physorg.com — All those paper transistors and paper displays that scientists have been designing can now be powered by an onboard power source, thanks to the development of a new paper supercapacitor. Designed by researchers at Stanford University, the paper supercapacitor is made by simply printing ...
May 23, 2010 View in Crawl 4
joe8packMay 24, 2010
I know how frustrating it can be to have your life's work demeaned in public. The infantile masses fail to understand the simple beauty of a unique invention. I have been laughed at for years for my relentless pursuit of the "water glass" a simple drinking device made entirely of water. It works great in Antartica but I have been unable to demonstrate it at room temperatures. Still I struggle onward despite a lack of funding from public or private sources and an ongoing attempt to block my work by the Corning Glass Works and other embedded corporations who realize my invention will make their companies worthless. I would be willing to work with the paper electronics people to develop an electronic paper water glass, as long as it contains room temperature ice, as I see room temperature ice as the future. It is recyclable, cheap and abundant. Why won't anyone help me discover the secret of room temperature ice?
suricouMay 24, 2010
When you walk down the isle, the characters on the boxes would start begging you to buy them.While hidden sensors track your eyes to determine which ones best get your attention, and relay back to the marketers.
joe8packMay 24, 2010
I think the future path of my research will rely on convincing people to consider -5 degrees C as "room temperature" - I am currently trying to get funding from the World Sweater Council and the Down for the Future group of the council of American Duck Farmers. Warm temperature just leads to human copulation and dancing which are frequently difficult to tell apart.
hereticoftruthMay 25, 2010
Nanotubes are hardly cheap yet and Cap'n Krunch would price themselves out of the market if they chose to use this technology to advertise on their cereal boxes. Besides, nanotubes are an environmental hazard like Asbestos. But fortunately they can be burnt into CO2, a biologically safe gas. But the Fluorine probably would be more dangerous than licking a teflon pan if ingested or burnt in a simple trash pile.
uprtMay 25, 2010
papgina???