Airtime Jersey

Airtime Jersey

Who are the inventors of invention?

Joseph Carnevale, a student at State University of North Carolina, made a 10-foot, monster road orange and white safety barrels. The monster leaned smiling into traffic, his right arm extended with the thumb, as if hitchhiking. After de Carnevale was arrested and charged with misdemeanors 2, hundreds of people in Raleigh wrote to the city, saying they liked the sculpture and wanted charges dropped Carnevale. The company owns the 120 barrels not to press charges, wanting to use the publicity monster. Unfortunately, due to Carnival and was on parole, is faces 6 months in jail. By stealing the barrels of security, Carnevale stole the show.

Georgie Davis, a student of British fashion, designed a dress with mobile phone maker Sony Ericsson as part of a school project. The plan was to incorporate modern technology in today's fashion. The result was a dress that glows when the phone rings the user's mobile. In fact, it's translucent white scales that decorate the right shoulder of the dress that light up. Also move. The knee, sleeveless white dress is also designed to be connected to mobile phone users via Bluetooth wireless technology so that the user can hear sound too – make the dress of a fairly small number.

Bertrand Piccard and André Borschberg, unveiled the "Solar Impulse, a prototype solar plane they plan to travel around the world in 2012 after 2 years of test flights for the $ 98-million dollars project. With the wingspan of a Boeing 747 and a weight of less than a small car, the plane will be moved the day and night using approximately 12,000 cells solar rechargeable lithium batteries and 4 motors. Flying at about 44 mph, the flight will be done in 5 stages, airtime can take up to 5 days at each stage. Because solar panels are needed for the day of travel and charging batteries for night flights, the need for sunlight is a "flat" made.

John Joseph Houghtaling, who died in 2009, was also an inventor. In 1958 in the garage of his New Jersey, invented the coin-operated Magic Fingers machine, which was a feature in motel beds in the 1960s. For 25 cents to 15 minutes the guests have a relaxing vibrations. Although Magic Fingers made millions, Houghtaling continued to invent. In the mid 1970s he invented a machine that reads the magnetic strips of plastic cards. Also, has extended the coin-operated business to a scale that offers customers of its weight and lottery numbers. Houghtaling, however, was a self-made winner.

About the Author

Knight Pierce Hirst has written for television, newspapers and greeting cards. Now she writes a 400-word blog three times a week. KNIGHT WATCH, a second look at what makes life interesting, takes only seconds to read at http://knightwatch.typepad.com

EMR Paintball 2006


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