Haute Chocolate

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When you shake a Chocolate theme with a Fashion show in Paris, it gives you unexplained sensation.

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Great list of all the latest TED talks

- Philosopher Alain de Botton describes a gentler notion of success

- Britain's prime minister Gordon Brown says it's time we adopted a global ethic

- 89-year-old maverick Elaine Morgan on the aquatic ape theory of human origins

- Novelist Chimamanda Adichie ponders the danger of 'a single story'

- Neuroscientist Beau Lotto shows incredible optical illusions - and what they mean

- Photographer Taryn Simon takes us inside secret labs, nuclear reactors and CIA facilities

Jonathan Zittrain on how the web promotes surprising acts of generosity

William Kamkwamba reveals how the windmill he hand-built as a boy has changed his life

Willard Wigan explains how he makes sculptures that fit inside the eye of a needle.

Dan Pink punctures the notion that financial incentives promote creativity

- Musician Imogen Heap performs a gorgeous new song self-accompanied on piano

James Balog uses time lapse photography to spectacularly depict vanishing glaciers

Tim Brown says we're not thinking big enough about design

- Charismatic architect Bjarke Ingels gives a thrilling tour of his recent work

- Former child soldier Emmanuel Jal brings the audience to its feet with his rap for peace

Eric Giler demos the enticing arrival of wireless electricity

Rebecca Saxe brilliantly depicts the brain science behind moral imagination

Carolyn Steel on how food has shaped the design of cities

- Economist Paul Romer says Guantanamo could be the next Hong Kong

- Inventor Michael Pritchard conjures pure water from sewage -- live on stage

- Ad man Rory Sutherland on real vs perceived value (posted today! funny!)

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FT.com / Technology - Dyson launches the bladeless electric fan

First there was the bagless vacuum cleaner, then the towel-less hand dryer: Now James Dyson, the British inventor, has developed a bladeless electric fan which goes on sale on Tuesday in the US and Australia.

The Dyson Air Multiplier fan – which looks like something straight out of a sci-fi movie – uses advancements in airflow engineering instead of traditional blades to ‘multiply’ air 15 times and push out 119 gallons of smooth and uninterrupted air every second.

As a result, Dyson claims the bladeless fan, which works by forcing a jet of air out of a narrow circular slit and then over an aerofoil-shaped blade, is at least as efficient as its bladed counterpart, more comfortable and much safer.

Conventional electric fans have gone largely unchanged for years,” notes Mr Dyson. “The fundamental problem has remained the same for more than 125 years – the blades ‘chop’ the air creating an uneven airflow and unpleasant buffeting.”

Dyson

Mr Dyson and his team of fluid dynamics engineers developed the technology behind the bladeless fan after studying the performance of an earlier Dyson invention, the Dyson Airblade commercial hand dryer that uses sheets of clean air travelling at 400mph to dry hands far more quickly and efficiently than rivals.

A team of fluid dynamics engineers spent four years running hundreds of simulations to precisely measure and optimise the machine’s circular aperture and airfoil-shaped ramp before perfecting Dyson’s Air Multiplier technology.

“We realised that this inducement, or amplification, effect could be further enhanced by passing airflow over a ramp,” says Mr Dyson. “And of course this was the point where the idea of a bladeless fan became a real possibility. Here was a way to create turbulent-free air and finally do away with blades.”

The new fan works by drawing air into the base of the machine. The air is forced up into the loop amplifier and accelerated through the 1.3mm annular aperture, creating a jet of air that hugs the airfoil-shaped ramp. While exiting the loop amplifier, the jet pulls air from behind the fan into the airflow (inducement). At the same time, the surrounding air from the front and sides of the machine are forced into the air stream (entrainment), amplifying it 15 times. The result is a constant uninterrupted flow of cooling air.

The Dyson Air Multiplier is powered by an energy efficient brushless motor and air speed can be precisely adjusted with a dimmer switch. It will be available in two sizes, a 10-inch model costing $300 and a 12-inch model costing $330.

via ft.com

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GQ.com relaunched today!

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GQ.com just got a very cheap re-looking. Disappointing!

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Sagmeister by Hilman Curtis

ARTIST SERIES: STEFAN SAGMEISTER '08

A short film on designer Stefan Sagmeister. Shot in 2008 at his "Things I Have Learned in My Life So far" show at NYC's Deitch Gallery. Runtime: 5:08
Watch it here: http://www.hillmancurtis.com/index.php?/film/watch/sagmeister08

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