DROPLETS DANCE IN TIBETAN SINGING BOWL
New Scientist
2011, 43 sec
Droplets dance in Tibetan singing bowl.
New Scientist
2011, 43 sec
Droplets dance in Tibetan singing bowl.
2010, 2 min 28 sec
Never let an engineer fix your lawnmower, especially if they work for Boeing. The original plans for this design were published by RC Modeler back in the 70’s but it looks like they improved on the design.
Solar Roadways & YERT; Sagle, USA
2010, 4 min 38 sec
The Solar Roadways project is working to pave roads with solar panels that you can drive on. Co-founder Scott Brusaw has made some major steps forward since our first visit back in 2007. This update on the project includes the new Solar Roadways prototype.
SmarterEveryDay
2015, 5 min 32 sec
Acoustic levitation (also: Acoustophoresis) is a method for suspending matter in a medium by using acoustic radiation pressure from intense sound waves in the medium.
Nick Rosen
2010, 3 min 52 sec
Nick Rosen, author of Off the Grid: Inside the Movement, travelled all over meeting outcasts, billionaires, the foreclosed and the forgotten, trying to find out why such a disparate group were all headed for the hills at the same time. Above all he wanted to find out why they live off the grid.
CCTV-9 Report
2011, 3 min 15 sec
Thousands of poor homes in Manila have a problem, not uncommon for cramped and small settlements. These houses are so close together, with metal roofing that all the light is blocked off and no light reaches the homes even during daylight!
The solar bottle bulb, an innovation developed by students of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, inspired by the Appropriate Technologies Collaborative,
is helping poor communities in developing countries like Brazil and Philippines through simple and appropriate innovation.
It is a simple bottle bulb, usually a 1 liter soda bottle that is filled with a solution of purified water and bleach. The bottle is inserted halfway through a hole drilled in the metal roof and its sides are sealed. The whole deal looks like a bulb through a sunroof and provides a good amount of light by deflecting sunlight into gloomy interiors. The chlorine and bleach ‘poisons’ the water to keep molds from developing so the solution can last up to five years. The clear and purified water helps disperse the light through refraction, so the light is not concentrated. It only costs $2-3 to make a solar bottle bulb that is bringing light to dark homes.
This simple innovation is not perfect- the water needs to be replaced every five years and obviously without any provision for energy storage, the bulb will not work at night. But the advantages are overwhelming for communities that are deprived of daylight. It is surprisingly effective, using cheap and locally available materials that allows the poor in these settlements to use their homes more effectively. The bulb does not produce any harmful pollutants and also reduces the dangers from faulty and temporary electrical connections that cause devastating fires.
Per the Philippine Daily Inquirer, the idea is actively being promoted by MyShelter Foundation Inc. in the Philippines under its Isan Litrong Liwanag Project which means A Liter of Light and it was launched in San Pedro, Laguna province early this year. Isang Litrong Liwanag is a Philippines-based organization aiming to build indoor lighting in one million homes throughout the country by 2012. The Manila City government shouldered the expenses for making the bulbs while MyShelter Foundation trained residents on how to make them.
Associations like the Appropriate Technology Collaborative create new sustainable technologies that promote economic growth and improve the quality of life for low-income people worldwide. This project and its success is a great example of the ‘market-based’ solutions that should be pursued for socio-economic problems worldwide, strategies that are smart, effective & resourceful.
Jim Meaney, Next World TV; Colliers, Canada
2008, 3 min 49 sec
Inventor Jim Meaney converts pop cans into powerful solar heating panels. He reuses aluminum cans as core heating elements in solar panels. The unit is virtually maintenance free: you need no fuel and no insurance for parts. It’s a lifetime supply of free heat that pays for itself in 3 to 5 years using recycled soda cans.
University of Engineering and Technology Lahore; Lahore, Pakistan
2011, 1 min 50 sec
Inventor Jim Meaney converts pop cans into powerful solar heating panels. He reuses aluminum cans as core heating elements in solar panels. The unit is virtually maintenance free: you need no fuel and no insurance for parts. It’s a lifetime supply of free heat that pays for itself in 3 to 5 years using recycled soda cans.
William Kamkwamba, Tom Rielly; Mastala, Malawi
2008, 3 min 34 sec
This is the story of William Kamkwamba, who started building windmills as a 14-year-old, based on a photograph in a textbook he found in his local library. Kamkwamba constructed energy-producing windmills in his home town out of scraps and old bicycle parts.
Kyushu University, Next World TV; Fukuoka, Japan
2011, 4 min 22 sec
A new wind turbine design is being developed at the Kyushu University in Japan. They look more like giant round fans with a diffuser that accelerates wind flow as it enters the turbine. They call them Windlands Turbines and generate 2 to 3 times the power of conventional turbines. Inventor Yuji Ohya believes that these turbines, when implemented on a large scale, can replace nuclear power.