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Showing posts from July, 2008

#7483 USB copying coil

We are quickly nearing the time when the once-cool CD is going to tip its hat and fade out the door into the fog of obsolescence. The CD was a great way to get people data that would be difficult to obtain over the internet - either due to the size of data to be shared or due to poor connections or both. Now we're seeing cheap USB keys fulfilling this function. You attend a conference, and receive the background materials on a USB key rather than a CD-rom. Why? Probably a few reasons, not the least of which is CD drives are heavy and more and more people are leaving them off their laptops. But getting a bunch of the same info on a bunch of USB keys one by one could be a bit time consuming. What is the new mass CD burner for USBs? Why the USB copy coil of coise! Imagine a little USB with a plug part on one side and a receiver part on the other. Then imagine a hundred of these keys hooked to each other in a long train. Then imagine this train coiled up into a snail-like shape. Then i

#1783 Chef's Soap

For the hands-on cook who needs clean hands, but not necessarily scented hands. This soap is specially unscented (or MSG scented) so you don't worry about your tossed salad tasting like musk (or your goulash tasting like grapefruit).

#4293 plug-in lights and ornaments

Everyone's a collector of Christmas ornaments, but now you can be a collector of Christmas lights too. You buy a strand of lights originally and then you collect different ornaments and lights that plug into the strand. Each ornament moves or lights up or both.

#7874 thatsme.com photography

This is a very basic business model that's success probably relies on its simplicity and firstness to succeed. Simply this: A hired amateur photographer with a cool camera (or at least a cool lens) attends a school event, let's say a high school football game wearing a T-shirt that reads "check out these photos at That'sMe.com". The photographer shoots oodles of cool photos, making sure to get at least one good shot of everyone in the game. She then goes home, uploads all the good ones, labels them by jersey number, writes up a little blurb about the event and that's all. Meanwhile savvy parents log on, look at the impressive shots of their little one and either buy the .jpg file or order prints. Stratified pricing structure makes it possible for everyone to get something - from the rich mom wanting a walnut framed print, to a fellow student who wants some locker decor, to a low-res file for facebook. Easily franchiseable. Relatively untouchable by "the b