Read how you can fix air conditioning and heating devices on your dress , no more cold or heat

Sony startup unveils tiny AC unit that fits inside your shirt It can supposedly cool you down by 23 degrees Fahrenheit. STEPHEN JOHNSON 25 July, 2019 First Flight Sony / Reon Pocket The Reon Pocket is a Bluetooth device that fits inside your shirt. A Sony-affiliated startup recently launched a crowdfunding campaign to develop the device. Currently marketed toward businessmen who wear suits, the designers hope to offer the Reon Pocket to more types of customers in the future. Looking to take the comfort of your air conditioning with you when stepping out into the summer heat? A Sony-affiliated startup has launched a crowdfunding campaign for a product designed to do just that — a wearable air conditioning and heating unit that fits right inside your shirt. The Reon Pocket is a Bluetooth device that's about the size of a small wallet, and it's designed to be worn with a special silicon-material shirt that holds the device in place, on the back just below the neck. The project leaders say the Reon Pocket can cool down a wearer by 23 degrees Fahrenheit, and warm them by 14 degrees Fahrenheit. Currently available in Japan only, the device comes in two versions: the Reon Pocket Standard and Reon Pocket Lite. The main difference is that the Standard has Apple- and Android-supported Bluetooth; the Lite version must be operated manually. Prices range from about $117 to $175, depending on the package. The project leaders say its main audience is businessmen who want to stay cool when commuting to and from work. In other words, it's not yet meant for all-day use, considering the device takes about two hours to charge but has a battery life of about 90 minutes. Yoichi Ito, a project lead on Reon Pocket, wrote in a blog post (in Japanese): "As a trend in the world, people are focusing on 'functionality' and 'comfort,'" he wrote. "For example, in winter, light and warm down jackets are popular in winter, and more and more people are combining their feet with sneakers for comfort. Therefore, in the summer of 2017, when we considered the fusion of 'fashion and technology.'" The Reon Pocket uses thermoelectric cooling and heating technology, an approach that utilizes the Peltier effect — which describes heating or cooling that occurs when a current is made to flow through a junction between two different kinds of conductors. It's not the first piece of techwear that's promised to heat or cool people on the go. A few recent examples include French label Courrèges' coats with built-in heaters, Eddy Yue's AC vest, and the U.S. Army's nanowire-coated base layers that aim to keep soldiers warm in extremely cold temperatures. Ito suggested that people would use less energy overall if they used portable heating and cooling devices. "In that way, I would like to contribute to the global environment," he wrote. RELATED ARTICLES AROUND THE WEB MIT-developed wearable cooling tech may make air conditioners ... › blö - The World's First Wearable Cooling Device and Diffuser by blo ... › InstantCool: the Wearable AC Unit for Outdoor Use | Indiegogo › fashion technology There are 5 eras in the universe's lifecycle. Right now, we're in the second era. Astronomers find these five chapters to be a handy way of conceiving the universe's incredibly long lifespan. Robby Berman 27 March, 2020 Image based on logarithmic maps of the Universe put together by Princeton University researchers, and images produced by NASA based on observations made by their telescopes and roving spacecraft Image source: Pablo Carlos Budassi We're in the middle, or thereabouts, of the universe's Stelliferous era. If you think there's a lot going on out there now, the first era's drama makes things these days look pretty calm. Scientists attempt to understand the past and present by bringing together the last couple of centuries' major schools of thought. Keep reading astronomy dark matter physics space telescopes universe cosmos Why are octopuses so intelligent? The opening of jars, while impressive and often used to illustrate octopus intelligence, is not their most remarkable ability. Lisa Poncet 11 July, 2021 Photo by Qijin Xu on Unsplash Our last common ancestor with the octopus existed more than 500 million years ago. Keep reading animals biology brain intelligence oceans Say goodbye to air conditioning with new roofing material The guilt-free air conditioning, called "cooling paper," is made from recyclable paper and doesn't use any electricity. Teresa Carey 11 July, 2021 Credit: Chromatograph via Unsplash This article was originally published on our sister site, Freethink. Air conditioning is something you barely notice — until the power goes out, and it no longer works. But what if keeping cool didn't require electricity at all? A scientist has invented a material that reflects the sun's rays off rooftops, and even absorbs heat from homes and buildings and radiates it away. And — get this — it is made from recyclable paper. The essential AC: Air conditioners are in 87% of homes in the United States, costing the homeowner $265 per year, on average. Some homes can easily spend twice that. With global temperatures on the rise, no one is giving up their AC. More people are installing air conditioners than ever before, especially in developing countries where the middle class can finally afford them. 15 years ago, very few people in China's urban regions had air conditioners; now, there are more AC units in China than there are homes. But AC has drawbacks: it's expensive, and it takes a ton of electricity, which usually comes from fossil fuels, causing air pollution and global warming. No electricity required: Yi Zheng, an associate professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at Northeastern University, calls his material "cooling paper." He hopes that people everywhere will wrap their houses in the cooling paper one day, reports Good News Network. In addition to the cooling benefits, the paper doesn't require any electricity, and it is 100% recyclable. The paper can reduce a room's temperature by up to 10 degrees Fahrenheit, making it a radical but effective alternative to today's air conditioners, which consume a lot of power. How to make "cooling paper": I remember making paper as a kid by soaking newsprint, shredding it in the blender, and rolling the slurry flat while pressing out the water. Zheng's technique isn't any more advanced than my 4th-grade science fair project. Except instead of pressing flower petals into his pulp, he mixed it with the material that makes up Teflon. The "porous microstructure of the natural fibers" inside the cooling paper absorbs heat and transfers it away from the house. Zheng even tried recycling his cooling paper to remake a new sheet and found that it didn't lose any cooling power in the process. "I was surprised when I obtained the same result," Zheng said. "We thought there would be maybe 10 percent, 20 percent of loss, but no." climate change energy materials uggets makes

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