At
any given moment there are approximately a zillion different
crowdfunding campaigns happening on the Web. Take a stroll through
Kickstarter or Indiegogo and you’ll find no shortage of weird, useless,
and downright stupid projects out there – alongside some real gems.
We’ve cut through the Pebble clones and janky iPhone cases to round up
the most unusual, ambitious, and exciting projects out there this week.
Keep in mind that any crowdfunded project — even the best intentioned —
can fail, so do your homework before cutting a check for the gadget of
your dreams.
Onagofly — Palm-sized camera drone
Consumer
UAVs are currently split into two separate camps. There’s the cheap,
palm-sized “nanodrones” that can’t do much, and then there’s the bigger,
fuller-featured camera drone set that costs you an arm and a leg.
Unfortunately, there isn’t much middle ground at this point, but
Onagofly aims to change that. Bridging the gap between those two
categories, Onagofly boasts all the requisite drone tech you’d expect
from a full-sized drone (camera, GPS, auto-stabilization, etc), but it’s
all packed inside a tiny, plam-sized package.
It
almost sounds too good to be true (and it could very well be that way),
but despite the Onagofly’s small size, it has specs and features
typically found in much bigger drones. For starters, it can be
controlled in real time from an iOS or Android smartphone via Wi-Fi, up
to a distance of 20 meters (66 ft). It can also lock onto the GPS signal
of its user’s smartphone, following along above them at a predetermined
height while they run, ski, cycle, or whatever. It even shoots
digitally stabilized video in 1080p.
Mokacam — Tiny 4K action camera
GoPro
might have the corner of the market when it comes to small, rugged
action cameras, but that doesn’t mean it’s the only horse in the race.
There are hundreds of newcomers aiming to steal a piece of the
action-cam pie — and Mokacam is one of the best ones we’ve seen to date.
It’s still in the crowdfunding stage at this point, but if its creators
can successfully see it through to mass production, Mokacam could very
well give GoPro a run for its money.
It’s
crazy how much stuff they managed to stuff inside this little gizmo.
Despite the small footprint, it’s got a full-on 4K camera inside with a
152-degree wide-angle lens on the business end. There’s also an
integrated microphone for recording audio, and a magnet for attaching
the camera to metal surfaces. For those who need a little more, there’s
also a snap-on magnetic LCD screen that can be attached for viewing
footage as it records. This same snap-on system also allows users to
snap on an extra battery for extended shooting.
Mojoe — Coffee-brewing travel mug
This
is one of those inventions that makes you shake your head and wonder
why nobody thought of it before. Finally, someone has invented a mobile
coffee brewer that doubles as a travel mug — so you can brew fresh
coffee and have it deposited directly into an insulated, travel-ready
mug. It appears to work fairly simply: Just add some coffee (your own or
their packets) and water to the thermos, make sure the battery is
adequately charged, and press a button to start brewing.
The
Mojoe uses what its creator’s call a “VacDrip” brewing process, which
combines elements of vacuum brewing and drip brewing. After you fill it
up with grounds, add some water, and hit the start button; the element
heats the water up to over 200 degrees. The steam created during this
process then pushes the water up through the siphon and over the
grounds, filling the coffee chamber with hot, freshly brewed joe. The
process reportedly takes about 10 minutes from start to finish.
Ekster — Trackable, GPS-enabled smart wallet
Losing
your wallet is one of the worst things that can ruin a good day, but
thankfully there’s a number of innovative startups that have developed
solutions to this horrible first-world problem. Take the Ekster wallet,
for example. On the outside, it looks like your average compact wallet.
It’s slim, its’ sleek, and it’s made out of high-quality leather — but
it’s more than just that. Underneath the stylish exterior, it has a
bunch of helpful tech built into it.
For
starters, it has a Bluetooth transceiver, so it can connect to your
smartphone and send you alerts whenever your wallet goes out of range.
This feature is designed to prevent you from leaving your wallet behind —
but that’s just the first line of defense. If your wallet is
legitimately stolen or missing, you can use the accompanying app to
track down the wallet’s location via GPS. When you get close, you can
even make it beep so that it’s easier to pinpoint.
Living Ink — Time-release bio-ink pen
Here’s
a weird one for ya. The story goes that Living Ink — described by its
creators as the world’s first “time lapse” ink — was actually discovered
by accident. It’s creators (a group of researchers from Colorado) were
attempting to create an ec0-friendly alternative to petroleum based
inks, and one of their first attempts turned out to be a weird ink that
starts out completely invisible, then turns green after a day or two.
The
key to the magic is really just simple science. Living Ink is composed
of a potent brew of water, eukaryotic microalgae, cyanobacteria (aka
blue-green algae) and chlorophyll — the stuff that makes your grass (and
most other plants) green. At first, the lines you can draw with it look
like they’re just water, but after you give the bacteria and algae some
time to grow, the lines will slowly take on a brilliant shade of green —
or blue, or pink. The
Living Ink team has actually designed a slew of different inks
that reappear at different rates. The pink-hued Fast Ink starts to grow
after one to two days, while the blue-colored Slow Ink begins showing
after three to four.
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