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Dreams can come true

Created at March 21, 2010
Created by Niko Lannetta
Deadline Not set
Shots given 2
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Jani SalomaaNever fouling food
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Eetu TauriainenDevices that exploit nanotechnology a...
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Description

Here you can share your wildest dreams - on the field of innovations.

No matter how absurd or impossible to develop your dream product is, we want to hear it - who knows, maybe some day someone might be able to make your dream come true. But for that to happen it has to be said out loud in the first place.

There are no limits on what usage your product is made for. It can be something silly or death serious, as long as it is something that will help you in your everyday life.


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Eetu Tauriainen March 22, 2010 18:12 Production Leader 1 Thumb-up
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Devices that exploit nanotechnology and quantum physics

I watched this document The Quantum Revolution. http://freedocumentaries.net/media/221/The_Quantum_Revolution/
There was some Japanese scientist showing how to achieve the anti gravity field, for example. This brings us to the flying cars, invisibility cloth and other science fiction stuff what is coming in next 20 years. nice!

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Niko Lannetta March 24, 2010 12:14 Flag

I'm very interested in nanotechnology applications to human body and other "cyborg"-things.

For example muscle enhancing applications, applications that make handicapped people capable ( for example to walk ) again and nano-microchips which could be laid in human body.

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Jani Salomaa March 21, 2010 20:01 1 Thumb-up
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Never fouling food

In the everyday thread someone brought up the problem of food fouling in the fridge.

As we all know, food is usually originally packaged in a virtual vacuum which is a bad environment for bacteria growth (even bacteria need to breathe, you know). Once the food gets in touch with air, the fouling process gets going.

Therefore i propose:
a) reusable hard plastic food containers (like tupperware) with a ventile through which you can suck the air out with some device,
b) a fridge in which you can create a vacuum to secure all food. It only needs an air pump! Of course you need to pump air back in to be able to open it, but that can be solved..

Someone tell me if my logic is sound! I'm not a biologist.

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