Frustrated by your iPod batteries dying while you're on the treadmill? Keep an eye out for a new knee brace designed to harvest energy from a walker's stride. From only one minute of movement, the device outlined in the journal Science can generate enough energy to power a cell phone for half an hour. A lightweight version of the brace could be available within 18 months and "promises to have significant medical, military, and consumer applications," says lead researcher Max Donelan. "It allows a soldier to get back home safely. It benefits stroke victims, amputees, and others who rely on power-assisted medical devices for mobility." And, of course, could assuage your iPod woes, if you shake a leg.
source: BBC News, The New York Times, The Telegraph, ScienceNOW
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Delay And Deny Posted 2:22 am
09 Feb 2008
I hate all the generator contraptions for bike wheels, but this would let me use rechargeable lights on my clothing and helmet.
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Matt Posted 11:02 pm
10 Feb 2008
The human body produces rather large amounts of energy through motion and capturing it to some good purpose is brilliant. Bravo!
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arty Posted 6:13 pm
11 Feb 2008
What about fart technology? It would be great if we could harvest the energy in farts to run heating systems etc.
Or how about keyboards. Everytime we click a key that generates energy, which is not harvested. Or on cars, why don't they harvest wind energy. There is a massive and reliable slip stream around cars at all speeds and it is not harvested.
Mad ideas aren't they. Apart from the farting one they are all pretty easy to implement. It's time to think outside of the box.
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sluggo013 Posted 3:46 am
13 Feb 2008
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