DJ Hero Review
Nissan's LandGlider Narrow track vehicles - the convergence of the car and the motorcycle
Emue and Visa Europe have been working closely over the past 18 months to develop the Visa... Anti-fraud credit card features E-Ink display
SPDY from Google's Chromium development team has achieved 55 percent faster page loading t... Google SPDY aims to make web faster
BMW has brought back the C1 as an electric-powered concept scooter called the C1-E E is for electric: The BMW C1-E concept scooter
Yes, that's supposed to be a piece of underwear. No, me neither. C-string makes your average thong look like grannypants (NSFW)
MORE TOP STORIES »
ELECTRONICS

The electrical inlet

By Darren Quick

22:13 March 18, 2009 PDT

The presumably 'knife friendly' Inlet Outlet
 Pic credit: core77

The presumably 'knife friendly' Inlet Outlet Pic credit: core77

Image Gallery (3 images)

It wasn’t surprising to see that power conservation was a prevalent theme for entries in this year’s core77 Greener Gadgets Design Competition – the first two places were taken by variations on household power meters. One of the entries that made it to the semi final stage that we thought warranted some kudos was the Inlet ‘Outlet’ - a concept that would see household electrical outlets accompanied by an electrical ‘inlet’ that would make it easy for householders to feed power back into the power grid.

The designers, Carla Diana and Jeff Hoefs, say energy could be captured from obvious kinetic sources such as exercise equipment, and emerging solutions such as cells that convert heat into energy. The concept could also be used in commercial settings with gyms being the obvious example. They also believe that such a system could encourage the development of new devices that capture wasted energy to feed back into the grid.

We like the idea, but the rolling out of infrastructure to support the feeding of energy back into the grid is likely to render the device a pipedream in the short term - although such an idea could possibly work on a self-contained level. People could store energy generated in-house in a battery for later use, lessening the need to draw power from the grid. The Inlet ‘Outlet’ could also have the added benefit of tackling childhood obesity - nothing’s going to get those kids on an exercise bike quicker than if it ensures their TV and gaming consoles keep running.

Darren Quick

Tags
Post a Comment

Login with your gizmag account:




Or Login with Facebook:


Connect
Gallery Images

Related Articles Email this article to a friend

Just enter your friends and your email address into the form below ...




Privacy is safe with us because we have a strict privacy policy.

Recent popular articles in Electronics
Recent Comments