The Tubewich is a food invention/scheme of mine. I've tried to make one once, but it didn't work out. I think it would improve the convenience of the submarine sandwich quite handsomely
Yet another pretty-convincing business idea. It's all about selling Cat5 cabling AND the adapter-doohickies that click onto the ends of the Cat5's and turn them into RS232, USB and other kinds of cables.
Simgas is an ideal gas simulator. It lets you define a volume of gas and then do pressure, temperature and volume changes to it. One can also add or subtract work or heat and see what it does.
An incendiary title for a book, certainly, but downright fascinating as well. This is Lion and me reading the first couple sections of "What Men Know that Women Don't," a book I've found equally angry and informative.
It's a USB doohickey full of RAM. The computer (via an OS driver) swaps to *it* instead of to the hard disk for the first so-many gigabytes. Cheap speed! (Another scheme from LongshotCity.com)
It's a thingie+service that aggregates 2+ flakey internet connections to "tunnel" a single IP address at a data center. This probably exists already as a product/service, but dangit I just can't figure out how to even SEARCH for it! Help! (Another scheme from LongshotCity.com)
How about a computer that could be reasonably expected to keep working for 20 years, yet also be conventional in terms of programming and administration? There could be very good uses for this, and here's how it could work.
A language-learning scheme that lets you take a picture of something with your iPhone and it comes back to you with "subtitles" added telling you just what the picture is of.
This is a thirty-second demo of the "FlyMill," which is the result of my 15 YEARS of trying to figure out how to generate renewable electricity for 2-3 cents / kw-hr. (Part of my Google 10tothe100th competition application.)