Showing posts with label brooklyn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brooklyn. Show all posts

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Charging Stations in NYC

          Low on your electronic device battery, whether it's your tablet, phone or mp3, and need that extra charging boost? Tired of constantly looking for a store in the city that may have a spare outlet to plug your charger and charge it? Well, thanks to AT&T, Goal Zero and Brooklyn-based design studio Pensa called Street Charge, there will be 25 new solar stations. In other words, it defines as a convenient and fresh way to charge your device within a few blocks from your location.
          Street Charge will be equipped with iPhone 4 and iPhone 5 chargers, as well as microUSB and USB cords for charging other devices. The solar power is derived from three 15-watt solar panels and is stored in lithium-ion batteries, both provided by Goal Zero, and thus, has the capacity to charge your device day and night. The devices are able to charge within a couple of hours, specifically in 4 hours.



For more details, click here.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Solar-Powered Vending Machines Rent out Bicycle Helmets

      
        A Brooklyn-based company, known as Express Biker, has created a self-serve vending machine which helps cyclists in nearby communities purchase bike parts anytime in the day. The aim for this machine is primarily to help cyclists, who may be riding late at night or far distances from bike shops, in conveniently purchasing any biking needs. Examples of such is as follows: tubes, lights, co2, patch kits, various tools and parts.
       Following such an example, a Bostonian company, Helmethub, has also created a vending machine but it contains only bicycle helmets. Their aim is to help keep cyclists safe and without an excuse for riding helmet-less. In July, however, they are launching another vending machine with a twist: powered by solar energy.


         Each solar-powered vending machine holds 36 helmets and features a touchscreen panel like those on Hubway rental kiosks. Rentals costs approximately $2 and riders also hold the option to purchase one. The machine can dispense three different helmet sizes to make sure if the helmet fits the user properly. 
            When a cyclist is finished with using the helmet, the helmet is picked up by the team and sent back to Helmethub headquarters to be inspected and sanitized before being placed back into the vending machine. The machines, in addition, provides real-time information to the team so that they know when each machine needs to be restocked or used helmets need to be picked up. 

Friday, April 5, 2013

As Summer comes, how useful is a Solar-Powered Bikini?

     When you're at the beach and you forgot to charge your MP3 or phone, what do you do? Do you wait in the car charging up your device while your friends are having fun in the sun? If so, this may come in handy: a solar-powered bikini!
      Invented by a Brooklyn-based designer, Andrew Schneider, this invention is able to power up your electronic devices but is able to be completely safe to wear in the water. Not only that but Schneider is actually accepting custom orders for the bikinis as well.

Schneider spends about 80 hours on each bikini, hand-stitching super-slim flexible photovoltaic film strips together using conductive thread

The swimsuit also comes with a USB connector that you can plug into your phone or mp3 to power up your device using the sun's rays