Japanese scientists craft planet’s smallest ramen bowl

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Now that just looks extra scrumptious, doesn’t it? What you’re peering at above is believed to be the world’s tiniest ramen bowl, created by a clever bunch of scientists from the University of Tokyo. Reportedly, Masayuki Nakao and his students “used a carbon-based material to produce a noodle bowl with a diameter 1 / 25,000 of an inch in a project aimed at developing nanotube-processing technology.” In other words, they carved a bowl out of nanotubes, which can now only be viewed through a microscope. Best of all, they didn’t stop with just the dinnerware, as they managed to insert a number of inedible noodles to round things off — each of which measured “one-12,500th of an inch in length with a thickness of one-1.25 millionth of an inch.” Don’t get any bright ideas here, McDonald’s, ditching SuperSize was bad enough.

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Japanese scientists craft planet’s smallest ramen bowl

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Now that just looks extra scrumptious, doesn’t it? What you’re peering at above is believed to be the world’s tiniest ramen bowl, created by a clever bunch of scientists from the University of Tokyo. Reportedly, Masayuki Nakao and his students “used a carbon-based material to produce a noodle bowl with a diameter 1 / 25,000 of an inch in a project aimed at developing nanotube-processing technology.” In other words, they carved a bowl out of nanotubes, which can now only be viewed through a microscope. Best of all, they didn’t stop with just the dinnerware, as they managed to insert a number of inedible noodles to round things off — each of which measured “one-12,500th of an inch in length with a thickness of one-1.25 millionth of an inch.” Don’t get any bright ideas here, McDonald’s, ditching SuperSize was bad enough.

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RIM’s BlackBerry 9500 “Thunder” captured on camera?

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A retailer taking pre-orders for phones that haven’t even been announced is considered business as usual, but there’s something just a little out of the ordinary with Horizon Wireless’ listing for the alleged touchscreen superphone outta Waterloo, the BlackBerry 9500 “Thunder” — it’s accompanied by a somewhat believable picture of the thing. Extreme blur always adds a healthy dose of credibility (we kid), but more importantly, the picture shows no telltale signs of being a render and looks essentially like what everyone’s expecting it to look like. BlackBerry addicts who’ve been desperately fighting the urge to go to the dark side, consider this your shot of willpower for the day.

[Thanks, Yasim M.]

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Rock Band Drum Kit accessibility mod helps everybody rock harder

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While we of course rock oh-so-very-hard on Rock Band’s drums, the pedal just never felt right under our weakling calves. The problem is naturally exacerbated for folks in wheelchairs, since there’s no way to avoid the kick drum or re-route it to another button — at least out of the box. Some folks at Kinetic Communications modded up a doorbell to work as the kick drum button and screwed it to a drum stick. Not the prettiest mod in the world, but it got their wheelchair-bound buddy drumming for about $20, and it shouldn’t be hard to replicate their instructions.

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Napa Valley winery flips on Flotovoltaic solar array

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Chalk another one up for Sharp. The company has landed yet another partner willing to utilize its solar panels in order to make news, wow onlookers and give Mother Earth a modicum of a break. Napa Valley winery Far Niente has flipped on its self-coined Floatovoltaic installation, which was developed by Thompson Technology Industries and installed by SPG Solar. Nearly 2,300 Sharp solar panels were secured for the job, and we’re told that the array generates 400 kWs at peak output, which “significantly offsets the winery’s annual power usage and provides a net-zero energy bill.” Don’t expect that coveted bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon to be any cheaper as a result, though.

[Via CNET]

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Napa Valley winery flips on Flotovoltaic solar array

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Chalk another one up for Sharp. The company has landed yet another partner willing to utilize its solar panels in order to make news, wow onlookers and give Mother Earth a modicum of a break. Napa Valley winery Far Niente has flipped on its self-coined Floatovoltaic installation, which was developed by Thompson Technology Industries and installed by SPG Solar. Nearly 2,300 Sharp solar panels were secured for the job, and we’re told that the array generates 400 kWs at peak output, which “significantly offsets the winery’s annual power usage and provides a net-zero energy bill.” Don’t expect that coveted bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon to be any cheaper as a result, though.

[Via CNET]

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FreeHand puts a pocket on your wrist, L on your forehead

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This day and age, there’s really no excuse to have too little room in your average pair of cargo shorts for all the gadgets needed in a day. Convergence and shrinking PCBs have left us with do-it-all handhelds that can fit in the rear pockets of size 2 jeans on a size 4 gal, so really, you have exactly zero reasons to actually buy that abomination pictured above. If you must know, the FreeHand is a wearable neoprene pocket that keeps your keys, flash drives, RSA token and chump change within easy reach, and if you’re lucky, you may be able to convince the boss it’s being worn to prevent carpal tunnel syndrome. Folks who haven’t listened to a word we just said can ignite a Jackson right now — or spend $19.95 on this, same difference.

[Via Coolest-Gadgets]

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ASUS M70 4GB RAM, 1TB HDD, 1GB video memory

ASUS launched a monster called stiffly M70. ASUS M70 was born for fulfilling the dreams of those who want a very powerfull notebook. The only negative part is its weight of 3,78Kg but if we take in account its dimensions (41×29.8×3.84 - 3.94 cm) we can say that it is normal.

ASUS M70 4GB RAM, 1TB HDD, 1GB video memory

ASUS launched a monster called stiffly M70. ASUS M70 was born for fulfilling the dreams of those who want a very powerfull notebook. The only negative part is its weight of 3,78Kg but if we take in account its dimensions (41×29.8×3.84 - 3.94 cm) we can say that it is normal.

Orange recharges Glastonbury

Ah, Glastonbury. The rain is hammering down, you’ve lost your friends and your phone’s out of battery.

Well the Orange reCharge could well save your weekend from being a lonely washout.

The seven metre tall tent is set to provide Glasto’s revellers with free juice courtesy of solar panels and a wind generator. The behemoth powerhouse can charge up to 100 phones an hour, and is a direct evolution of the Orange portable wind chargers debuted at last year’s mud-fest.

So next time you’re in a very dark place with no battery, just look for the massive orange pylon. Then when you stop hallucinating, search out the reCharge tent.

 

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