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Celebrities / Re: Rukky Sanda, Oge Okoye With Emmanuella (photos) by odinese(m): 3:08pm On Mar 01, 2016
Love the little girl thou
Family / Re: Two Die In Enugu Community Over Adulterous Woman by odinese(m): 2:44pm On Mar 01, 2016
[size=30pt]bloggers always posting crap! [/size]

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Crime / Re: : Ten Last Words From Murderers Before Facing Execution. by odinese(m): 12:32pm On Mar 01, 2016
7. Patrick Bryan Knight 04

Patrick Bryan Knight was convicted of a double murder in 1991 and was sentenced to death on June 26, 2007. In the months prior to his execution, he claimed that his last words were going to be a joke. He encouraged fellow inmates to vote on which one he should tell, but he wouldn’t tell the guards their choice. Knight claimed that this exercise was to raise the spirits of his fellow inmates. He even had a website called “Dead Man Laughing” where the public joined in a controversial contest, offering suggestions for the doomed man’s last words. It attracted more than 1,300 posts. The winner of this slightly twisted competition? No one, apparently. Instead of sharing any of the submitted wisecracks, he began crying and listed several names of inmates on death row who he claimed were innocent. “Not all of us are innocent, but those are,” he said. “I said I was going to tell a joke. Death has set me free. That’s the biggest joke. I deserve this.” Then he added: “And the other joke is that I am not Patrick Bryan Knight and y’all can’t stop this execution now. Go ahead, I’m finished.”’ (Fingerprints proved that he was indeed Patrick Bryan Knight.)

6. Mary Blandy

Mary Blandy was described posthumously as a “spinster/murderer”—Georgian society probably couldn’t decide which was worse. She was engaged to a minor Earl, Captain William Henry Cranstoun, but her father Francis had disapproved of the match due to small fact that the Earl was already married. So Mary’s suitor gave her a supposed love potion to slip to her father to change his mind. It’s unclear whether Mary was aware that the liquid contained deadly arsenic. The woman maintained her humor to the last. As she approached the gallows, wearing a loose, billowing skirt, she said, “For the sake of decency, gentlemen, do not hang me high.”

5. Gary Burris 05

In 1980, at the age of 24, Gary Burris shot and killed in cold blood an Indianapolis taxi driver. He sat in prison for that crime until the age of 40, during which time he confessed to a cellmate how he had held his victim’s face down on the freezing pavement, shooting him in the head as he begged for his life. He was executed by lethal injection on November 20, 1997. His last words were “Beam me up,” a Star Trek reference. He did indeed leave this world right after, but you’ll have to decide for yourself whether he was headed “up” or somewhere else.


4. Robert Alton Harris 06

American Robert Harris was convicted of the murder of two teenage boys. In 1992, at the age of 39, he became the first man in decades to be executed in California. His last words were, “You can be a king or a street sweeper, but everyone dances with the grim reaper.” It was a line of poetry, and you might see it as thought-provoking or inspiring, illuminating the original thoughts of a man facing death.Actually, it was a quote from Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey. Or, rather, a misquote. The original line (more consistent, and rhythmic) was: “You might be a king or a little street sweeper, but sooner or later, you dance with the reaper.”

3. John Jenkins 07

Photo credit: National Library of Australia
Some criminals remain self-congratulatory to the last. John Jenkins’s personal vendetta against his victim certainly served, for him, as justification enough for his actions. The Australian national was incarcerated alongside his accomplice Thomas Tattersdale for the shooting and killing of a doctor, Robert Wardell. Jenkins’s motivation was revenge for the countless beatings he claimed to have received in Wardell’s prison, where he and Tattersdale had previously served time for other crimes. He claimed that he did not shoot the doctor “for gain.” It was because “he was a tyrant.” Jenkins spoke to his fellow inmates en masse before his execution in Novermber 1834, entreating them to “shoot every tyrant you come across.” He muttered his last words in the direction of his friend Tattersdale: “Let every villain shake hands with himself.”

2. Barbara Elaine Wood Graham 08

Former prostitute Barbara was nicknamed “Bloody Babs” by the press after she beat Mabel Monahan to death. She and two accomplices, Jack Santo and Emmet Perkins, were attempting to rob the wealthy elderly lady’s house, but they failed to find anything of value and left empty-handed. They only later learned that a closet right next to where they’d murdered Monahan contained a purse with $15,000.Graham was executed in San Quentin gas chamber on June 3, 1955. Her execution was repeatedly pushed back from 10:00 PM until 11:30, to which she lamented, “Why do they torture me? I was ready to go at ten o’clock.” Her last words were a snarky, resonant “Good people are always so sure they’re right.”She was pronounced dead at 11:42. She wore a blindfold so that she didn’t have to look at the observers, and she held her breath in a last-minute attempt to stay alive.


1. Mario Benjamin Murphy 09

This Mexican hit man was part of a gang of six involved in the murder-for-hire of a US officer. Murphy was only 19 at the time of his arrest and had no previous criminal record.Murphy was the only foreign national in the gang, and critics blame racism for his conviction. Despite cooperating with police, he was the only member of the gang not offered a plea bargain and the only one sentenced to death. As a Mexican citizen, he had the right to contact his embassy for legal assistance, but at no point from his arrest till his execution was he informed of this option.His last words on September 17, 1997 reflect this self-perceived martyrdom and are probably the nicest and noblest on the entire list. “Today is a good day to die. I forgive all of you. I hope God does too.”

Lalasticlala
Mynd44
OmA4 4j
Crime / : Ten Last Words From Murderers Before Facing Execution. by odinese(m): 12:26pm On Mar 01, 2016
10. Clarence lackey

Clarence Lackey abducted, raped, and slit the throat of Toni Diane Kumpf in 1977. He spent 17 years on death row, and his appeals attracted media attention for his defense’s unusual claim that execution violated the Constitution’s provision against cruel and unusual punishment. The intended punishment, apparently, was “grossly out of proportion” to his isolated act.That argument was unsuccessful, and he was taken to the death chamber on May 20, 1997. He ate a last meal of steak, fries, and chocolate ice cream, and requested that two ministers be present. He thanked Jesus Christ just before he died. The victim’s father said, “That pleased me very much, it really did. At least he had religion.” His last words were, “I love you, Mom.”


9. John Bell 02

One of the more upsetting quotes on this list came from the mouth of a child sentenced to hang in 1831 as public entertainment, which was a tradition in Britain for hundreds of years. Such hangings were both a violent display of state power and a cheap family outing. Before the Children’s Act of 1908, it was still perfectly legal for a child to be tried in an adult court, where execution was possible. A penniless street urchin who murdered a 13-year-old boy for nine shillings, John Amy Bell became the last person under 16 to be executed in Britain. He was also the youngest, at the age of 14, to ever be executed at Maidstone Prison, where 5,000 people heard his last words. His short speech was chilling but laced with self-damnation and honest piety. “Lord have mercy on us. All people before me, take warning by me.”


8. Richard Zeitvogel 03

Zeitvogel spent 22 of his 40 years in various Missouri prisons for offenses ranging from armed robbery to rape. These crimes earned him his initial prison sentence at the tender age of 18, which was then extended to life when he murdered an inmate. His death sentence, however, came as a result of killing a second prison inmate while still serving time for the first murder. Zeitvogel confessed to this second murder, hoping to be placed on death row with his friend and suspected lover Frank J. Guinan. Guinan had acted as Zeitvogel’s accomplice in the first of his two murders. Zeitvogel got his wish, was indeed placed on death row, and was executed by lethal injection on December 11, 1996. His last words were surprising, given his somber and dark life up to that point. They were: “Keep the faith and rock on.”
Romance / Re: Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 9:26pm On Feb 29, 2016
24. Machine


Tesla
Tesla Model X / est. $130,000
Available 2016

Tesla’s Model X, unveiled in September, marks a leap toward a reality in which electric cars aren’t simply exotic, but just as useful as their competition. The world’s first luxury electric SUV can go 250 miles on a charge, Tesla says, and haul seven passengers. It features futuristic back doors that open like the wings of a bird (up, not out). And the Model X is a blast to drive: it can hit 60 m.p.h. from a standstill in 3.2 seconds, and its battery pack gives it a low center of gravity, enabling sports-car-like handling. (That’s rare for any SUV, let alone one that runs on clean power.) For Tesla, more than one model is at stake. As CEO Elon Musk put it during the Model X unveiling: people need to know “that any kind of car can go electric.” —Matt Vella


25. The Toy That Talks Back

CogniToys_Blue_Front Right.JPG
Cognitoys
CogniToys Dino / $120
Available for preorder at CogniToys.com

Rather than repeating catchphrases, as “talking” toys have done for generations, this dinosaur taps IBM’s Watson technology to engage with kids ages 5 to 9 in a meaningful way. In addition to answering plain-language queries (like “How far away is the moon?”), the wi-fi-enabled figurine talks back and learns from kids’ responses—helping them hone their math skills, for example, by asking harder questions once they nail, “What is 2+2?” and “Can you count to 10?” The trick, according to CogniToys CEO Donald Coolidge, is to make educational development seem like a “cool, fun experience.” “That’s kind of the best toy possible,” he says. —Sarah Begley



Cc: lalasticlala

Romance / Re: Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 9:21pm On Feb 29, 2016
20. Pollution Detector

tzoa 34 with shadow.JPG
TZOA
TZOA Environmental Tracker / $139
Available for preorder at Tzoa.com

In order to avoid potentially harmful pollutants and allergens, it helps to know about the air you’re breathing. That’s where Tzoa comes in. The stationary device, developed by electrician Kevin R. Hart, uses sensors to evaluate the atmosphere in any given area—­measuring factors like temperature, particulate matter (dust, pollen, mold, car exhaust) and UV ­exposure—and uploads that data to the cloud, so that institutions like Johns Hopkins can conduct air-­quality research. The company plans to launch wearable versions in May that offer a similar service, allowing consumers to chart specific walking routes, for example, if they want to avoid pockets of pollen. —Alexandra Sifferlin


21. The Ball That Teaches Kids to Code


Gregory Reid for TIME
Hackaball / $85
Available for preorder at Hackaball.com

At a time when demand for computer scientists is skyrocketing, most Americans get little or no exposure to coding during their formative years. Made by Many, a New York City–based digital-­consulting firm, is trying to change that. Its Hackaball toy syncs with a mobile app, allowing users to program how and when it lights up—and then to see how those programs affect their lives in the real world. During one test, for example, kids set the ball to change colors at random intervals, then used it to play a hot-potato-style game. Enabling social ­scenarios—rather than a more isolated, screen-based introduction to ­coding—is the point of Hackaball, says William Owen, a strategy director at Made by Many. Its concept appears to be resonating: some 2,800 people backed the project on Kickstarter, raising $240,000. The first units ship in January. —Lisa Eadicicco


22. All-Access Virtual Reality


Gregory Reid for TIME
Google Cardboard / Price varies
Available DIY or from third-party sellers


Most of the hype surrounding virtual reality has rightly centered on premium headsets, such as the forthcoming Oculus Rift and HTC Vive (both of which will likely cost several hundred dollars). But Google Cardboard is revolutionary in its own right. Since its 2014 debut, the scrappy viewer—which can be built from scratch using free online instructions and relies on your smartphone screen for visuals—has emerged as a playground for virtual reality, priming brands and consumers alike for one of the world’s most anticipated technologies. There are Cardboard apps that let people drive cars (from Mercedes-Benz), attend concerts (from musician Jack White) and even play immersive video games. “We ask people, ‘Hey, put your smartphone in this piece of cardboard. It’s going to do something amazing,’” says Clay Bavor, a Google VP who oversees VR projects. “And then it does, and they’re shocked.” —Alex Fitzpatrick



23. The Musical Instrument That Anyone Can Master


Gregory Reid for TIME
Artiphon Instrument 1 / $399
Available for preorder at Artiphon.com

An estimated 70% of adults want to play an instrument on a regular basis, but only 5% actually do, partly because it’s tough to choose just one to master. That’s not an issue with the Artiphon, which can mimic dozens of ­instruments—not just how they sound but also how they’re played. It can be strummed like a guitar or tapped like a piano. Or it can mix and match inputs, allowing users to bang banjo chords as if they were drumming. “We’re trying to pave a different path toward musical creativity,” says Jacob Gordon, an Artiphon co-founder, of the device (and its companion smartphone app), which raised $1.3 million on Kickstarter. —Victor Luckerson

Romance / Re: Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 9:12pm On Feb 29, 2016
16. Shoes You Can ‘Tie’ With One Hand


Gregory Reid for TIME
Nike Flyease 8 / $130
Available at Nike.com

In 2012, Matthew Walzer, a then high school junior with cerebral palsy, sent a note to Nike: “My dream is to go to the college of my choice,” he wrote, “without having to worry about someone coming to tie my shoes every day.” Sensing an opportunity to create a new footwear category—both for casual consumers who want a simpler way to tie sneakers and for people like Walzer, who need one—Nike dispatched a design team. This year, they unveiled their solution: the Flyease 8, a LeBron James–branded basketball shoe with a one-handed fastening mechanism that drew inspiration from “opening and closing a door,” says Tobie Hatfield, the shoe’s head designer. (To tie the shoe, wearers yank on a strap, which zips around the ankle as they pull.) There are still kinks to work out; pulling the strap too hard or too fast, for example, may cause the zipper to break. But Walzer, now a sophomore at Florida Gulf Coast University, has said the shoes have given him a great “sense of independence and accomplishment.” —Sean Gregory


17. The Pan That Teaches You To Cook


Gregory Reid for TIME
Pantelligent / $199
Available at Pantelligent.com

How hot should the pan be? When do I stir? It it done yet? If you’ve ever cooked an unfamiliar dish, chances are you’ve asked yourself one or more of these questions—­and ­Pantelligent aims to answer them all. Once you select a recipe from its smartphone app, the pan uses Bluetooth and a special heat sensor to offer real-time instructions on your screen, so you’ll know exactly when to flip a steak, for example, if you want it medium rare. When they first dreamed up the concept at MIT, Humberto Evans was a great cook, but Mike Robbins could barely fry an egg. Now, according to Evans, his former roommate whips up dishes like chicken piccata. “The food speaks for itself,” he says of how people can use the pans, which started shipping in October. —Samantha Grossman


18. The Book That Filters Water


Gregory Reid for TIME
The Drinkable Book
Developed by Teri Dankovich

An estimated 663 million people globally do not have access to clean drinking water, in part because filtration is complicated and expensive. The Drinkable Book is neither: thanks to a special ­treatment—­developed with a team of scientists over several years—its pages double as water filters, killing over 99% of harmful bacteria during trials in Bangladesh, Ghana and South Africa. (They also list usage instructions.) Though research is still needed to determine whether the system can filter all contaminants, including viruses, Dankovich is optimistic; she says she is talking to partners who could help fund more testing and, eventually, large-scale production. —Sarah Begley


19. The Ocean Vacuum


Martin Gee for TIME
The Ocean Cleanup Project
Developed by Boyan Slat

There’s a glut of plastic trash in the middle of the Pacific Ocean that’s bigger than Texas—and growing. But the default removal process of chasing it with nets is both costly and time-­consuming. Instead, the Ocean Cleanup Project proposes a 62-mile-long (100 km) floating boom—at an estimated cost of $15 million—that would use natural currents to trap trash. (Its net drops roughly 10 ft., or 3 m, below the surface, shallow enough for fish to swim around.) If next year’s trials succeed, a full cleanup operation would aim to start in 2020; internal estimates suggest it could reduce the trash by 42% over 10 years. —Bryan Walsh

Romance / Re: Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 9:02pm On Feb 29, 2016
12. An Airport for Drones


Martin Gee for TIME
Drone Port
Developed by Foster + Partners and Afrotech-EPFL

As Amazon, Google and others ramp up their drone-delivery tests, one question looms large: How will their home base function? For hints, the tech titans may well look to Rwanda, where workers will soon break ground on three “drone ports,” designed to make it easier to transport food, medical supplies, electronics, spare parts and other goods through the hilly countryside, where road travel is difficult. The Rwanda project “is a relatively modest beginning,” says Norman Foster, chairman of architecture firm Foster + Partners, which is leading the first phase of construction (scheduled to be completed in 2020). But, he adds, “it could be a catalyst,” helping to solve an array of pressing health issues and creating a model for other countries looking to regulate commercial drone use. —Sarah Begley


13. Period-Proof Underwear


Gregory Reid for TIME
Thinx / $24+ per pair
Available at Shethinx.com

For decades, women trying to avoid leaks or stains during menstruation have mainly had to rely on disposable pads, tampons and panty liners, which can be bulky and expensive. “But can’t underwear do the same thing, better?” wondered Miki and Radha Agrawal. That’s the idea behind Thinx, a line of thongs and panties that the twin sisters—alongside co-founder Antonia Dunbar and a team of manufacturers in Sri Lanka—have engineered to (mostly) replace traditional products. Each pair is washable, reusable and equipped with four layers of moisture-wicking, antimicrobial fabric. On heavier days, however, some women may need extra protection. “We always say, Know your flow,” says Miki. —Samantha Grossman


14. The Bed in a Box


Martin Gee for TIME
Casper Mattress / $500+
Available at Casper.com

Buying a new mattress is a lot like purchasing a used car: stressful, confusing and likely to overwhelm you with options. “We want to cut the clutter,” says Philip Krim, CEO of Casper, one of many startups upending the sleep industry, including Leesa and Tuft & Needle. The model is simple: create one mattress style; up the comfort factor (using a mix of foams); set clear prices; and sell it online (cutting costs, so prices remain low). Once the mattress arrives—it’s vacuum-packed in a cardboard box—customers get a 100-day trial period during which they can return it for a full refund. But that rarely happens, says Krim. Casper’s sales are expected to exceed $75 million this year, making it a leader among its startup competitors. —Victor Luckerson


15. The Virtual Brush and Canvas


Gregory Reid for TIME
Apple Pencil and iPad Pro / $99 and $799+, respectively
Available at Apple.com

In the 450 years or so since its invention, the pencil has become so ubiquitous, it’s easy to forget how remarkable a technology it is. It can write at any angle. Shades get darker depending on how hard you press. Marks can be erased. Reproducing this functionality digitally has vexed computer engineers for years, which is what makes Apple’s latest effort so impressive. The Pencil allows users to draw, paint or write on a screen, just as they would a sheet of paper. And it works in tandem with the iPad Pro, a tablet faster than roughly 80% of laptops sold in the past year, so there’s no perceptible delay. That combination has already sparked chatter about new ways to create art, animations, blueprints and more. “You can rest your hand anywhere and [the iPad Pro screen] totally ignores it and it just reads the Pencil,” wrote Don Shank, an art director at Pixar, after testing the products in September. “It’s pretty amazing.” —Matt Vella

Romance / Re: Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 8:54pm On Feb 29, 2016
8. The Desktop DNA Lab


Mark Serr
Juno
Developed by Fluidigm

It can take a full day to “amplify” DNA, the technical term for making millions of copies of one strain so it can be compared with many others. Juno cuts that process to just three hours, freeing scientists to concentrate on actual ­analysis—a shift that makes it easier to match bone-marrow donors, find cures for genetic diseases and more. The key is Fluidigm’s proprietary microchip, which can amplify samples that are 1,000 times smaller than a drop of water. And the sleek, Yves Béhar–­designed aesthetic doesn’t hurt, either. “We see a lot of possibilities for clinical labs and hospitals,” says Marc Unger, a senior vice president at Fluidigm, of the $120,000 machine, which is now being used at academic and research labs. “We really want to help.” —Alexandra Sifferlin


9. Housing That Welcomes the Homeless

Star Apt 14-11 MMA 1204.JPG
Iwan Baan
Star Apartments
Designed by Michael Maltzan

For decades, housing for the homeless has too often meant transient shelters or warehouse-­like abodes. L.A.’s Star Apartments aims to buck that trend by design; it functions more like a minivillage than a single building, says Maltzan of his third collaboration with Skid Row Housing Trust, a local nonprofit. In addition to 102 prefabricated studios, which are ingeniously staggered into four terraced stories, Star Apartments offers a ground-floor medical clinic and, above that, a garden, an outdoor running track and space for classrooms. The goal, says Maltzan, is to make the residents of its 300-sq.-ft. units—who are handpicked by the county department of health ­services—feel “like they’re part of a dynamic and intimate community,” a strategy that can help people, especially those struggling with homelessness and substance-­abuse issues, re-­establish stability in their lives. —Richard Lacayo


10.The Transparent Truck


Martin Gee for TIME
Safety Truck
Developed by Samsung and Leo Burnett

Every year, thousands of people get hurt or die in traffic accidents, in part because their visibility gets blocked by a lumbering vehicle. This is especially true in Argentina, known for its winding, narrow roads. There, however, Samsung and ad agency Leo Burnett have partnered on a creative solution: a system that relays video footage from the front of a truck to four screens on its back, giving drivers a clear view of what’s ahead. During its initial test, the Safety Truck covered some 620 miles (1,000 km) over three days without incident. Now Samsung is refining the technology and working with Argentine officials to roll it out more broadly. “We believe this will change the history of road safety,” says Sang Jik Lee, president of Samsung Electronics Argentina. —Julie Shapiro


11. The Next-Gen Baby Monitor


Gregory Reid for TIME
Sproutling / $299
Available for preorder at Sproutling.com

“Is my baby O.K.?” That’s the question Sproutling aims to answer—in real time—with its first product. Once in place, the Fitbit-like device can track an infant’s heart rate, body temperature, position and more, and notify parents, via mobile app, if there’s cause for alarm. (Though regular check-ins are still encouraged.) Once it learns a baby’s habits, Sproutling can also offer helpful predictions, like when he or she will wake up from a nap. “We want to get more understanding of how children behave as a whole,” says CEO Chris Bruce, a father of two. “That’s the holy grail.” —Sarah Begley

Romance / Re: Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 8:44pm On Feb 29, 2016
5.The Superior Stethoscope


Gregory Reid for TIME
Eko Core
Developed by Connor Landgraf, Jason Bellet and Tyler Crouch

If there is one aspect of medicine that’s more art than science, it’s the way doctors listen to ­heartbeats—­trusting their fallible ears and memory to detect aberrations over time. Not so with Eko Core. Once the $199 smart adapter is attached to a stethoscope, it streams heartbeat data to the cloud so physicians can download it to a smartphone. From there, a companion app can analyze the audio and compare it to previous recordings, which may help doctors detect murmurs, heart-valve abnormalities and other conditions that “our ears are not able to,” says Dr. John Chorba, a cardiologist (and mentor to one of the inventors) who’s leading an Eko trial at the University of California, San Francisco. If the device works as planned—early signs are positive—it could not only improve overall care but also drastically reduce the need for expensive tests like echocardiograms. —Alice Park


6. The Headset That Helps You Hack Life


Gregory Reid for TIME
Microsoft HoloLens
Developer edition available early 2016

Virtual-reality headsets, like the Oculus Rift, create escapes. Put one on, and you’re suddenly swimming with dolphins or fighting in the Battle of Waterloo. Microsoft’s HoloLens, by contrast, augments reality—overlaying holograms and data onto existing surroundings, so you’re not “confined to the virtual world,” as designer Alex Kipman puts it. Imagine gamers defending their homes from robot invaders, engineers manipulating 3-D models or surgeons following directions “on” the human body. Early tests indicate all are possible. Already the HoloLens is being used by NASA to mimic Mars’ terrain in labs and by medical students to dissect virtual bodies. —Alex Fitzpatrick


7. Power Pasta


Gregory Reid for TIME
Banza Chickpea Pasta / $4+ per 8 oz. box
Available at EatBanza.com

“When people think of pasta, they almost always think, I ate way too much and now I feel like crap,” says Brian Rudolph. Not so with his brand, which is made from chickpeas instead of wheat. That simple switch—in a recipe perfected over 10 months of trial and error—has yielded a healthy twist on the al dente dinner. Banza, shorthand for garbanzo pasta, has double the protein and four times the fiber of traditional pasta, and far fewer carbs; it’s also gluten-free. And to those who may question how good it tastes, consider the sales. Banza launched in two U.S. stores last year; now it’s in 1,700, including Fairway markets, where it was recently the top-­selling pasta of any kind (including wheat). Now Rudolph and his brother Scott plan to reinvent products like pizza and cereal. “People want to eat better,” he says. “We see Banza as a true replacement, a more filling version of the food people love.” —Mandy Oaklander

Romance / Photos: Top 25 Inventions Of 2015 by odinese(m): 8:34pm On Feb 29, 2016
The 25 Best Inventions of 2015
TIME Staff




1. The ‘Hoverboard’ Scooter


Gregory Reid for TIME
Developed by multiple brands
Prices vary

Part Segway, part skateboard, the self-balancing scooter—generally known as a hoverboard, even though it doesn’t actually hover—is easily the year’s most viral product, drawing fans like Justin Bieber, Jimmy Fallon and Kendall Jenner. Once someone hops on, the device uses a pair of electric gyroscopes (one under each pad) to balance automatically, allowing users to speed forward, backward and around by slightly shifting their body weight. That enables all kinds of fun stunts, ranging from hallway races to motorized dance routines. Maxx Yellin, co-founder of PhunkeeDuck, one of more than 20 companies making versions of the device, sees larger implications. “It could evolve as a new form of transportation for cities and colleges,” Yellin says (though British authorities recently caused a stir by outlawing their use on public sidewalks and streets). But convenience comes at a cost: prices range from $350 to $1,700, depending on the brand and its features. —Lisa Eadicicco



2. The Underground Park

The Lowline in New York City
Cameron Neilson
The Lowline Lab
Developed by Dan Barasch and James Ramsey

“It’s not like any park you’ve ever seen before,” says Dan Barasch of the Lowline, an abandoned trolley terminal in New York City’s Lower East Side that he and architect James Ramsey are trying to turn into an acre of lush green space, replete with flowering plants and areas to relax in the sun. The key: a “remote skylight” dish system that captures sunlight from surrounding rooftops and funnels it underground via fiber-optic cable; once there, it’s beamed out via reflective dome, enabling plants to grow. To prove the technology works, Barasch and Ramsey opened the Lowline Lab; it’s a prototype version of the final park, which is still several approvals—and $70 million in funding—away from completion. But Barasch, who attracted more than 3,300 backers on Kickstarter, is undeterred. Even forgotten places, he says, can still be used “for public good.” —Julie Shapiro


3. The Sensor That Sniffs Out Gluten


Gregory Reid for TIME
6SensorLabs’ Nima / $199
Available for preorder at NimaSensor.com

For the millions of Americans with celiac disease or gluten sensitivity, eating out is often anxiety-ridden—any menu item might contain traces of the protein, which is off-limits. The Nima sensor, which starts shipping early next year, would work to put their minds at ease by allowing them to test any kind of food or drink in as little as two minutes. After a sample is dropped into the well of the device, a proprietary antibody (loaded in a disposable cartridge) mines it for traces of gluten. If they exist, a frowning face lights up; if not, a smile appears. “My hope is that people are going to be able to eat socially” without accidentally getting sick, says Shireen Yates, a 6SensorLabs co-founder who is gluten-sensitive. The firm also hopes to apply its technology to detect other food allergens, including peanuts and dairy. —Alice Park


4. Bionic Ears


Gregory Reid for TIME
Doppler Labs Here Active Listening Earbuds / $249
Waitlist open at Hereplus.me

If you’re stuck somewhere with unbearable noise, you essentially have two options: plug your ears, or leave. But what if you could isolate the most grating sound and mute it? Or just lower the volume, much as you would on a TV? That’s the promise of the Here Active Listening system, a groundbreaking set of earbuds from New York–based Doppler Labs. Unlike hearing aids, which amplify or decrease all noises at once, Here’s processor syncs with a smartphone app, so users can handpick which frequencies they want to filter. That means you could stand on a subway platform and have a normal conversation as a train screeches by, or even tune out a crying baby on a plane. “It’s augmented audio reality,” says Doppler Labs CEO Noah Kraft, who initially developed Here for musicians and concertgoers before pivoting to a general audience. The first earbuds will ship in December.


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Celebrities / Re: Omotola Looks Stunning In Ebony Event In Hollywood (photos) by odinese(m): 5:02pm On Feb 29, 2016
nairalandbuzz:




Sit back, drink a glass of warm milk, re-read your comment and feel free to delete once you're sufficiently embarrassed.
Dumbass n*gga
Celebrities / Re: Omotola Looks Stunning In Ebony Event In Hollywood (photos) by odinese(m): 4:52pm On Feb 29, 2016
[size=20pt]why tha actual fùck do I keep seeing this wh**e on this forum?. Huh? [/size]

5 Likes

Politics / Re: FG Removes 23,846 Ghost Workers From Government Payroll by odinese(m): 9:09am On Feb 29, 2016
SUPERPACK:
sai buhari
sai change
We stand with you
im 100% sure you didn't read this sh!t

6 Likes

Politics / Re: Good Governance: I Need Your Prayers- Buhari Tells Religious Leaders by odinese(m): 9:04am On Feb 29, 2016
[size=30pt]SCAM[/size]
:

7 Likes

European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) / Re: Southampton Vs Chelsea (1 - 2) On 27th February 2015 by odinese(m): 5:45pm On Feb 27, 2016
Goooaall
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) / Re: Southampton Vs Chelsea (1 - 2) On 27th February 2015 by odinese(m): 5:32pm On Feb 27, 2016
Goaaaalll

1 Like

European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) / Re: Southampton Vs Chelsea (1 - 2) On 27th February 2015 by odinese(m): 4:43pm On Feb 27, 2016
Gooooaaaaallll
Health / Re: FG Unveils Free Health Services To 100 Million Nigerians by odinese(m): 9:27pm On Feb 26, 2016
R
Crime / Re: Dollar 'palaver': Prostitute Stabs Man Over Price Increase by odinese(m): 9:24pm On Feb 26, 2016
[size=15pt]dollar increase for some nasty pùssy?? [/size]

9 Likes

Career / Re: How Can I Tell My Boss To Stop Spamming My Phone? by odinese(m): 12:48pm On Feb 26, 2016
[size=30pt]he ain't scamming your phone after all[/size]

1 Like

Romance / Re: Pregnancy, HELP!!! by odinese(m): 1:03am On Feb 26, 2016
Smellingmouth:
undecided
Monkeys don't give sense. That man right there is a type of primate called 'orang utan'
Romance / Re: Pregnancy, HELP!!! by odinese(m): 1:01am On Feb 26, 2016
RadicallyBlunt:

So u no sabi pidgin again
I know some. smiley
Romance / Re: Pregnancy, HELP!!! by odinese(m): 12:56am On Feb 26, 2016
KashyBaby:
shocked ....it's morning down here and reading this ,i be like smh....
Currently in Spain thou, Its midnight here
Romance / Re: Pregnancy, HELP!!! by odinese(m): 12:50am On Feb 26, 2016
RadicallyBlunt:
U don dey drunk abi. U no go go sleep

Why you typing like a retàrd?
Romance / Pregnancy, HELP!!! by odinese(m): 12:44am On Feb 26, 2016
[size=25pt]help![/size]

My grandma is pregnant, what can she do it? She's 98 and her boyfriend is responsible. smiley



Honestly why are people not taking it serious
This woman I'm talking about right here is 3months pregnant ffs.

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