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Want to see some more impressive glass stairs than those at the Apple Stores? Despite the fact that Apple actually has a patent on the glass stairs at some of its stores, their glass staircases are actually not all that innovative. The glass stair at the Carre D art in Nimes is more adventurous and was designed 20 years ago, and Ove Arup have engineered a purely glass stair with no steel fixings.

Transparent Glass Stairs

Atomic clocks are accurate to within one second since the period in time when humans and apes diverged. These clocks are literally what makes modern civilization tick, but few people ever see one. Their accuracy is necessary to overcome potential errors caused by relativistic effects in GPS satellites, for example. Here is a gallery of some of the more interesting atomic clocks. Vote for your faves.

12 amazing atomic clocks

Magic Lanterns are essentially pre-electric slide projectors. They hold a unique position in the history of gadgets, being popular at the end of the nineteenth century when cheap mass produced decoration became available. They represent one of the last machines to be designed like furniture rather than gadgets.The dirty little secret of design is that good taste equals expensive - when everybody could afford decoration, minimalist design with expensive materials became a way to display wealth (the early modernist, Barcelona pavilion had stainless steel columns, onyx walls and travertine floors) contrary to legend, modernism was originally product for the elite, not the masses.Magic Lanterns are pre-modernist, richly decorated items that are very different from the design of todays gadgets, which look like their design is dictated by function, but in reality (like an expensive Porsche designed to travel at speeds which it is illegal to do so) is dictated by a fetishized culture of the machine.

12 Magic Lanterns

Both the second world war and cold war produced particular styles and uses of bomb shelters that were unusual, from Swiss suburban houses with mandatory blast shelters and several years of food to the use of London’s tube stations as shelters during the second world war. Here are a few examples of vintage shelters, each with a hint of retro irony or bygone strangeness.

9 retro bomb shelters

With the notable exception of Apple, America has largely ceased to be a design culture, yet from Art Deco to Mid-Century modern, the US once ruled the world. There is no better example of a quintessentially American product designer than Raymond Loewy, who combined the exuberance of consumer culture with the asceticism of modernism and applied this to elements from pencil sharpeners to locomotives.Like Apples lead designer, Loewy was not from America. He was born in France and travelled to New York after WWI, wearing only his officers uniform and carrying $40. Here are a dozen of our favorite examples of Loewy designs.

12 Classic Raymond Loewy Designs

A selection of our favorite camera rigs, modifications and improvisations from eccentric Czech artist Miroslav Tichs trash camera to a camera which is setup to deliberately create the red-eye effect.

10 neat camera hacks

Just how much of the human body can you replace or augment: seemingly everything apart from the tadpole like remnants of the brain and spinal chord.Bionic eyes, ears, hearts, lungs, kidneys, livers, hands, feets, legs, arms and skin are now real science rather than concept designs. For this list, we have gathered together as many real devices including commercially available products rather than concept designs or imagery that appeal based on gimmick value. The one exception is the tooth and ear cellphone implant which is feasible today.An interesting idea is how the notion of a cyborg might change (often imagined as fusion of mechanical and electronic technology with human biology), since many of these devices use technology that is itself principally biological, such as stem cell lines in the bioreactor liver or artificial skin.

16 Genuine Cyborg Technologies

Although the term galvanometer is often used to refer to things other than devices which measure electrical current (such as charge or resistance), there are an amazing array of early designs for this instrument, considering their simplicity.Many of these design differences are to do with the cases that surround what is basically a twisting wire, however there is something definitively analog in their mechanism and 19th century amateur scientist in their variety. Early galvanometers represent the extreme opposite of todays high energy physics, which requires giant multi billion dollar apparatuses and extreme digital processing for measurement. A long way off a compass and a battery.

different types of galvanometer

Burning man, which currently rages in the Nevada desert, is Mecca for art cars. America is the capital of modified cars, since rules about what you can do to your car and it still be street legal are less stringent than most other developed nations. Custom vehicles are a cultural expression of individuality.There are many categories of art cars, but our favorites are where a mundane, ordinary vehicle is completely covered in a single material or item. Here are some of our faves.

12 object covered cars

Nothing makes architecture quite as gadget like as if it folds up into a kit or a box. Here are 12 examples of rooms in a box by various designers. Many of these are actually purchasable, which is sometimes rare for conceptual architecture. Click through the links for their sources.

12 rooms in a box

Some of the most original or most innovative lighting ideas.

13 innovative lights

From the $75,000 Opus to robotic automated one player systems, hybrid reality and second life tables, extra long team play tables and the futuristic new table by GRO design. These are not your average foosball tables.

top 10 oddball foosball tables

Lighthouses are extreme and iconic buildings. Remote, intrinsically conspicuous and built to withstand extreme environments. For this list I've picked some interesting lighthouses themselves, such as the transparent latticework hyperboloid structure by Russian engineer Vladimir Shukhov or the haunting abandoned soviet nuclear powered polar lighthouses. In addition I've chosen some interesting elements from the giant fresnel lenses lamps to the traveling libraries that the predecessor to the US coastguard used to pass around to lighthouse keepers to keep their sanity.

the extreme architecture of lighthouses

The most impressive neon districts in the world include Tokyo's Ginza and Shibuya, Osaka's Dotonburi which was the inspiration for Blade Runner, the worlds largest shopping street, Nanjing Road in Shanghai and, of course, Vegas and Times Square. Bangkok's Soi Cowboy district (named after an American who opened one of the first go go bars in the 70s) deserves inclusion on account of its unpleasant strangeness, with live elephants paraded up and down the pink neon streets.Most dramatic of all, however is Hong Kong where the entire skyscraper cluster is animated for 15 minutes as part of the worlds largest light show.Vegas and Times square deserve double mentions as they are more famous for iconic signage which has since been demolished or taken down. We have included footage of both past and present.Although the classic welcome to Vegas sign by Betty Willis has been preserved, many of the famous signs lie in the Vegas neon boneyard and we have included a movie made by urban spelunkers who broke into the yard to explore it.

The 10 most important examples of neon signage

Aside from a couple of custom versions that we couldn't resist, the emphasis here is not on novelty but on design, since, as we believe these picks show, sidecars are a genuinely viable and interesting mode of transport.

15 splendid sidecars

As people blow each other to pieces, daily, on the planet below, the silently floating Hubble telescope seems to represent everything great about humankind. Here are our other favorite telescopes.Update: Have been in continuous operation since 1963, the Arecibo project is in danger of closing due to cuts in funding. Jonathan, who is a researcher working at the Arecibo dish has posted a link in the comments to its website where you can donate or voice your support. http://www.arecibo-observatory.org

16 most wonderful telescopes

Our favorites here are the food based instruments of The First Viennese Vegetable Orchestra and the spectacular Atlantic City Convention Hall Organ which is practically the 8th wonder of the world.

15 strange musical instruments

The first in a two part list. Here are a series of strange and unusual bus stops, including those with domestic or air conditioned interiors, odd structures and a variety of innovative integral advertising.

bus stops as art

Almost everything there is to know about modernism is contained in a single room slice of a curtain wall tower dropped into the Illinois countryside. The Farnsworth house was a project designed and built by Mies van der Rohe 60 years ago, undeserving of its patron's name, who wrongfully sued and which still seems to win prizes and be declared as innovative when architects consciously or unconsciously copy it today. Here are a dozen examples to demonstrate it.

12 buildings inspired by the Farnsworth house

The Saturn V rocket was something the size of a skyscraper could survive being thrown into orbit, undamaged. 40 years after the Saturn V powered trip to the moon, nothing as powerful exists today.Years ago Airfix made a model of a Saturn V which I lusted after as a kid and Revell have now re-released their original 1:96 version and a 1:144 one which is the same size as the old Airfix. We tracked down the best Saturn V models that you can buy or have been built, culminating in auto repair man, Steve Eves' completely insane home built 40 foot high, 1600 pound monster which he actually launched, in April.

Top 10 Moon Rocket Models

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Category: 'new'

[CES 2009] Intel (And Others) Officially Unveil The Convertible Classmate PC Tablet

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
By Andrew Liszewski While I don’t think putting a computer in the hands of every child on the planet will solve all of Earth’s problems, I do believe in the idea that educating the young’ns won’t hurt us in the long run.

Look out, here comes Wireless USB

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
CES is playing host to a number of devices that utilize Wireless USB.  It’s likely you’re already familiar with USB and know what wireless means, so you’ve probably already guessed what Wireless USB holds in store for you.

Hands-On With Samsung’s 64GB HD Cam

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
LAS VEGAS -- Samsung's booth at CES 2009 is huge. So huge that, when I turned up early to take a look at the new cameras, I still ended up 10 minutes late for my appointment. But there are some advantages to being a company that makes, well, everything.

The Pogoplug; seemingly the easiest way to access your home content anywhere

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Section: Computers, Networking Last night at the ShowStoppers event, the Gadgetell crew was frantically running around looking for something unique to highlight, and it seems that something instead found us, which came courtesy of an very enthusiastic booth representative.  The product is...

CES 2009: Camera Disguised at Photo Badges, Pens

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Chinese company Apexto makes small video cameras that they stick in odd places. The company had a number of weird/cool little cameras on display today at the CES International Hall.

Cell Mate - Hands-Free Cellphone Holder

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
A simple and good idea, wear your phone while driving! Haha... The Cell Mate($TBA) is a hands free cellphone holder. Simply attach your phone to the Cell-Mate, slide it over your head, and you're ready to go!

CES 2009: Wiimote Maracas and Soprano Sax

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
I think Chinese companies may have officially jumped the shark, regarding Wiimote adapters. Swords, OK. Tennis Rackets, sure. Hey, I can even get behind Wiimote crossbows. But a company called Top-Union, based inf Shenzhen, has gone a bit too far.

2TB on a SD card in 5 years, see what’s available now

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Section: Peripherals, Storage, Trade Shows, CESClick for a larger image. The announcement of SDXC cards intrigued a lot of us here at Gadgetell.  The idea that you could have a card with up to 2TB of storage sounded great.  We could throw everything we had one card and bring all of our...

CES: The Audacity of Woot

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
The Woot boys challenged us to find the most flagrant display of waste at CES. Clearly, this monstrous booth run by Woot themselves typifies the worst sort of disregard for the dire economic climate in which we live. I mean *two* flashing lights? A slap in the face of decorum!

In the battle to fill your ears with music, enter customizable iFrogz EarPollution headphones

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Section: Audio, HeadphonesClick for a larger image. It seems that almost everyone is moving into headphones this year.

Skullycandy shows off 2XL, a sexy new line of headsets

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Section: Audio, Headphones, Trade Shows, CESClick for a larger image. The company behind stylish lifestyle headphones, Skullycandy, is branching off a new division of youth-centric consumer headphones called 2XL.  2XL maintains the company’s trendy look with a slew of new products...

Robotic Albert Einstein makes its appearance at CES

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Section: Gadgets / Other, Robots/AI, Trade Shows, CESClick for a larger image. Maker of handheld games and electroincs, Excalibur Electronics, is showing off their talking Albert Einstein head.  The head shoots out facts and information, and is very entertaining to watch.  I’m not...

Pure Acoustic shows off wireless sub and colorful speakers

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Section: Audio, Home Audio, Trade Shows, CESClick for a larger image. Pure Acoustic was on the show floor this year showing off their wireless sub as well as some colorful speakers.

[CES 2009] Hands-On With The Polaroid PoGo Instant Digital Camera

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
By Andrew Liszewski The classic Polaroid might be dead, but the company still feels there’s a demand for a quick and easy way to spit out a hard copy of a photo, even if taken on a digital camera. And that’s basically what the Polaroid Pogo is, and does.

[CES 2009] HP’s Useful iPrint Photo App Lets You Print From Your iPhone

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
By David Ponce We spent a good portion of Thursday morning listening to HP’s execs talk about their new products with an enthusiasm of near onanistic intensity. Sure, their lineup of laptops, printers and desktops is slick and all, but we here are OhGizmo!

[CES 2009] Hands-On With The Sony Webbie HD Cameras

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
By Andrew Liszewski Besides jumping on the netbook bandwagon, at their press conference on Wednesday Sony announced that they’d be entering the cheap and easy-to-use hi-def web video camcorder market with their new ‘Webbie’ cameras.

Fujitsu Tokidoki Laptop Is All Eye Candy

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Fujitsu's Lifebook U820 has been billed by the company as the smallest and the lightest notebook out there. The Lifebook mini-notebook is available in a black and with Tokidoki art from Italian illustrator Simone Legno.

Palm Pre: An early review

January 9th, 2009 link to (permalink)

3 years ago
Our sister site, Pre Community, has a taken an in-depth, hands-on look at the Palm Pre and has posted an early review.  What are the first impressions after having a chance to play with Palm’s new toy?  We’ll tell you a little bit about it after the jump.

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