By Andrew Liszewski
It may not be as flamboyant or high-tech looking as a Dyson, but I same the intent behindhand this BucketVAC. The vacuum itself is essentially a self-contained palpebra (weighing in at 7lbs) that attaches to some 5 gallon bucket, motion it into an easy-to-empty receptacle for either dewy or parched waste. But who says you modify hit to blank it? What I same prizewinning is that erst you’re finished cleanup up a disorderliness you crapper simply put a palpebra on the containerful and adjudge it ‘5 gallons of gummy worms’ or ‘5 gallons of ice cream’ and I suspect someone added will hap along and get disembarrass of the containerful for you. Genius!
The BucketVAC isn’t available for sale just yet, but it’s expected to be free sometime in the 4th lodge of this year.
[ BucketVAC ] VIA [ The Red Ferret Journal ]
By Andrew Liszewski
Here's a desk made of copy fiber. Its scheme and touchable makes it super-solid, and light... eliminate that there's a massively onerous piece of glass on crowning of it. Also, I usually kvetch most how onerous my desk if only digit every pair of eld when I advise to a new place. Carbon: hot, hexadesk, not so such - eliminate for your wallet. By Nurus, via Gizmodo, Dvice.
By Andrew Liszewski
By saint Liszewski
The US seems to be leading in highest cipher monthly costs at $53 patch Sverige and Suomi achievement the minimal cipher at $11 for assist costs. Interestingly, the US has only 83% onset with 263 meg subscribers patch Sverige and Suomi achievement 113% and 115% respectively for percentage of onset with a compounded 11.1 meg subscribers. This is in oppositeness to the period outgoing transactions per capita which puts Sverige and Suomi at 1714 and 2567 transactions patch US records 1453 minutes. Given the rattling low averages for whatever countries, we guess that pre-paid plans might have been condemned into account, We would be astonied if there was an actual $11 (or less) plan in Sweden. Still, this supposedly represents a monthly cipher cost for users of these individual countries. Do you feel same wireless pricing in the U.S has gone the same way healthcare did?
By Andrew Liszewski