This idea was formed while still in California, where finding public restrooms can be a challenge. There are apps now that help you find toilets. My notion, however, was to link the app to a cleaning service. Another piece of the puzzle is that many facilities aren't open to the public because the owners don't want to worry about keeping the facilities clean. If the app is linked to a cleaning service, more places formerly private might be made public, potentially with a discount on cleaning for participation. Also, users could report cleaning problems through the app and/or potentially upgrade their app to list additional facilities. Also owners could report users who created problems and get them removed or blocked. (advanced - app might even be used to unlock facility doors or charge a fee for some facilities).
Inventions I'd like to see
I'm always coming up with ideas - sometimes they are later brought to reality by someone with more skills than myself. So I will write these things down so that if they come to pass, I can say, "I thought of that, back in..." Of course, ideas I might bring to reality myself will be kept top secret until they are unleashed upon the world.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
Public Toilet
Friday, August 22, 2014
Public transit
If people could be guaranteed a 2.5' bubble of personal space, all forms of public transit would be more popular.
Sunday, June 1, 2014
First clinical rotation in nursing
Due to lack of employment opportunities in Australia, I've started nursing school. In my first rotation in a hospital ward, these are the two inventions I'd like to see further developed and integrated into practice:
1. Bed scales. Unfortunately, the ones at this link only measure to the nearest pound. Nurses spend time measuring fluid balance of patients - critical to keep track of the fluids going in and coming out. A more precise measuring system could take some of the work out of tracking patient fluid balance. I found some other more sophisticated beds online - but they're designed for ICU patients with other very expensive features.
2. Video monitoring. This development is awesome and implementation simple. The patient gets a screen with a camera like most computers now have standard. Video processing can monitor the patient's pulse and breath rate. The patient can also use the camera to video-chat with relatives or the front nursing desk. Rather than occasional monitoring of vital signs, the camera system continuously monitors vitals and flags irregularities for investigation. Of course, for patients whose condition is not so critical, they can turn off video monitoring for privacy. They'll forget to turn it back on, so there will be a timer function, perhaps with an alert. If the patient doesn't respond, the camera goes back on. (see video)
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Motorcycle practicality
A Mediterranean (or desert) climate makes motorcycles much more practical - you only have to worry about the *possibility* of rain less than six months of the year. Someone needs to invent vehicles as small and fun as motorcycles that offer more weather protection.
Monday, September 23, 2013
Controlled Burns
While historical tribes used controlled burns, from the dawn of the industrial age, natural fires have been seen as something to prevent until very recently. It's only been in the past 20 years or so that controlled burning has been seen as a way both to prevent larger out-of-control fires, and also as necessary for the survival of certain plants that only reproduce after fire cycles.
In this regard, our controlled burns are both inadequate - insufficient in scope to prevent major fires - and primitive. We wait for the weather to be just right, and even then fires sometimes get out of control, or at minimum, create more smoke to surrounding urban areas than is desirable. Given a warming climate and more frequent, large fires, it's time for radical improvement in controlled burning.
Fire is rapid oxidation - so there's that option, though tanks of oxygen and an artificial process using oxygen might not create the sustained heat necessary for the reproduction of certain plants. I think the answer lies somewhere between more effective backburning, burning off alternating strips, and technology to both promote and extinguish fire on-site.
In some areas, the plant life produces volatile oils and fumes that rapidly combust - perhaps some sort of curtaining material could burn off patches while containing the fire to prevent spread - and potentially also a large device to capture smoke and filter it (a giant "bong" mechanism? Sorry - the notion makes the idea less serious, but a device to capture smoke and vapors coming off the controlled burn patch would be great). Another idea is to lay down a line of heat-labile material that will "explode" releasing smothering gasses once the fire reaches a certain boundary. It would be necessary to do small patches to prevent heat from leap-frogging the boundaries, but this might be more useful near urban zones, where flammable material is most dangerous, yet also most in need of being rendered benign.
I'm also imagining a large box that is just set down on grassy areas, like a BBQ lid - combusts the grass, contains the sparks, and extinguishes it once oxygen is depleted. Perhaps the "box" could be flame-proof tenting material. I'm just brainstorming here, but clearly more thought needs to go into controlled burning than just setting things on fire and creating a back-burn boundary, letting the smoke cover miles with haze, or the alternative of doing nothing, then reacting to the emergency conflagration that results.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Kitchen inventory
Problem: a) the amount of time spent digging in a refrigerator to figure out what's hidden in there b) items forgotten in the bottom bin c) amount of food wasted due to spoilage.
Answer: An app?? No one wants to spend the time actually logging in stuff, and logging it out when it's eaten. But there *is* a point when each item is individually scanned - at the cash register. What would be nice is if there were a universally recognized data code - not only would the cash register ring up your purchases, but also provide you with nutritional information and suggested expiration dates. Having the data in a portable format could help you track how much you're spending on what types of food and alert you when something is due for expiration. Of course, you should be able to override a manufacturer's suggestion that the peanut butter should be eaten within two weeks, and you keep it at room temp for a month, or in the refrigerator for a year. Alerts on expiring products would either be deleted (we ate that) or re-dated (that's still ok, in spite of manufacturer's suggestion). Can your refrigerator talk to your phone and tell you someone else has eaten all the turkey, so you don't have to search the fridge trying to find it? Rather than searching through the fridge and cupboards, just look at the snack menu on your phone.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Locals only! Pavement
Sydney has a convoluted maze of streets and overloaded main arteries not designed for peak-hour traffic loads. This overload results in cars cutting through neighborhood streets. It's not a huge problem when the drivers are respectful, but often it's the jerk who can't wait in line with everyone else - the one with the loud obnoxious engine who races through the quiet street. Rather than blocking off the street, the goal is to control speeds on it. In this respect, wavy pavement might do the trick - with undulations alternating for each tire track! Not the height of speed bumps, but a continuous, slight undulation in the surface that becomes more noticeable at greater speed. On the side, a smooth bicycle lane to facilitate human powered travelers. Either this, or simply make the pavement corrugated, like a rumble strip; except for the bike lane. This would present a visual indicator to drivers that the street is primarily for locals, and slow-speed traffic has the right-of-way. Speed bumps work somewhat, but the tendency is to race up to them, brake, and race away.