Showing posts with label latest tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label latest tech. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Watch The Real-Life TacoCopter Drop Some Delicious Mexican Food From 20 Feet



When the inevitable happens and robots take over the world, let's all hope that TacoCopter meat and bone Skycatch bring delicious Mexican treats over the fence to the last remnants of humanity. Anthony TacoCopter have entered during the panel "These are not the droids you're looking for," where he discussed the future of autonomous robotics and sensing technology is changing our lives.

 


The robot is a basic quad-copter with a small box at the bottom that opens automatically. This unmanned plane was piloted by an employee Skycatch but the Christian founder Sanz has prototypes that can follow a laser around the room and even run completely autonomously.

I, for one, welcome our robotic taco-delivery gentlemen.


Hands On with the automatic Sous Vide Anova




The vacuum cooking is probably one of the most high-tech methods of food preparation that home cooks can perform without a degree in chemistry and / or kill themselves and those around them. That's why I was particularly excited to try the Anova, a circulation pump to automatic vacuum that can turn a piece of cold chicken in a succulent taste sensation in about an hour.

Sous vide is a form of poaching in which meat and vegetables are in bags and then cooked slowly at low temperatures in vacuum sealed recirculated water. The Anova, for example, allows you to seal a chicken breast in a bag and fully without losing any of the juice or burning flesh. Then you can brown the meat surface by hand after cooking, creating some of the best darn chicken you've ever tasted.

The Anova is surprisingly simple. To use it you need a large pot with water and an outlet. You should seal the meat in a plastic bag - zipper bags probably will not work, unfortunately, so a thermal vacuum sealer is also needed. Next, adjust the temperature and time. For example, I cooked the chicken on the right at 60 degrees Celsius for 45 minutes. Then I Salé and seared on a hot skillet.

The system has a temperature range of 25 ° C to 99 ° C and a pump of 12 liters per minute circulates water during cooking. Ideally preheat the system before turning on the food because the food lying comfortably in warm water, not a great idea.

The founder and creator, Jeff Wu, claimed to have made the first vacuum system of affordable housing in the market. Although there are some open source projects and DIY out there, this is one of the most "Apple-esque" fire and forget the models we have seen. Wu has a background in biochemistry, computer science, and finance. He builds hardware for pharmaceutical and chemical companies.

"Most, if not all of the products that I helped develop are directly related to the investigation of new drugs, medical research or the development of new innovative materials," he said. "I'll meet a lot of smart people in my line of work - mostly doctoral researchers, graduate students, and Nobel prizes occasionally. - Which is indeed as I found vacuum"

"I was in Boston visiting a research group at MIT / Harvard / BC (I forget which) about 4 years ago and saw some graduate students sous Viding some chicken in a circulator laboratory and finishing off on a hot plate. This interests me enough to try it in the lab that was a big mistake that almost killed the project, "he said. "I basically had no idea what I was doing because it was really no clear guide to sous vide in 2009 and above all this, my luggage was sucked into the turbines of scientific circulators."

So it's amazing? Yes. I'm a little hooked. The fact that this thing is only $ 199 (which will also have to invest in a vacuum sealer $ 70 and a big pot) makes it very compelling and it made an excellent meal in just a few hours. I've always wondered how the most elegant restaurants make most of their succulent meat and not soggy vegetables and now I know. Because it requires very little preparation you can essentially set it and forget it. You can also leave food at a low temperature for 72 hours, creating some amazing slow-cooked it's not as careless as a pot of baked beans, but it's so tasty as one meal.

Again, $ 199 is a great investment for a pretty cool tool for cooking. However, if you are a fan and want to try sous vide, this is probably the best device out there. There are other online water furnaces, but those passing the $ 400 mark and higher. This is the first "independent" model - you do not need another computer to work, but not much - and it's surprisingly easy to use and elegant design.

Well sous vide is obviously a very intense culinary technique. Fortunately, food nerds like Wu are out there and do interesting things like Anova.


Like Us Network, a pacemaker, Mark Cuban, and a vending machine: A Journey Mobile Payments




What's this? An ordinary vending machine you say? If that was your guess, it would be a mistake, but it would be understandable why you might not notice anything special. That's because, on the outside, this looks like any other vending machine plain-Jane. No screens or touch in special areas or NFC chips or anything like that grace its exterior, however, this machine can accept mobile payments for PayPal or Google Wallet.

How? Well, it has a special device in it - designed and developed by Red Like Us Keyston Ray Hernandez and Clay - which connects to the existing hardware inside and communicates wirelessly to accept payment and add credit and PayPal Google Wallet. Platforms Other payments are being planned right now.

Using either an application for smartphones that developed or mobile website (in order to identify a vending machine ID and to close the transaction cycle) credit is added to the machine when authorized. Pow! Their drink is out like a slipped a crisp dollar bill (or conversely as you fought for more than 3 minutes trying to deploy a bill that could be mistaken for a Spitwad).


appanddevice 

Out of the transactional nature of the payment process, there is also a built-fi game. The application can also tabular loyalty points for sharing your purchase and trackable perform other activities. In one scenario, the team is investigating the product price variable depending on the influential status of the buyer. For example, someone with a high Klout score might get an item at a reduced price or even free if they agree to broadcast your purchase. They are even considering geo-fencing some vending units to broadcast your location to impulse purchases. Very clever.

There have been many concepts in recent years, especially international, who have tried and deploy the capabilities of alternative payment for vending machines, but many have required new hardware interfaces, changes or payment methods are agnostic and can add a considerable expenditure of capital deployment. That kind of spending is notorious for delayed roll growth and stifle innovation.

But the beauty of the network approach Like Us is that it is plug and play. You drop your little wireless node in the vending machine, connect it to the motherboard chip old school inside and mobile payments are enabled. No external alterations to the machine itself are required.

monetization

Obviously, it could be difficult to make items for sale, but the team is considering some options. They are investigating a convenience fee for consumers or possibly data rates to owners of vending their cloud node capacity.

What comes to mind as a viable option for monetizing would simply accept a reduction (and only) purchases where payment is facilitated by the system. I mean, that the purchase could not have happened otherwise so the court could be justified.

Overall, I think the concept is a great idea, but who cares what I think? What I really want to know is "what Mark Cuban thinks about it?" As it turns out, actually has an opinion about it and, in fact, is an investor. Mark has spent $ 75,000 so far on the device Like Us Network.

How Mark Cuban got to participate as an investor is an interesting story in itself. Mark and Ray Hernandez met during a freak accident at a gym where a man who had resolved an "event" of pacemakers and fell off a treadmill. Both Cuban and Hernandez and some other good friends, got the help of man, and then the conversation took place and the concept is on the radar of Mark. He advised Ray and Keyston and now we're here at the launch of the concept in TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2013.


As October approaches Launch, Build BotObjects Other Editions Video



BotObjects 3D printer is a printing company that promises "full color" in a system that uses a set of colored filaments for extracting colored plastic in layers. Like Makerbot, plastic ProDesk3D layered deposits and can print color bands around an object and not really specific points in a model.

That said, they have more video of the printer in action (I can not embed here, perhaps by design); the founders have offered a practice after a little back and forth.

After following this company in the last month or so, I've seen a number of 3D printers express skepticism in your product. I've seen a lot of vaporware in my day - I was one of the first guys to poo-poo the Phantom console at the time - and, at least, these guys are willing to work the crowd. The printer, as shown in these videos is not exactly full color printing - it is essentially only good in creating bands of color around a device - but could be programmed to add spot color in the right places.

Although I can not say I have seen this with my own eyes, my understanding of the technology we are seeing a working model will be ready to ship within a few weeks.

Is this a true color 3D printer? If you accept the clear limitations of the current incarnation then sure, it's entirely possible to create colorful plastic objects very well with this technology. If you are looking for something more detailed, however, you will need to use services like Shapeways to print real, full color sandstone. I am cautious but optimistic about BotObjects ProDesk3D, that is all I can be without seeing it in the flesh (or plastic).


3D-Printed Original Libertador Guns To become artworks in London Museum



The Liberator pistol made ​​headlines when its creator lit his 3D printer created, building guns that shoot really little more than the plastic components combined cost little more than your average Blu-ray. Now, the turning point in the history of DIY 3D printing is comfortably installed in a London museum, reports Engadget.

Liberator of Cody Wilson had his own faults from the beginning, which destroyed half of the case, but later proved he could give several shots. As John Biggs explained in an overview, which technically can be printed at home for anyone who wants one, but not all self-printed versions carried the story that make these original models Libertador.

As Biggs noted, homemade weapons are not new; It is a longstanding pastime, especially in the USA, with an illustrious history. But while once a lathe and other tools of iron metallurgy and some kind of dedication and sand is required, it is now more or less can be managed by casual fans able to spend some money on a 3D printer competition in downloading Internet files.

The project is developed by the London museum Victoria & Albert is designed to display a series of "projects of contemporary design", of which the printed-3D Libertador is a key example, and these are displayed between September 14 - 22 to the time, the Liberator has not led to a popular revolution or a wave of murders, but getting eyes-on the original could still be a story to tell the grandkids one day depending on how things go out.


CodeBender.CC crazy makes it easy to program your Arduino board from your browser



l official Arduino IDE is an austere piece of software designed for loading code for the ubiquitous and super-cool microcontroller. It is a standalone application, no network connection is not very pleasing to the eye. But what if you want to share programs and upload code directly from your browser? That is where comes into CodeBender.cc.

CodeBender is a browser-based IDE that supports up to almost any Arduino. You can use the program to copy the code sample scan code uploaded by other users and even store private fragments. Because collaboration is to clone code snippets and use in their own projects and there is even a curated list of cool fragments.

Founded by Vasilis Georgitzikis and Alexandros Baltas, the site left LAUNCHub a European seed fund. "It all began with my frustration as a computer engineer who is used to the development tools advanced, only to lose them when I moved to coding for Arduino, and my frustration as instructor Arduino in various hackerspaces around the world, when I spent 2 5 hours of each workshop 3 hours just to install the damn thing, "said Georgitzikis.

"We have also developed a technology that allows our users to program and control an Arduino-enabled network (ie Arduino Ethernet) via the network, directly through the browser using HTML5 technologies pure (ie WebSockets), which allows remote programming of the IO devices, "he said.

The system is responsible for the compilation and reporting of errors and ensures that the code you upload to your Arduino will not break your project. Unlike sites like Circuits.io, this system is not limited to simulate projects that allows full control of your Arduino hardware directly from the browser. Maybe this system will eventually allow me to dig my Arduino and really do something.



Researchers Create a Disney way of doing Geared figures that look surprisingly life-like

For centuries, the automatons oriented has been something of a dark art. To design a mechanical device to move like a human or animal was a trick in itself and to build rods and gears needed to drive the thing was even more complicated. A team of researchers from Disney, however, have created a system that will allow the puppeteers and fans oriented manufacturing clockwork robots using 3D printing and some metal bars. The most important thing is to look far cooler than this guy.

The designers set the system to "try" different gear configurations at different size ratios. This gave them a ready-made movements that could reproduce including parabolas, ellipses repeating odd and even moves that look random library. Type the researchers:
A designer can then enter an articulated character in the system software, select a set of action points on the character and outline a set of curves for the desired motion at every point. Then, the system is based on movement library to identify the mechanical assembly and its related configuration best suited to the desired movements. Simulation software optimizes the assembly to achieve the animation created by the designer.

Once the system is operating in the computer screen ensures that the gears do not collide or interfere with structural components. Then, the designer can create a 3D object and print on any 3D printer. Think of it as a sort of library / workshop directed that lets you remix robots movements and made ​​a very simple set of tools. Disney Research, Zurich, Disney Research, Boston, ETH Zurich and MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory worked together to bring the project to fruition. It also works well with "soft" objects, such as jellyfish, allowing real-looking animals move in lifelike ways.

New Structure occipital sensor turns your iPad into a mobile scanner 3D

People of Boulder / San Francisco-based occipital software people are very much - RedLaser application of the company was very successful in the early days of the App Store before the team sold it to eBay, which was 360 Panorama Panorama function before iOS 6 took some of the wind out of his sails.

Its roots may be in the software, but now the team is trying to do something very, very new. Occipital has just launched a Kickstarter campaign for their first hardware project: the structure, a portable 3D sensor that straps on the back of your iPad to be shipped by next February.

Update: Wow, the occipital team has flown beyond its funding goal of $ 100K in just over three hours.

"It took us out of our comfort zone," CEO Jeff Powers admitted. "We went from basically a team of three to about 13, which is still ridiculously small, and nobody sleeps anymore."

Those sleepless nights seem to have paid off. The structure itself is a ruggedly handsome piece of kit. Small and dressed in anodized aluminum, is not nothing like the goofy 3D sensors is likely to have been exposed to. That's a testament to the kind of tedious adjustments that went into making the structure of what is - is there a sensor full size PrimeSense Carmine, but went to the occipital cutting physical crust so the structure could fit in a pocket . Energy consumption also had to be cut dramatically since it was out of the battery iPad 4 (although technically it will connect to any iDevice in your arsenal that has a dock connector Ray).

The bit is really amazing how quickly the structure works in capturing all this data. Powers took the structure and some of the demo applications bundled by a short spin in our New York office, and within mere moment he was able to capture a virtual bust his ever-present marketing director and shooting off to Shapeways for printing. Scanning the topology of a side room was equally rapid, as in the process of launching a virtual
cat
in the mix of chasing balls that bounced 3D interpretations of the sofas and coffee tables.


structure-silver_blue


That breadth of these demo applications speaks to the type of ecosystem that Powers hopes will rise around the structure in the weeks and months ahead. After all, as clean as it is, the market for a gadget that allows users to capture and export 3D models for printing is still quite limited. Powers Vision 'is much broader: the SDK being released along with the sensor structure will allow developers to create consumer-oriented applications that take advantage of all that the 3D data.

"We're really just building a device, we're building a platform," Powers said. For what he sees, occipital is not possible to build every possible game or application augmented reality measurement alone. Instead, the team will make the data accessible low level for developers, and make high-level APIs available to developers who know nothing about computer vision in an attempt to make the structure is as accessible as possible.

You can imagine the type of applications that might come along with the adoption of the structure. Looking to buy a new sofa? Analyze your living room and see if that sucker fits with his shelf. The realtors could benefit from easy capture models, manipulatives at offices and homes (although some startups already have an advantage on that front). Thankfully, while the structure is designed to fit in the back of your iPad, ambitious developers can use the connection to the PC, Mac and Android devices thanks to a hacker call a standard cable that allows connection through USB.

At first glance, this seems a drastic change for a company that has only ever focused on the development of software, not to mention the dangers of production and the pitfalls that come with the hardware of the large-scale construction. That does not mean that the ambitions of occipital 3D have completely come out of nowhere though. Earlier this year, the company closed its acquisition of startup ManCTL Frenchman, who was best known for a desktop application called 3D scanning Skanect that let users turn cheapo 3D sensors like the Kinect or Asus Xtion to capture data and turn them into full 3D color models in minutes.

Structure, then, it seems the next logical step. It is a convergence of two seemingly divergent realms of experience, and is possibly happening at the right time. Smartphones and tablets are becoming more capable by the day, which leads people to expect more from their daily companions. And with 3D printers moving into the mainstream, there is a growing sense of awareness about the value of conversion of objects and environments in 3D representations.

Even the Kickstarter campaign is a sign of the times. Powers admits occipital really do not have to go the route crowdfunded - he says they have enough above its previous round of funding to cover these very early production series - but it could not hurt to help build excitement among developers and measure demand for expensive add-on tablet. If you are interested in throwing your hat in the ring boasts a package of early adopters for $ 329, but the package will cost you $ 349, if you wait too long.

Batthead of Vonkil is A, AA rechargeable battery remote control



I spent my formative years using up AA batteries at a frantic pace, and I can not count the number of times my parents said they wanted to zap my trusty Game Boy dead. While there is nothing they can do to save my childhood now, people have worked Vonkil Technologies something that should help a new generation of parents away toys kill at will.

Enter Batthead, the star of a new Kickstarter campaign you want to do your rechargeable AA batteries much, much smarter.

Here's the concept in a nutshell: they have essentially taken a rechargeable AA battery and crammed a Bluetooth 4.0 radio and an accelerometer in it. You will probably see where this is going - thanks to a companion app, users can enable and disable remote batteries in order to conserve more energy for when it is really necessary. Of course, parents can put on their hats trolls and off remotely toys for their children from a distance using their iOS devices (the Vonkil team says that Android support is in the works too).

The accelerometer adds a curious little awareness to the fold, and users can configure to activate the batteries only when they are moved or oriented in a certain position. I can already hear gossip about the questionable value it brings to the table, but the notion of a flashlight that turns on automatically when you pick it still seems terribly clean.

Now I can not blame you if all this sounds a bit familiar. A seemingly similar concept called the TetherCell was successfully kickstarted earlier this year (although supporters still expect the first shipments to exit). The big difference though is down to execution: while the TetherCell is also controllable remotely from an iOS device, the fact that the product itself is just a sleeve that wraps around a AAA battery means there is only as the team could physically squeeze into the thing. Since the cell contains a rechargeable Batthead addition to large number of sensors, we are ultimately left with a more capable power supply.

Of course, there are some caveats to consider. Do not go expecting these things to beat a whole Eneloops confidence, for example. The team has not released that yet capacity rechargeable cell (I reached out and will update the post if and when they do), but I can not imagine that longevity has not had a success considering the amount of space for all those other bits must assume. And then there's the price difference to consider, too - a single, run-principles Batthead without an accelerometer will cost you $ 19 CAD, while the fully dressed version will cost you $ 40 CAD. Not exactly the most cost-effective way to feed their countless remote controls, but it may be worth it just for some handyman and home fans out there online.


Apple IPhone 5c Building costs start at $ 173, 5s entry level $ 199, according to IHS Research Firm




Every time Apple has designed a new device, the search firm IHS check out parts and try to estimate the bill-of-materials for the new gadget. The resulting price is an approximation of what it costs Apple to build each
iPhone
, Which can provide an idea of what Apple makes from the sale of each device to consumers.

AllThingsD IHS provides an early look at the evaluation of new iPhone 5s this year and iPhone 5c, and finds that Apple probably spends a minimum of $ 191 on the iPhone 5s with 16 GB of onboard storage, plus $ 8 for the mounting at a total cost of $ 199 per device. At the upper end, a 64GB iPhone 5s probably cost around $ 208 for Apple, which is close to the estimate for the iPhone 5, which is said to cost a minimum of $ 205 last year IHS for more storage option low.

The iPhone 5 c is estimated to have a total cost of about $ 173 USD to start for the 16GB model, or $ 183 for the 32GB version $, including $ 7 for assembly. As is usually the case, Apple has managed to reduce costs compared to previous versions, while introducing new unique components such as the ($ 7) fingerprint sensor and radio frequency chips that IHS says are designed exclusively for Apple to be able to handle 13 LTE bands. Both 5s and 5c contain the same combination of radio frequency chips, clocking in at around $ 32 per unit, which is still cheaper than the estimated $ 34 to Radio 5 Band iPhone 5 LTE.

Apple never reveals its devices or supply costs, and there is no way of knowing exactly how close IHS has to set the right prices. Suffice it to say that it is fair to assume that they are on the right track, given its experience and long history. The key takeaway here is that Apple's ability to massage lower prices and margins supply unit until it seems in danger of slipping, and in fact, given this information, Cook and his experience could be more efficient effective than ever.



Load with fire! FlameStower turns your Campfire In A Phone USB Charger

Charge your gadgets with fire! FlameStower, a startup that came out of StartX Stanford Summer 2013 class, has launched a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign to get your charger alternative to the market.

The gadget lets you take advantage of a heat / gas stove / fire flames heat source to add some juice to a phone or other USB device loaded. It has a maximum output power of 3W and an average output of 2 W, its creators say it can produce between 2-4 minutes talk time per minute phone charge

The team behind FlameStower outdoorsy types are addressed first, but I also recognize your device may be a reliable backup option to keep in storage for use in power outages and storm safety scenarios.

Consistent with camping kit, the FlameStower folds to a fairly flat profile so you can throw in your backpack.


FlameStower 

And unlike the other option / outdoor back-up chargers solar energy, this little game can run at any time of day - provided you have access to FIRE!

How does FlameStower exactly? It creates and uses a temperature differential to generate electricity using the thermoelectric generator. The user sets the sheet metal to a flame to heat up while the other side is cooled by a small water tank filled with water. So really needs fire and water for this to work. Oh, and the air to feed the fire. It is elementary.

The hotter the fire, the charge is issued. Although, the energy generated will never match what is obtained from an outlet. FlameStower manufacturers compare their output to the load through a laptop USB port. What does slow and steady, giving you time to appreciate the great outdoor setting.

The East Palo Alto team behind the device is expected to raise $ 15,000 on Kickstarter to get the charger to market - and are about half way, with 28 days to run his campaign.

They are offering early FlameStower supporters for $ 70 ($ 10 on their expected sales price) and are aiming to ship in December.

 

This week in the Europa TC Podcast: Paris Gets a Supersized incubator Tesco Makes A Tablet and Valkee light strikes on the ear




After a brief pause, during which most of the writers based in Europe TechCrunch packed their laptops and took off from San Francisco (for Disrupt 2013), the TechCrunch Europe Podcast is back for a few nuggets to chew election news regional technology.

On the board this week, get your own incubator Paris oversized alias 1000startups - a massive factory startup is backed by CEO Xavier Niel free. Our own French resident, Romain Dillet, is available to comment, but is not entirely convinced of the merits of this model très Big ...

Besides taking the operating time of the air this week, the retail giant Amazon style movement Tesco own-brand tablet with Hudl - as a way to extend the reach of other digital services has been trying to sell to buyers, and the reasons for Tesco 'baked beans.

We also play the Finnish start-winter blues Valkee directed to the headphones, which takes the form of a pair of headphones light emission. Does it work? Who knows. We could feel the light shining deep in our ear canals during a long winter, scandinavian dark? Frankly, who would not.

Join host John Biggs, besides the TC Natasha Lomas, Steve O'Hear and Romain Dillet to discuss all these issues, along with one hand on the finer points of the European irony. Background sound effects courtesy of the counter demanding money in Montenegro.


Quantified Work: Meet Stir, Desk A former smart iPod Engineer, Health-Tracking and height-adjustable

If you're like me, you spend too much of their day sitting at his desk, hunched over his computer. During busy days - especially once the "zone" standing - it is easy for a couple of hours to fly without leaving a sedentary position. For this reason, I'm probably not the only one who could use a gentle reminder, just a little, "Hey Rip, who has been sitting for two hours, what's up, and lazy?"

Well, my friends, the Fitbit can remind you that you are behind in your footsteps, but what if you could remind her desk stand, or take a break? With Revolver, a person born in Los Angeles startup founded by former Apple employees, Disney and IDEO, now you can buy a smart desktop that will do just that.

Stir Kinetic Desk, the first product launch, which launches today, combines software health monitoring wearables as popular Fitbit and connected up with hardware and machine learning to create a work experience that really promotes movement - and, in so doing, his health.

Founder and CEO of JP Stir Labrosse was one of the first 35 employees to join Apple's iPod division, where he led development teams in two initial engineering projects to iPod. No surprise, then, that the Bureau of Kinetic borrows some designs and interfaces Apple family, including a touch screen function, which has a size of iPod very kind, shape and look to it. It is this touch interface that acts as the main table "control panel" that allows users to change the configuration and height of your desk, or to move from sitting to standing (and vice versa) just by double tapping.


Screen Shot 2013-09-26 at 10.37.20 AM 

Not only that, but the screen displays graphics and visual representations of a user's movement, so you can quickly see how long they have been sitting and what their work habits and use looks like. The desktop contains a thermal sensor presence and computer equipped with the software health monitoring, allowing you to track your movement and display the data through its touch screen.

While it may sound almost uncanny, not to worry, the table is not yet equipped with Siri's voice or any kind of personal assistant. While Labrosse was willing to admit that the tourist Stir Kinetic could incorporate some features 9000 HAL-like Watson or on the road, for now, the board intends to work with the Internet of things, not to try to command and master his office.

In fact, the board of control and adapts to your personal routine so that has meant to optimize the health and productivity. The desktop displays how many calories you've burned, time spent standing in front sit - and his answer to "who is the fairest of them all table?" Course.

Labrasse, echoing recent study by Harvard Business Review called sitting "smoking of our generation", which is probably a little over dramatic, but it is true that in our modern working environment overworked, connected to través-, we spent more time in the chairs on our feet. While his desk Kinetic not remind you to eat, shower, end coding and go outside or be a best friend, who will help you stay upright and conscious healthier routine that is right around the corner .

The desktop also contains a setting called "active mode", which can be activated by pressing a button on the front of the table, which will mode "Whisperbreath" - meaning that the table asks you to move after you've been sitting too long in one smooth motion, one inch up and down. Then you can tap twice to change position.

New Smart desktop Stir also comes with integrated ports AC and USB (eight four, respectively), connected to a single power cord plugs into the wall, and comes with Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, which hopes CEO eventually allow the desktop devices to integrate with third-party health and fitness. Think: Your desk may come your fitness and wellness own graphic. Imagine that. The team also eventually release a control panel web based that lets you see your data and health work on the fly.

Stir Kinetic Desk has a wooden surface, comes in white, espresso and four colors bottom surface, and will be sold at an expected $ 3,890. Not cheap, but hey, you can not put a price on good health, people, especially when it comes to your office furniture that keeps you healthy.