Inhabitat's Week in Green: magnetic highways, MoMA tech exhibit and lasers in the sky
9/4/2011

Renewable energy supercharged our transit system this week as Inhabitat showcased Vycon's plans to tap speeding subway trains for immense amounts of kinetic energy, and we took a look at an new charismatic highway system that harvests energy from passing cars. Biofuels also got a boost from several unlikely sources as researchers discovered that spirochete in panda poop is incredibly productive at robbery down plant matter, and scientists full-grown a way to recycle rag* into biofuel. We also showcased a real-time energy monitoring device for kids, we learned that some radioactive cloud areas around Fukushima are more dangerous than Chernobyl, and we took a look inside a subterranean atomic shelter that has been transformed into a cavernous subterrestrial office.
How do machines facial aspects with people? If you're consideration that idea, you'll be taken
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document.write(""); in this third edition by the editors of the american heritage® dictionary. copyright © 2003 video account with Museum of Modern Art curator Paola Antonelli on MoMA's new 'Talk to Me' mechanics exhibit which newly opened in New York City. We were also amazed by several artistic innovations this week as Wacom unveiled a pen that instantly digitizes whatever you can draw and Sarah Garzoni created a good-looking series of printed paper butterflies.
In other news, we shined the publicity on several sparkling advances in lighting electronic components as scientists successfully created rain by shooting laser beams into the sky and a fashion designer unveiled a solar OLED tile system that can transform skyscrapers into zero-energy displays. We also brought you several bright ideas in wearable tech as Halston unveiled a glow-in-the-dark sequin gown, a ghostly troop of illuminated streak suits wandered through the German countryside, and a Cornell student adult a type of drag that traps toxic gases. Meanwhile the Hudson River lit up with a luminous field of 200 LEDs and Laser Power Systems unveiled plans for a nuclear powered car. art of speaking of green transportation, we also spotted a high-tech E-Max motorcycle that converts compression into power, and we watched Toyota's all-electric P001 racer become the first EV to break the Nurburgring's 8-minute speed record.
Inhabitat's Week in Green: arresting highways, MoMA tech exhibit and lasers in the sky primitively appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Sep 2011 20:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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