Combining the servings of coffee, tea and hot cocoa in a single appliance, designer Carlos Marquez has presented a personal brewing station that allows users to customize the size of their beverage from 6oz, 8oz, 10oz or 12oz, so there is no waste of water. Entitled the “MiCoffee,” the coffee maker concept includes a pressure sensitive pad to know when a mug is under the spout, so the automatic setting does not go off without a container to catch it.
Royal Watch Phone is best meant for those who would like to keep their hands free and unengaged. Since mobile phone is something that won’t let that happen, we bring you a watch cum phone for total convenience and usability. The watch utilizes cutting edge technology to combine features of both the gadgets.
WowWee’s Roboscooper is a smart robot willing to lend a helping hand in keeping your home clean. The robot is powered by 6 AAA batteries and its six-wheel design helps it roll over most terrain. The robot can automatically scoop one-ounce objects from your home floor till the time its batteries last. Not just picking, Roboscooper would be more than willing to dump and recycle waste as well.
In recent years, we have not seen any gadget or device changing as rapidly as a cellphone, which has come a long way, from a custom wireless handset to a hi-tech touchscreen mobile phone, to confer the user with some of the most recent technologies to enhance their experience. While we haven’t even enjoyed the touch sensitive functions fully, Chinese designer Tao Ma has come up with a cellphone concept that runs on runs on a custom AA battery to prolong your chatter without any hindrance. Dubbed the “Rollphone,” the compact cellphone as depicted by its name is a rollable handset with a flexible display that rolls into smaller size to slip neatly into your pocket. Claimed to be the shortest cellphone ever, the Rollphone looks like a camera film that you may either put in your pocket or hang it on your wrist/belt like a key ring. Moreover, users can enlarge the screen, from 45mm to 75mm, to see a video clearly on a big screen.
This speaker concept called Brooch has no built-in soundboard. You have to bring that to the party. With its specially design suction cup, attach it to any smooth, flat surface. Different surfaces have different tones to them. The idea is to experiment. All music controls are projected onto that same surface for simulated touchscreen goodness. What do you guys think? Win?