.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:11 PM
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http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_waterproofpaper.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Keeping Dry
Inventor: Sally Ramsey, Ecology Coatings
Availability: Commercial production in about 18 months
To Learn More: ecologycoatings.com (http://ecologycoatings.com/)
Like many great inventions, Ecology Coatings' new type of waterproof paper was an accident. While experimenting with a new protective coating for plastic in her lab, chief chemist Sally Ramsey put down paper to keep her workspace clean. But before she trashed the coated paper, she got curious. It turned out that she had created a waterproof and mildew-resistant paper that was easy to write on. The technology could be perfect for such low-cost paper products as shipping labels.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:17 PM
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Formfitting
Inventor: Rikiya Fukuda
Availability: Prototype only
To Learn More: snipurl.com/jp3h (Japanese only) (http://snipurl.com/jp3h)
A door that fits like a glove? This one does. Fukuda's Automatic Door, designed in Japan, opens just enough to match the shape of the person or object passing through. The nifty motion-detecting portal saves energy by keeping a door from having to repeatedly open all the way. That helps maintain a stable temperature in a room and can prevent dirt and other materials from being swept inside. In addition to people, the new system can be used for small objects, like packages dropped off at a post office, or for larger things, like a car coming through a garage door.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:17 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_slingbox.jpg Your TV, Anywhere
Inventor: Blake Krikorian
Availability: Now, $250
To Learn More: slingmedia.com (http://slingmedia.com/)
Every so often, a handy gadget comes along and changes our TV habits. In the 1990s WebTV married the Net with the tube, and TiVo famously began freeing us from network schedules. Now comes a new appliance to shift not when you watch your TV but where. Slingbox hooks up to your home set and beams whatever is onscreen to any Web-enabled device loaded with special software. Waiting for a plane in Paris? Use your laptop and the airport's wireless network to watch the local news from back home—or a DVD or an old show saved on your TiVo. You can even change channels. Best feature: no subscription fees
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:18 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_scooba.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Squeegee Clean
Inventor: Blake Krikorian
Availability: Now, $400
To Learn More: irobot.com (http://irobot.com/)
Scooba, iRobot's follow-up to Roomba, the robotic vacuum, steals a few tricks from its predecessor to tackle a different chore: mopping tile, linoleum or sealed hardwood floors. With each pass, Scooba completes four tasks: it sweeps loose debris, sprays a special Clorox cleaning solution onto the floor, scrubs the surface with a brush and then uses a "squeegee-vac" to suck up the dirty water. Like Roomba, Scooba works around obstacles and has "cliff" sensors that prevent it from falling down stairs. Different sensors keep Scooba off your high-pile carpet.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:19 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_trainingbike.jpg COURTESY PURDUE UNIVERSITY
Training Wheels
Inventor: Scott Shim, Matt Grossman and Ryan Lightbody
Availability: In late 2006; $100
To Learn More: designapkin.com (http://designapkin.com/)
Learning to ride a bike can be fraught with anxiety, but it doesn't have to be. Industrial designers from Purdue University have invented the Shift tricycle, whose rear wheels move closer together as the rider picks up speed, then separate for easier balance at slower speeds or at a standstill. A spring-loaded mechanism in the rear hub controls the rear wheels, and there are no spokes or exposed bike chain. The 25-lb. aluminum trike won an international bike-design competition in Taiwan this year. Now its creators want to produce it commercially.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:20 PM
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_globalflyer.jpg THIERRY BOCCON-GIBOD / REUTERS
Round Trip
Inventor: Burt Rutan
Availability: Sorry, it's one of a kind
To Learn More: globalflyer.com (http://globalflyer.com/)
The nonstop, nonrefueling solo flight around the world is the last great milestone in the history of aviation. Or it was. On March 1 the Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer, designed by Burt Rutan (who also designed the first civilian spacecraft, SpaceShipOne), took off from an airfield in a small town in Kansas; 67 hr. 2 min. 38 sec. and 23,000 miles later, the aviation world had reached another milestone. GlobalFlyer is so light (at takeoff, its weight is 83% fuel) and so aerodynamic (with a 114-ft. wingspan) that it has to use drag parachutes to help it get back down to the ground.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:21 PM
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http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_antfarm.jpg Tunnel Vision
Inventor: Fascinations
Availability: Now, $20, plus $3 for 25 live ants
To Learn More: fascinations.com (http://fascinations.com/)
Want a low-maintenance pet that won't scratch, shed or sleep all day? AntWorks is a new kind of ant farm that replaces dirt or sand with a clear, seaweed-based gel that is packed with all the tasty sugar, water and nutrients that ants need to survive. Just pop in some ants, close the lid, and watch the insects start tunneling through the blue-tinted goop. A magnifying glass, included, lets you see the ants' surprisingly sharp claws and even the hair on their bodies. For special effects, blue LED lights can be attached to the bottom of AntWorks to make it glow day and night.
المصمم الصناعى
22-01-2006, 06:22 PM
<HR style="COLOR: #dce8f7" SIZE=1> <!-- / icon and title --><!-- message -->
http://img.timeinc.net/time/daily/2005/0511/inv_piano.jpg NICHOLAS EVELEIGH FOR TIME
Roll and Rock
Inventor: Yamano Music
Availability: Soon, about $160
To Learn More: www.yamano-music.com (http://www.yamano-music.com/)
Traveling musicians, rejoice! With keys just an eighth of an inch thick, the 2-lb., 61-key Hand Roll Piano rolls up like a blanket and spreads out to about 3 ft. in length. Incorporating technology used in remote-control buttons and touch panels, the silicone-rubber keyboard, which has a built-in speaker, can be played for up to 15 hours on four AA batteries. But it's no lightweight. The Hand Roll comes with a set of 128 tones (from acoustic piano to bird tweet), 100 rhythms, 20 prerecorded demo songs and a speaker jack, and it connects to a computer.
د. عمر هزاع
22-01-2006, 06:51 PM
جهد واضح وكبير
كل الشكر اخي المصمم
لك تحيتي
المشرف العام
23-01-2006, 03:44 AM
جهد كبير وملموس
بالتأكيد مقدر لك من كل متصفح
جزاك الله خير.
بالتوفيق.
محمد جاد الزغبي
24-01-2006, 04:48 AM
مفهومة مين يا حج ..
اعمل فينا معروف .. أخوك فى الانجليزي
مثل حضرتك فى اللعة السنسيكريتية ..
أحمد سعد الدين
26-01-2006, 07:14 PM
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
جزيت خيرا أخى الفاضل المصمم الصناعى
وتوجد ثلاث صور فقط مما أوردته ( 38 صورة ) تحتوى صور فتيات متبرجات ليس لهن أهمية فى شرح الموضوع ولكن المعلنين عن السلع والمنتجات اعتادوا ذلك للتشويق والابهار لترويج السلع ،
وأرى ( ورعا ) حذف تلك الصور فليس كل أحد من القراء بقادر على غض النظر.
والله أعلم
وضع صور النساء على المنتجات
أجاب عليه:سلمان العودة
السؤال:
ما حكم وضع صور ذوات الأرواح على الأغلفة التجارية للإشهار؟ ومن ذلك وضع صور النساء على كرتون بعض العلب التجارية للإشهار والتعريف بخصائص السلعة، علماً بأن المرأة لا يظهر منها إلا وجهها وبعض من شعرها، وهي في صورة محتشمة. وهذا خاصة في بعض المنتجات الخاصة بالنساء مثل الحناء، وزيت الشعر، وصبغ الشعر؟
وهل يجوز أن نضع صورة امرأة ملتفتة إلى الخلف بحيث يظهر الرأس فقط، ولا يظهر منه إلا الشعر؟
الجواب:
أرى أنه لا يجوز وضع صور النساء على المنتجات لما في ذلك من الفتنة، حيث أصبحت الشركات والمتاجر تتنافس على اختيار الجميلات، وعرضهن بشتى الملامح والأوضاع، وهكذا القنوات الفضائية، والصحف، والمجلات أصبح الكثير منها ينظر إلى المرأة باعتبارها جسداً فحسب، ويوظفها وسيلة لجذب الزبائن، وقل أحيانا لخداعهم.
وهذا يعود بالضرر على المرأة نفسها في تكريس صورتها المادية الجسدية، وتغييب صورتها الروحية والعقلية، حيث هي مدرسة، وسكن، وعقل، وتاريخ، وفضائل.
فيختفي هذا كله ويتضاءل، أو ينعدم، وتبرز صورة المرأة الجسد، وهذا مقصور على ذوات المواصفات الخاصة أولاً، وعلى فترة من العمر محدودة ثانياً، ثم يلفظها السوق.
ولذلك تقوم الحملات، ويجب أن تقوم في الغرب، والشرق لمنع استغلال المرأة، أو المتاجرة بها بأي وجه.
أما رسم صورة شعر مجرد مثلاً كوسيلة إيضاح وإشهار، وتعريف ببعض السلع فلا يظهر مانع منه والله أعلم.
http://www.islamtoday.net/pen/show_questio...nt.cfm?id=12481 (http://www.islamtoday.net/pen/show_question_content.cfm?id=12481)
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركة
مشكور أخوي المصصم الصناعي
ع الموضوع رائع
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