1. Airbag System For Motorbikes. The "D-Air System" is a critical component of a bespoke bikers jacket that activates in 40 milliseconds when the device knows that the motorbike rider is in danger.
Such a device seems likely to become legally required for all motorcycle riders to wear given the legal imperative of automobiles to have airbag protection systems since 1989 in the US. This appears like a typical example of a smart device possibly safeguarding many lives.
2. Optical Illusion 'Truckvertising'. Even though advertising on big trucks like mobile billboards has been around for as long as I can remember, producing cool, jawdropping and word-of-mouth building visual creations with those marketing spaces has not.
Now this is obviously a very cool methodology to publicize your new small business in your local area or as a commercial operation in itself. The vehicles will even serve as advertisements for such a business.
3. Miss Army Knife - The Women-Only 'Swiss Army' Knife - Witty huh? (a.k.a. Miss A Kit) Designed for girls, the Miss Army Knife, like its world famous boys opposite number, boasts a variety of tools in one clever product yet for female convenience. Tools on the Miss Army Knife cover corkscrew, tweezers, nail file and safety pin.
4. Piezoelectric Night Club. Exploiting the requirement for energy cognisance in all areas of our daily lives, a British dance club - "Surya" - utilizes piezoelectricity (what's that?) by drawing approximately 60% of its power needs from its floor when clubbers dance on it. The pioneering man involved is 35-year-old property magnate Andrew Charalambous who is sure that his new venture is the world's first ever self-powered club. The club's marketing line? "All you have to do is dance to save the world".
5. Fair Trade Product Vending Machines. Fair Trade food and beverages are establishing power in regular foodstuff retail shops through such items as coffee (about 50% of coffee retail sales in Tesco in England apparently) in addition to sugar so it seems that the next logical process is to generate income from Fair Trade high-demand products through vending machines - most notably in socially aware settings in the first place, for instance colleges and university-type environments.
This obviously grants individuals the physical way to do generous stuff for our world unlike them just feeling the occasional, unfulfilled desire to help.
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