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Search Result for: chair Cool
This is a really cool ride. Forget those boring roller coaster rides, these robot arm can shake you, roll you, until you puke! It's definitely a very extreme ride, and no. 1 on my list!
A lazy man's dream. Shape it the way you want to, and when you're done with it, fold it and put it away. It's all possible with this crazy Japanese invention: the folding chair.
Funny
A wrestler wants to finish of his opponent with a chair....so he asks for one from the audience. He gets more than he can chew on...Hilarious! Enjoy!
WTF..?!
Heck...you won't see something like this anytime soon. I didn't see it coming until it was too late. Anyway, it's a "strong" and unique performance. Enjoy!
Big in Japan
A crazy and funny show, that comes (where else?) from Japan. It features their view on a massage chair for the real men
Tech
It's kind of pointless having a robot chair which destroys itself, and then it takes him half an hour to put itself back together again. Anyway, here's the amazing robot chair video!
Hilarious pics
Click on Full Story for another picture
Technology and Health News
Small robots that walk on water like insects? The kitchen table, the walls of a room or the arms of an armchair that are self-cleaning? Two phenomena that Xiao Cheng Zeng, a professor of chemistry at University of Nebraska in Lincoln (USA), considers possible in the near future, and based on the same characteristic: super hidrofobia.
Thanks to the computational performance of the super computer of the Riken Institute in Japan, the researcher is able to reproduce the conditions that give the area the property is to "roll" away the drops of water.
In nature this phenomenon is observed on the bristles of caterpillars or on lotus flowers, and allows insects that often are seen on ponds slip skate on water. As the authors of the study reported the caterpillars or insects skaters get the super hydrophobia surface through a "two-tier" surface which means a waxy base on which there are microscopic structures like hair, often covered in turn by smaller "hair".
These gradients decrease the surface area in contact with the drop of water. The result is that the drop rolls instead of sliding, as it would be a hydrophobic surface.
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