Genius.box wants to put a different experiment on your doorstep every month

Geniusbox wants to put a different experiment on your doorstep every month

There are a lot of things you can have delivered to your home on a monthly basis: magazines, hot sauces, underwear and beer are just a few. The second place winner at the Husky Startup Challenge, genius.box, takes that basic concept but replaces the Fruit of the Looms with simple to perform science experiments. Aimed at children between the ages of eight and 12, the projects inside each package teach a basic lesson in science, technology, engineering or math through a hands-on experience. All of the materials needed for each experiment are included, along with a lesson plan, instructions and “factoid” cards with tidbits of interesting trivia, such as the number of elements on the periodic scale.

The two boxes trotted out for demo day by creators Kate Pipa and Shivangi Shah covered the science and technology portions of the STEM equation. One was a kitchen chemistry set for growing crystals and the other a simple electronics kit, based partially around parts of a Snap Circuits set, that has kids building an electromagnet and lighting up an LED. This isn’t exactly a return to hardcore chemistry sets of the past (you’ll find no radioactive materials or poisons in here), but it’s certainly a step in the right direction for an America whose love affair with science is on the rocks. Every four weeks a child would get a whole new educational playset for the target price of $20 a month. Which is quite a bit cheaper than your standard chemistry set or electronics kit. To be kept in the loop as genius.box works to get off the ground, sign up at the more coverage link.

Gallery: genius.box

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Engadget Giveaway: win one of two Amped Wireless router bundles!

Engadget Giveaway win one of two Amped Wireless router bundles!

Chances are avid readers of our site will recognize the Amped Wireless name, because the company pushes out products like routers and range extenders as if they’re candy. We’re always big fans of new stuff, and Amped is ready to throw some your way. We have two bundles of prizes to hand out, each one containing a R20000G dual-band WiFi router ($140 value), SR20000G Range Extender ($150 value) and Amped’s brand new REC10 Compact Range Extender ($80 value) announced just a week ago. The whole set will likely hook you up with WiFi coverage not only throughout your home but your backyard as well — heck, you may even be able to enjoy a signal at your neighbor’s place. It’s definitely worth heading below to submit your entry, and we wish you the best of luck!

Note: Please enter using the widget below, as comments are no longer valid methods of entry. The widget only requires your name and email address so we know how to get in touch with you if you win (your information is not given out to third parties), but you will have an option to receive an additional entry by following us on Twitter if you so desire.

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These crazy, gorgeous seats are an ‘allegorical interpretation’ of the BMWi line

These crazy, gorgeous seats are an 'allegorical interpretation' of the BMWi line

You may not look at the trio of concentric seats above and think “expensive electronic car,” but French designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec are nonetheless calling their “Quiet Motion” exhibit at this year’s Solone del Mobile an “allegorical interpretation” of just that. Beyond simply looking pretty, the exhibit is intended to represent BMW’s history of working with “designers spanning a wide range of industries” — BMW’s long-running Art Car project, for instance — as well as employ the sustainable materials used in the BMWi line. They’re calling the slowly rotating platforms a version of a carousel, and you’ll be able to get your gluteus maximus on the installation starting tomorrow through April 14th. Whether it inspires you to buy a BMWi vehicle … well, that’s another question; at very least, it’s a rather unique photo opp (if you’re in Milan, that is).

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Wave Glider sea robot gets a new version, replete with more power and gear

Wave Glider sea robot gets a new version, replete with more power and much more gear

The latest seafaring robot from Liquid Robotics got an unveiling this morning. Dubbed the Wave Glider SV3, the mobile, amphibious robot is targeted at the (thoroughly unexciting) usual suspects: big oil, the government, and scientific researchers. Apparently those halcyon days of seeking out Guinness World Records are over. Compared with the previous SV2 model, the latest ship runs faster (2.5 knots top speed), carries more (100 pounds, compared to a paltry 40 in the previous ship), and lasts longer (an additional 40 percent of surface area on the deck allows for many more solar cells). All that extra oomph should allow Liquid Robotics’ customers to spend even more time plumbing the Earth’s waters for … well, whatever they’d like. And for the mock G.I. Joe battles that are assuredly taking place with the Wave Glider. Like, come on.

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Via: The New York Times

Alt-week 4.7.13: Skylab II, reading your dreams and addiction fighting lasers

Alt-week peels back the covers on some of the more curious sci-tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 4713 Skylab II, reading your dreams and addiction fighting lasers

Evolution, devolution, review-lution. Okay, so we made that last one up. But if they ever do invent a machine that can re-view your dreams in full HD, we’re betting that’s what they’ll be calling it. The even better news is that that’s possibly not as crazy as it sounds as we learn this week. What week? Why, alt-week of course.

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The After Math: Facebook finds a new Home, robot hands get cheaper and the Bluths are back

Welcome to The After Math, where we attempt to summarize this week’s tech news through numbers, decimal places and percentages

The After Math Facebook finds a new Home, robot hands get cheaper and the Bluths are back

It’s finally Friday, and while the week kicked off with one too many April 1st efforts, the big news for TAM this week is a release date for the Netflix-exclusive fourth season of Arrested Development. Nothing else should matter, but if you think it does, Facebook finally showed off their new game plan for mobile and HTC appeared from the sidelines with a new phone to house it. According to some, Windows Phone has also started to claim a less embarrassing share of the smartphone market too. We crunch and spit out the numbers after the break.

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Oxford University researchers create new 3D printed ‘soft material’ that could replace human tissue

3D printed droplets

Water and fat — those are the two primary building blocks Oxford University researchers have used to 3D print the droplet you see above. Sounds unremarkable until you consider its intended application as a human tissue replacement. By stringing together thousands of these so-called droplets (which measure about 50 microns across) using a custom-built 3D printer, the Oxford team believes it has engineered a “new type of material” that could eventually be used to ferry drugs throughout our internal systems to a specific target site, fill-in for damaged tissues or even mimic neural pathways via specially printed protein pores. The potential applications for medical science are impressive enough, but consider this additional benefit: since the droplets contain no genetic material, scientists can completely sidestep all the ethical red tape surrounding the alternative stem cell approach to artificial tissue. At present, the team’s been able to string about 35,000 of the droplets together, but there’s no real cap as to how large or even what type of networks can be made. If the money and equipment are willing, this Oxford team can make scifi dreams come true.

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Via: National Geographic

Source: Oxford University

Watch this smart foam chair ‘grow’ and unpack itself

Watch this smart foam chair that 'grows like popcorn'

Sometimes we dream. We dream of a world with no more flat-pack furniture, no more obtuse construction manuals and no more missing screws. Smart foam tech might get us closer to those admittedly small-time dreams. Using cross links within the foam’s particle arrangement, regardless of how much the structure is compressed, it’ll spring back to the predesigned shape. Designer Carl de Smet adds that the product would expand at a set temperature getting a little doughy in the middle, then more solid at room temperature.

He also demonstrates another smart foam structure which changes when a current is fed through it. Electricity provides the heat that transforms the rolled-up structure into a flat one, with the current experimental version taking around five minutes to completely settle. Commercial products which are apparently only about a year to 18 months away and as de Smet details in the video, could land on store shelves in a compacted rolled-up form for “unpacking” back home. These early examples can even be adjusted, if for some reason you suddenly decide you wanted a coffee table, not a chair. Sit back and see how it literally unfolds after the break.

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Source: BBC News

Virginia Tech learns how to get hydrogen from any plant, might lower fuel cell costs

Virginia Tech can extract hydrogen from any plant, may lower fuel cell vehicle costs

Hydrogen fuel cell cars have any number of hurdles to overcome, whether it’s widespread adoption or the basic matter of locating a place to fill up. If a Virginia Tech discovery pans out, getting the fuel itself won’t be one of those challenges. The new combination of a polyphosphate with a special blend of enzymes lets researchers extract meaningful quantities of hydrogen from any biological element that includes xylose — in other words, the sugar that’s present in every plant to at least some degree. The process is potentially more eco-friendly than most, as well. While you’d expect it to be renewable given the main ingredients, it also reduces the need for metals and cuts back sharply on the volume of necessary greenhouse gases. Most importantly, the findings could reach the commercial world as soon as three years from now. If they do, they could lower the price of hydrogen fuel by making it more accessible, all the while avoiding much of the guilt trip that comes with using polluting technology to generate clean energy.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Virginia Tech, Wiley

Harvard lets human minds control rats, private rodent armies remain distant (video)

Harvard links human and rat minds, Pied Piper no longer required

Sure, we’ve seen rats control other rats, but that won’t give us a legion of mind-controlled creatures to unleash upon an innocent public, will it? Harvard Medical School may unwittingly assist with solving our (rather misguided) plight, as it just experimented with a system that lets a human mind trigger actions in a rat’s motor cortex. The test had sensor-equipped humans watch a screen that flashed in sync with their EEG brain patterns for visual stimulation; as soon their attention shifted to controlling the rat, they triggered an ultrasonic pulse that twitched the rodent’s tail. There’s a few problems with the implementation beyond the obvious lack of autonomy for the poor target creature, though. The rat’s anaesthetized state likely affected the results, and the system isn’t currently sophisticated enough to map specific thoughts to corresponding actions. The Harvard team is working to refine the technology, however, and there may be a day when we can satisfy our megalomania… or at least, put the Pied Piper on notice.

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Via: New Scientist

Source: PLOS (PDF)