CES' weirdest gadgets
PETER SVENSSON
BLINK AND MISS IT: A Tobii Technology representative demonstrates what the Swedish company says is the world's first first eye-controlled laptop at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
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A motorised, seat-less unicycle, a video game you control with your eyes, and a mind-reading headset that serves as a game controller were among the more bizarre gadgets being shown off at this year's International Consumer Electronics Show.
Some 3100 exhibitors attended the show, and although there were plenty of mainstream technologies on display, the show attracted a fair share of off-beat gadgets. Here's a roundup of some of the weirdest devices:
SOLOWHEEL
Picture a unicycle without a frame or saddle, and you have the Solowheel. Not working for you? Ok, add this to the picture: footboards that fold out from the wheel. To ride it, you stand on the footboards and straddle the wheel. Lean forward, and the wheel engages a battery-powered electric motor that can send it -and hopefully its rider- zooming along at 10 miles per hour. The wheel has a gyroscope that helps keep the rider upright. In other words, it's like a Segway with only one wheel.
Because of the rechargeable battery, which has a 15- to 20-mile range, the Solowheel weighs 26 pounds. That's as much as a folding bike, but the Solowheel is more compact. It's sold by Inventist LLC for US$1800. Its creator is a serial inventor, Shane Chen, previously came up with the AquaSkipper, a human-powered hydrofoil.
Who's it for? Brave people with a good sense of balance, who want to utterly surprise everyone they meet.
FOAM FIGHTERS
Toy companies are eager to link their products with smartphone and tablet games, creating toys that are an amusing blend of virtual and real. Foam Fighters are made of two sheets of thin foam, painted and shaped like World War II fighter planes such as the famous Mitsubishi Zero. Toss them in the air, and they fly like paper airplanes. Better yet, you can attach them to a plastic arm with a suction cup that, in turn, sticks to the back of an iPhone, iPad or Android phone, right next to the camera. The airplane shows up on screen, and if you download a free app, the fighter plane will look like it's zooming around in war-torn skies, controlled by the movement of the phone or tablet. Foam Fighters go on sale in April. A pack of two, with a stand, will cost $10.
Who's it for: AppGear is aiming at kids, ages 8 to 12, but it could appeal to frustrated fighter pilots of all ages.
HAIER BRAIN WAVE
The Chinese appliance company brought this wireless mind-reading headset to the show, and demonstrated how it could be used to control a TV set. It holds one sensing pad to the wearer's forehead and another that clips onto an earlobe. The big limitation is that the mind-reading capability (actually just measurement of brain waves) is crude. The set can only be used to sense if the user wants something to go up or down. For any other direction, you need the remote. In a demonstration of a simple maze-like game, the wearer guided a figure up or down with his mind, and right and left with the remote. Haier said it's developing something that lets the wearer change channels by thinking about it.
Who's it for: No one outside of China, yet. Eventually, this could be a dream come true for the laziest of couch potatoes.
EYE ASTEROIDS
Continuing on the theme of controlling electronics without moving, Swedish company Tobii brought its eye-controlled arcade game to the show. To play, you stand in front of it and look at a screen, where asteroids hurtle toward your battle station. It shoots laser beams at the asteroids you look at, destroying them. So yes, looks can kill.
The game cabinet contains cameras that track your gaze. The arcade game is really just a technology demonstration. What Tobii really wants is to have these gaze-tracking cameras built into laptops and other computers, so we can dispense with the mouse. But it does sell the game for US$15,000.
Who's it for: Arcade owners who want the latest.
SIGNA POWERTREKK
This New York company showed off an alternative to batteries: a fuel cell the size of a big sandwich, powered by small, light "pucks" of a silicon-based material that produces hydrogen when water is added. The fuel cell is expensive, at US$200, but the pucks are cheap, at US$12 for three. Each puck will produce the equivalent of six AA batteries of electricity. That means it can charge an iPhone twice, through the included cables.
Who's it for: Campers, hermits and others who need to go a long time without electricity.
- AP
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Dan M #1- Indeed he did, aha. Still better than flying regular airlines!
Not sure if the inventers of these gadgets have thought of other applications, but the writer of this article definitely hasn't. Eye-controlled and mind-reading devices, when they are eventually developed to the point of being accessible tot he general public and are actually functional can completely change the life of some disabled people. Those who have no functionality in there body and rely on a carer being able to interpret eye signals, and body language will be able to have a degree of independence that they may never have experienced before. Imagine a person who's body no longer works, and is unable to use verbal communication being able send and receive emails, send texts via a PC and even have a program that could verbalise text in real time, written using only eye movements!
Didn't Mr Garrison already invent the solowheel? I don't think his version was as comfortable though.
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At what age is it OK for children to have a smartphone?
From the Powertrekk web site, each Puck has 4Wh of energy. That's less than just 2 AA Eneloop rechargeables. It's not 6 AAs by any means.
As for those control devices, I'm with you Dave. They'll be life changing.