Gadget For Students-PUP Scan : The World’s Fastest Pocket Scanner
PUP Scan fits right into your fingers. This smart, simple and connected tool lets you scan important documents and upload them on to your cloud account in seconds.
PUP Scan fits right into your fingers. This smart, simple and connected tool lets you scan important documents and upload them on to your cloud account in seconds.
Robots that clean your floors. Lights that turn off when you’re not home. These new inventions might seem like something from the 1960s cartoon “The Jetsons,” but automated technologies are not a thing of the future, anymore.
Battery life is one of the most critical issues for smartphone vendors and users. On the other hand, we have already seen so many innovative technologies that can recharge a battery within a very short time. But now, researchers at Nanyang Technology University (NTU) have developed fast-charging batteries that can retain charge for 20 years.
By using any weather apps, one may get the information, but what if there’s no reliable data connection to get the latest update? Keeping that in mind, a Danish team of enterprising inventors has created Vaavud, a new smartphone gadget that lets you measure wind speed easily, anywhere.
When you are driving in rain and suddenly lightning strikes your car and knocks it out, while also recharging your gadgets, you will pause before deciding whether to be thankful or not that you’re alive. So was apparently the case with a family which, incidentally, filmed the whole thing.
Gadgets such as smartphones and tablets are becoming an increasingly integral part of our lives. We use them all day long, take them to bed, check them first thing in the morning and are nearly always hooked up to them. A new infographic by Online Psychology Degree shows how often we make use of our gadgets in bed.
An Engadget associate editor argues that the low priced Nexus and Kindle devices will hurt the consumers in the long run, and thus it’s a bad strategy to follow. But, consumers, as well as industry figure like Linus Torvalds, seem to feel otherwise.
With the existing commercially available devices like Tobii PCEye or the EyeTech TM3, a user can control a computer with his/her eyes. But these devices are very costly (priced between $5,000 and $7,000). The good news is, Dr Aldo Faisal, a Neuroscientist at Imperial College in London, has created a $30 cost device which allows wearers to use their eye movements to control a computer. Get some more details inside.