New Inventions Featured at the BIS
kjh1 writes "BBC News is running an article covering the British Invention Show (BIS) and some of the (quite useful) inventions that will be on display there this year."
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For example, "The Keyed Chain" was invented about 15 years ago here in the US. I know because I had one in my parents home when I grew up (they still have it). You reach your arm in the door with the key and unlock (and release) the chain.
I'm not trying to be cynical here, I'm just pointing it out.
Don't think that a small group of dedicated individuals can't change the world. It's the only thing that ever has.
It was designed for farms and businesses that have a big problem with mice. I'd rather catch them in a bucket and drive them out and put them in the woods then break limbs in a more traditional trap. For many of these farms and businesses, leaving the mice running free is not an option. This seems like a very humane trap.
http://www.busyweather.com/
Let's be honest, it's not exactly cruel compared to old style mousetraps that snap the little blighters backs now is it?
...I'm a bad bad person. ^_^
Hmmn... if you want to make it cruel AND make it fun... exchange the bucket for the feeding mechanism of a tennis ball launcher! Now that's cruel. AND fun!
*squeek* *squeek* nibble nibb.. slide scrabble pause... Thwump! Wheee!
Might not be fun for the mouse but install enough of them on your farm and the fields will be alive with the sight of airbourne rodents this summer!!!
If you can't think of something nice to say then don't say anything at all. No, REALLY.
I have discovered a truly remarkable invention which this comment is too small to contain.
liqbase
Absolutely Normal
Hey! Don't be giving those bankrupt US airlines any ideas on how to make their flights cheaper!
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
I'd rather catch them in a bucket and drive them out and put them in the woods THEN break limbs in a more traditional trap.
:-)
You sick S.O.B.
That certainly was an interesting typo!
People that believe in their opinions don't post AC.
One of his more entertaining ideas was "The Great Egg Race". Build a machine out of ordinary household junk. Any household junk you like. The only requirements are that it be able to carry a raw egg across a course without damaging or breaking the egg, and to do so in the least possible time. The only motive power allowed was a tiny elastic band.
The idea was simple, ingenious, and triggered several fairly successful (yet geeky) competitive tech shows and inspired The Power Game - a national contest between schools along similar lines.
(The first "Power Game" was a simple variation of the Egg Race, involving dropping coins along a race track at specific points. Missing the target was penalized heavily. The following year, competitors were asked to build near-frictionless mobile platforms that could carry a person over the longest possible distance around a complex course. Oh, and the platform had to be made of cardboard.)
To be honest, it matters little if the BIS, any geek television show, or any techie contest, ever shows anything much. What matters is whether they inspire people to come up with things that maybe are useful. Nobody could accuse the entrants of, say, the Great Egg Race or the Micromouse Championships of producing something fundamentally worthwhile. At the same time, I'm willing to bet that many more of those people who have built things that are useful have been inspired by demonstrations of how to do a great deal with very little, than those who are fed a diet of "nobody could do that, it's too complicated!" or "only big corporations can invent!"
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
The "expandable airport walkway" is found at smaller airports today. Santa Barbara, California, has several.
Tilting-ramp mousetraps have been around for years and are quite effective.
Retractable parking posts are widely used. Most are solid (there's now a big "security" market for the things) but there are lightweight ones that can be driven over.
Everything else listed has been found by someone else, so I won't rehash that.