INNOVATIONS THAT WILL CHANGE YOUR TOMORROW
1. ELECTRIC CLOTHES
Physicists at Wake Forest
University have developed a fabric that doubles as a spare outlet. When used to
line your shirt — or even your pillowcase or office chair — it converts subtle
differences in temperature across the span of the clothing (say, from your cuff
to your armpit) into electricity. And because the different parts of your shirt
can vary by about 10 degrees, you could power up your MP3 player just by
sitting still. According to the fabric’s creator, David Carroll, a cellphone
case lined with the material could boost the phone’s battery charge by 10 to 15
percent over eight hours, using the heat absorbed from your pants pocket.
Richard Morg
2. THE NEW COFFEE
Soon, coffee isn’t going to taste
like coffee — at least not the dark, ashy roasts we drink today. Big producers
want uniform taste, and a dark roast makes that easy: it evens out flavors and
masks flaws. But now the best beans are increasingly being set aside and
shipped in vacuum-sealed packs (instead of burlap bags). Improvements like
these have allowed roasters to make coffee that tastes like Seville oranges or
toasted almonds or berries, and that sense of experimentation is trickling down
to the mass market; Starbucks, for instance, now has a Blonde Roast. As quality
continues to improve, coffee will lighten, and dark roasts may just become a
relic of the past.
Oliver Stran
3. ANALYTICAL UNDIES
Your spandex can now subtly nag you
to work out. A Finnish company, Myontec, recently began marketing underwear
embedded with electromyographic sensors that tell you how hard you’re working
your quadriceps, hamstring and gluteus muscles. It then sends that data to a
computer for analysis. Although the skintight shorts are being marketed to
athletes and coaches, they could be useful for the deskbound. The hope,
according to Arto Pesola, who is working on an advanced version of the sensors,
is that when you see data telling you just how inert you really are, you’ll be
inspired to lead a less sedentary life.
Gretchen Reynolds
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