Thursday, August 19, 2010

Coolest Inventions you Probably Didn’t Know Exist

Anti-Drunk Keyhole



If you ever have trouble getting your key in the door then you may wanna check this key slut out.

Anti Flatulence Blanket



The Better Marriage Blanket is a potentially useful tool!. It`s an odor eliminating blanket and contains the same type of fabric used by the military to protect against chemical weapons.
NASA uses it in space suits to filter the air that an astronaut breathes. It can certainly spare you or your partner (or both of you) from a scorched olfactory system in case someone devoured the enchilada combo platter. 


A lipstick that shows when women are in the mood for sex.



A NEW lipstick has gone on sale that shows when women are in the mood for sex.The saucy slap changes from clear to deep crimson as the wearer feels frisky.It works by reacting with a girl’s body chemistry.
And each £12 tube comes with a colour chart so men can work out how randy their partner is feeling.
The Mood Swing Emotionally Activated Lip Gloss was invented in California


Gold-dispensing Machine



It’s the ultimate hole-in-the-wall — a money machine that dispenses pure gold.
But installed beneath the gold-coated ceilings of Abu Dhabi’s Emirates Palace hotel, where royalty and billionaires come for cappuccinos topped with gold flakes, the machine almost seems part of the furniture.
The exterior of the machine is coated with a thin layer of gold and offers customers 320 items to choose from, ranging from gold bars that can weigh up to 10 grams, to customized gold coins.
Through a computer system, the ATM gold machine updates the gold price every 10 minutes to match international markets. 


Helmet with a rearview mirror in the visor



Reevu site claims that this is how your view would appear when wearing the helmet.
Similar helmets using cameras and LCDs already exist, but they do it all with optics and mirrors, so there’s no electronics to power, or malfunction. 


Oil-Filled Lenses



“AdSpecs” allow the corrective power of the glasses to be adjusted by means of a clear fluid injected into the lenses; they were developed in 1996 by Joshua Silver, a physics professor at Oxford University who directs a research institute there called the Center for Vision in the Developing World.
The idea behind the adjustable glasses is to allow people to fit their glasses to their optic needs – the technology enables untrained wearers to set the right focus themselves in less than a minute. This will greatly reduce the need for trained optometrists, who are rarely available in Africa and many parts of Asia. Though these adjustable glasses cannot yet help with conditions like astigmatism, at least 80 percent of refractive errors can be fixed