74 – Instant Elastic Waistband

So I’m at work, some years back, doing carpentry, and my belt breaks.  No big deal really.   It was a cheap belt, but now pants are loose and falling down, one of my pet peeves.   Doing my best McGyver, I take a micro bungee cord, around 6″ long and connect it between a couple of the belt loops on the back half of my pants.  Wow, it’s not too tight, and yet it keeps my pants up.

After a short while, I realize that not only does it work, it works better than that darn belt ever did.  Bend at all, and the elastic flexes, where the belt just squeezes you like a clamp.  Then I notice that since it’s on the back of my pants, I can easily unbutton the things without undoing any belt apparatus.  Another win for the bungee.

So what then is the issue?  Well, it’s just not socially acceptable to have a bungee cord attached to your pants.  It’s also not acceptable to have elastic wasted pants as an adult.  So to be both functional AND fashionable, this brings me to today’s solution.  A flat elastic band, with a flat plastic or metal hook at each end.  (Imagine, until I get around to being able to illustrate these posts, that a flat hook that was similar in size to your belt loop) The hooks would go around 2 of your belt loops in the rear of your pants / shorts, and being of similar shape and size as the loops, they wouldn’t stick out very much at all.  Additionally, you could make the whole assembly to match the pants in question, and then they would really blend in, being nearly impossible to see, and since we all wear our shirts out these days, no one will see it anyway.

Truly, instant elastic waistband.

58 – Coordinated Smartphone 3D Capture

Taking the concepts of the last 2 days, I will take a step back.  Take all existing smartphone technology and create simply an app that does 5 things. 

1. It uses wifi and/or bluetooth to set up an exacting timing sych between 2 or more “connected” phones. 
2. It uses the accelerometer of each device to get a near exact reference to where each phone’s camera is “looking.”
3. It coordinates the 2 or more phones to take a collective group picture.
4. As a combined session, each smartphone uploads the images to a centralized server, where sofware creates a realistic 3D image.
5. The centralized server then shares this 3D image with all participating phones.

(A techy note – how I envision step 2 happening is once all phones are synched up, the software would direct the participants to place all 2+ phones on top of each other, oriented the same way, with particular phones in a particular place in the “stack.”  This way, when phones were then picked up and moved into position for the “shot,” the accelerometers all be used to provide their various approximate location data.  This is suprisingly accurate in todays phones – and the central server’s software would be able to fine tune the image from this initial data sampling)

This is beyond a cool idea.  A pretty limitless bit of technology.

I’m in for $1000 to making this a reality.

57 – 3D Imaging with your phone

From yesterday’s post, I will just consider the possibilities of having 4 HD cameras at the 4 corners of the back of your smartphone.  The first thing I can think of with this configuration is the ability to capture and quantify small objects in 3D.  Simply hold the phone within a certain distance of a small object and sampling from all 4 cameras, the phone would easily be able to determine the 3D layout of whatever the object was.  Using existing technolog combined in this way, such a device could easily find accurate sizes and quantities of whatever it was capturing.

Imagine the combination of such a “scanning” function with a 3D printing device, and you could literally capture the 3D image of a trinket on the street in Korea, and in moments be printing out an exact replica for you back home in New York.   The fact that it can indeed be incorporated into smartphones makes it a wild technological advancement when you consider the potential database of everyone’s captures.

Oh geez, my brain has me on a roll of thought, as tomorrow’s idea should demonstrate.  Let’s take it a step further!

56 – A Truly See Through Phone

OK, there are some ideas born from a need of great importance, which yield some substantial human improvement.  There are others which are just cool, and need to be done, just to be done.  Today’s idea comes after I observed some of the “cutting edge” apps available for smartphones these days.  Apps that give a virtual 3D view at the phone, spawned the idea in my head that it would be very cool if the view of the phone included more than just the option for transluscent windows, and icons over a background image.  What I would like to see, at least as an option, would be a translucent view of those same windows and icons over what is actually behind the phone.  That’s right, you put your hand behind the phone, and you can clearly see your fingers, as well as whatever is behind the phone.  Then another option that immediately comes to mind is the “hands free” mode of view, where you would only see the background, and you would not see anything immediately behind the phone, like the users hand.

To accomplish this, you would need more than just a single camera.  You would need a grid of cameras, and some intelligent software to combine the images into one single image.  I realize that this would be considered wasteful.  There are, of course, other purposes that this “camera grid” could be used for, but staying on the point of today’s post, I will just acknowledge this feature wouldn’t be for everyone.  Just off the top of my head, I would suggest that 4 HD cameras would be at each of the 4 corners of the phone, and 10 or so lower quality cameras would be organized in a grid between them.  The 4 HD cameras would be the basis for the view, and the bulk of the background image would be derived from them.  The advantage of having 4 would be that if you were in the “hands free” mode and did not want to see your hands in the image you would be less likely to block the view with your hand.  The software would know from sampling all 4 of the images that there was a hand blocking one or more of the cameras and it would grab the view from the corner or corners you were not blocking.

Now, in the more realistic “hands included” mode, the display of your actual fingers would be included as part of that background image.  This would be done with coordination of the 4 HD cameras, with the grid of “lesser” cameras.  The software would first use the 4 HD cameras to create an acurate image of what was behind the phone.  Then, all cameras would be sampled to determine exactly what, if anything, was blocking that view.  If you slide a finger directly behind the phone, the cameras will focus on it and using comparative software, be able to create an exact image of what that finger looked like, if the phone and LCD were actually a piece of glass that you were able to look through.

An additional neat function of this grid and software combination, would be the ability to set your phone down nearly right flat directly onto a printed page of paper.   As you sat the phone onto the paper, the image would be gained.  If you were to slide the phone onto another image, the act of that sliding would allow for the camera grid to effectively sample the page, and gain an accurate image, even if certain parts of the page weren’t able to be sampled at any given period of time.   Tiny built in LEDs would be used to light the close up image enough for functional capture.  These LEDs would not need to be bright at all.   Indeed, you could set your phone onto a desk in complete darkness, and if your screen was on, you would see with perfect clarity, perhaps the business card, it was resting on.

Again, not a societal necessity, but a really cool visual on your phone.  For that, you need to see tomorrow’s post on what REALLY mind blowing stuff this technology would allow.

2 – Bypass hotel motion sensor thermostats – Sept 23 2012

Sounds good enough.  Empty room equals no need for AC or heat, which is true, but when you rely on motion sensors to achieve this it has one huge potential problem.  Guests don’t move much while they are sleeping.  This leads me to today’s idea.  A simple clip or stick on device that moves a small metal element side to side at programmable intervals. Place the device directly over the movement sensor and it would fool the sensor into thinking someone was moving around in the room. It would be silent, convenient, and easily could be added to any traveler’s bag.  A small battery would be all that was needed, and would last for many nights of consistent use, and keep the travelers room at the desired comfortable temperature.  It certainly would be worth it, if it keeps you from waking up in a nice warm sweat.  Ugh!

(Yes, there are other uses for such a device)