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Future Product
Future Product
A direct-to-machine Nespresso delivery system
Future Product
A watch with built-in earplugs
Future Product
A phone with built-in earplugs
Future Product
A retro Macbook
Future Product
4 times faster at the same fuel cost
Future Product
A slipper that picks up Lego bricks
Future Product
A whiteboard robot
Future Product
A self-driving mailbox
Story
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Future Product
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Experiment
Augmenting the user’s skills, not just their reality
Breaking the rules of AR in five demos, accidentally scaring people on the internet — code included
Future Product
AR-ready furniture
Future Product
A painting of a wing-less airplane in Copenhagen
Future Product
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Story
A voice speaker for train stations
Future Product
Alexa for the introverted
Future Product
A bike path that cuts straight through a mall
Future Product
An elevator you can bribe
Future Product
A GPS bagpack that steers its human
Future Product
An airport that loads passengers like human cargo
How to speed up airplane boarding by at least 10 times.
Future Product
A self-driving office chair
Future Product
A brainstorming facility with lots of dirty dishes
Future Product
An immersive VR game that navigates you to a real place
Future Product
A projector drone that follows its user
Future Product
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Story
Your UI is your product’s humble compensation for not being telepathic
Take a few products and keep asking “what is this compensating for?” and you’ll eventually end up with the same answer. And that answer may be why conversational interfaces could get in trouble
Future Product
A fast-food restaurant with exit treadmills
Future Product
A drive-behind movie theater
Future Product
A self-driving hot dog stand
Future Product
A self-driving recreational vehicle
Future Product
An app that makes your phone worse as you gain weight
Future Product
A wall clock with an extra set of hands
Future Product
A pet video phone
Future Product
How to teleport a printer across the Atlantic
Future Product
How a remote control with just one button could make your TV great again
Yes, just one, big, nice button. The manual would say one thing: “Press the button”. Here’s how it could work.
Future Product
Searching the real world in real time
Future Product
Using the phone as a highlighter pen
Future Product
A headlight projector
Future Product
A parked car projector
Future Product
An app that lets you share photos of songs
Future Product
A camera that lets you do stuff without lifting your finger
Future Product
Nutrition Facts for printers
It's too easy to buy something that is hard to use. The food industry has a solution.
Future Product
An app that measures how boring a movie is
Future Product
An app that talks to robots on the phone
Future Product
Using the elevator will make you miss your meeting
Future Product
Running together, in separate countries
Future Product
Pack once, travel many
Future Product
Navigation by following
Future Product
Talk radio with music
Future Product
Broadcasting any track for free
Future Product
Ringing voices, not tones
Future Product
Remote help on non-desktop devices
Experiment
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Future Product
The worn interface
In the real world, we can se traces of how other people use things around us. Here's why we should be able to do that in software, too.