Oregon Manifest, a nonprofit located in Portland, has been running a competition over the last few months in which students and pro teams work to create a next-generation city bike. This isn’t about speed (like the McLaren Venge) or concept design (like the Vienna Bike), but rather about creating a bike that provides the maximum amount of utility for someone looking to ditch their automobile.
These innovation-from-competition events are really blowing up; there have been lots lately aimed at creating everything from mega-efficient cars to electrically-powered aircraft. This one had 34 entrants who mostly had some variation of a cargo bike with electric assist, but they all varied in execution. I have to agree with the people’s choice, though, a collaboration between IDEO and Rock Lobster (pictured).
You can see the other winners here (I like the campus bike and the two-seater), but the Faraday, as the IDEO-Rock Lobster bike is called, really just hit me right in my future bone. Minus some of the slightly retro trappings, I can picture thousands of these crowding the streets. The design is just that well thought-out.
The front wheel has a hub motor powered by that battery underneath the seat there. The battery can be quick-charged at an outlet and are actually the same kind found in the Chevy Volt. The porteur-style front rack has been brought into the 21st century with a removable flat-rack that attaches or detaches in seconds by means of spring-loaded bolts, and the fronts of the support tubes conceal a pair of LED headlights. The rack is mounted on the frame, not the fork, which improves stability. I’ve always been a fan of paniers but this works nicely as well. Reminds me of this bent-wood bike basket. Core77 has a nice design diary for the project, and IDEO has a page for it as well.
It does have some design issues to work out: it’s rather tall, the seat-handlebar relationship is off, and it needs a more potent braking system. But there’s still a weird sort of elegance to the design.
A bike like this for a decent price would go a long way toward replacing cars for many people in the city. Human-powered, compact, and simple, yet able to go long distances and carry groceries. It’ll be a while before they’re really affordable, but the promise of the electric-assist bike, already taking effect elsewhere in the world, seems destined to come to our shores as long as there are people creating things like the Faraday and the other entries to the contest.



Courtsey :TC



Regardless of what you think about the Android platform, there’s no denying that the Market experience for finding apps is 






Hulu CEO Jason Kilar made an appearance at the Samsung press event at CES today, where he announced that a Hulu Plus app will be coming to Android 2.2+ in the coming mo


1. 2DoA user-friendly task management and ‘to do’ list app that does exactly what it says on the tin. The user-interface is clean an intuitive and the latest version now supports synchronisation with Outlook, Mac, and Toodledo. The Biggest feature of this app is push notifications. Many to-do managers in the app store are missing this feature that is top of the shopping list for many shoppers of the App store. When making a new to-do, or editing an old one, there is the option of assigning alarms for when the item is due and/or before it’s due. These alarms come in the form of push notifications and/or email, giving you no excuse to forget your partner’s birthday!
2. EvernoteIf you love taking notes in all different forms and shapes and need a bit help with organizing and searching your notes then this is the App for you. The beauty of Evernote lies in its simple presentation and organization of notes, images, websites, text, video, etc. It makes great use of the iPad’s location awareness, which means that you can actually organize your notes and synchronize it with the place where they were taken. One of the key features of Evernote is the capability to Auto-synchronize your notes to your Mac, PC, and Web. Another handy useful feature is its ability to make the text within snapshots searchable, which, coupled with the great use of the iPad’s inbuilt voice recording, location awareness, and camera makes Evernote a fantastic App for the absent-minded!
3. DropboxHave you ever wanted to be able to access all of your important documents and photos from your iPad without the need of doing any synchronization? If the answer is a resounding ‘Yes!’ then definitely give this App a try. There are many sync and share apps out there, however, generally speaking Dropbox is a clear favourite by many of the users that we speak with. Apart from installing the Dropbox app on your iPhone, you need to also install the client app on your PC or MAC. Once that is done then all that you need to do is to drag and drop any document you wish into your Dropbox folder. It will then automatically synchronise your documents and make them available on your iPad. No matter what format your document is in, Dropbox will be able to handle it with impressive speed. The beauty of Dropbox is the fact that it lets you view any document format (Excel, Word, pdf, PowerPoint, you name it!), so it also works as a great document viewer on your iPad.
4. LogMeIn IgnitionThis App allows you to access PCs in the same way as on the LogMeIn website – but via your iPhone or iPad. If you want an easy and reliable way to remote control all of your computers then this deserves consideration. LogMeIn comes with an expensive price tag (£17.99) and you might be concerned as to how easy it will be to use with the small iPad screen. Cassie did full review which you can find here on iPhoneAppCafe and in her experience after getting used to the zooming functions and the option of keeping the mouse in one place while moving the screen, it actually functions quite easily.
5. AudioNoteAudioNote is essentially an App for beating the boredom of the boardroom; when you are having a meeting the App allows you to record the conversation whilst simultaneously taking notes. If you forget anything about the meeting, you simply click on the notes and it will play the audio of that time in the meeting, (so if you do tune out a little, you have a safety net!) AudioNote is superior to Keynote seeing as it allows more fonts and different options for its presentation view; in Keynote the presenter is unable to read the notes whilst they are actually doing the presentation, which is fairly useless unless you happen to have a photographic memory! For more information read the
6. iWork Good things come to those who wait. That’s what those fabulous Guinness ads tell me and I for one choose to believe everything that I hear on the television, particularly when alcohol is involved. Seriously though, Apple spent an age in developing iWork for the iPad, honing all of the elements in order to make it perfect…and is it? Well, pretty much. Using iWork, you can create new documents or open other types of existing document and utilize them straight away on your iPad. Even if you have to convert the iWork files that aren’t ‘native’, you can convert them relatively quickly. Type away to your hearts content on Pages, or if you are a numbers bod, you can use, well, Numbers to fill charts, spreadsheets and graphs with wonderful information. Keynote is also included for presentation purposes, although on balance, AudioNote just pips it at the post in terms of usability.
7. ReederAh, the daily commute…a necessary evil that we all have to endure if we are to be top dog in our chosen business. But why not make it a little more enjoyable and have something to read along the way rather than the daily rag picked up from a grotty newsstand? Reeder will, essentially, sync any items in a Google Reader account that have been left unread or are starred, compiling a set of RSS feeds based on your Google account data. So instead of having to read the same old boring headlines as everybody else, you are presented with articles, images and websites that are of interest to you. If nothing else, this App will give you an interesting fact to talk about with the receptionist on the way in to the office…it’s the little things that make life worth living!
8. InstapaperWe’ve all felt the pain of iPhone or iPad signal failure right in the middle of a great article, as our train goes through a tunnel or we step down the escalator into the tube, the next page going blank before our very eyes; well this is a pain that you can soon forget, seeing as you can now get the Instapaper App for your iPad. Instapaper allows you to save and bookmark any webpage or article on your laptop, PC or iPad that you like, which then allows you to read the entire article on your iPad in offline mode. Also, all the extra tat will have been stripped out, so that you have a clean, pure article with no ads or links to click on, with the iPad’s anti-glare screen creating the perfect backdrop for whichever articles you choose to read.
9. KindleYou can’t beat a good book. Becoming engrossed in a novel from start to finish is more captivating on an intellectual level than any film or TV drama and the great thing is, you can take a book anywhere! The only problem is, that if you want to take more than one book somewhere, you start running into size and weight issues, in that you are having to lug masses of big volumes around in a bag that is set to tear at any moment. Well, Kindle for iPad solves all of these problems. You can currently choose from over 750,000 books in the Kindle Store, the text of which appears on you riPad, ready for you to scroll down and bookmark at any point. You can get 1000’s of free classics or take advantage of the ‘try before you buy’ offer of a free first chapter; the dictionary and Wikipedia functions are also incredibly useful when it comes to looking up words and concepts that are unfamiliar to you. A fantastic App that may not have the slick feel as iBooks, but offers a far greater range of books.