This desktop toy is literally a Stairway To Heaven!

The Uplift, made to sit on your desk, was designed to occupy little physical space but a lot of attention. Mounted on a magnetically powered axle, this wooden spiral spins continuously in a soothing fashion, in the hopes of pulling your eyes away from screens and displays, and to something that’s more physical and relaxing. The Uplift is the literal embodiment of the phrase “watching this on loop”.

Titled the Uplift, the spiraling wooden structure was made to calm and uplift one’s spirits. Made to move either clockwise or anti-clockwise, the spiral can either rotate upwards or downwards. Designer Tom Lawton says “There isn’t really a wrong or a right way. Steam rises, whirlwinds and smoke flow upwards — molten lava, waterfalls and whirlpools flow down”. Powered by magnets at the base (and with a ‘magnetic wand’ that helps initiate the rotation), the Uplift spins quietly, and for long lengths of time, thanks to its ‘solar engine’- a cleverly designed contact-less rotary drive system that has little to no inertia. The entire sculpture is encased in a glass dome, giving it a personality that feels almost precious and untouched, while making sure external elements like the wind don’t break the Uplift’s hypnotic spinning action!

Designer: Tom Lawton

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Kid Solves Rubik’s Cube While on His Head, Spinning

This kid is crazy. Crazy awesome. Check out this video of 15-year old Justin Stomp solving a Rubik’s Cube while spinning on his head. I know, crazy. I can’t do either of those things and this kid is doing both at the same time. If solving the Rubik’s cube was an Olympic sport, I think it would looks something like this.

rubiks_cube_kid_1zoom in


I can’t even solve a Rubik’s Cube sitting still in a chair. The joke’s on him though. I bet the top of his head is pretty flat by now, whereas mine is nice and round. He’s probably rubbed himself bald too. I hope it was worth it kid. I have plenty of hair.

No, seriously this kid is pretty awesome. I’m just jealous.

[via Geekologie]

Kid Solves Rubik’s Cube While on His Head, Spinning

This kid is crazy. Crazy awesome. Check out this video of 15-year old Justin Stomp solving a Rubik’s Cube while spinning on his head. I know, crazy. I can’t do either of those things and this kid is doing both at the same time. If solving the Rubik’s cube was an Olympic sport, I think it would looks something like this.

rubiks_cube_kid_1zoom in


I can’t even solve a Rubik’s Cube sitting still in a chair. The joke’s on him though. I bet the top of his head is pretty flat by now, whereas mine is nice and round. He’s probably rubbed himself bald too. I hope it was worth it kid. I have plenty of hair.

No, seriously this kid is pretty awesome. I’m just jealous.

[via Geekologie]

Peloton’s Android-powered static bike lets you spin from home (video)

Pelotons Androidpowered static bike lets you spin from home video

Here's some gear that'll ensure you'll never again have to fight for space in that hyper-competitive spin class. The Peloton Bike is two grand's worth of static bike that's designed to bring the gym experience to your home with a number of innovative touches. First up, the Android 4.1-running unit is controlled by a 1.5GHz TI OMAP 4470 with 1GB of RAM and 16GB storage with 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, ANT+, Bluetooth 4.0 and Ethernet. It's connected to a 21.5-inch 1080p multitouch display, which'll let you stream classes from Peloton's NYC studio live and on-demand. The display also holds a webcam and microphone, so you can still swear at your friends / the instructor as if you were there in real life.

Secondly, the New York design house has abandoned the bike chain -- replacing it with a belt drive that'll prevent your training getting too noisy, and a magnetic resistance system to reduce wear and tear on the flywheel. The company has taken to Kickstarter to raise funds for the initial production run, requesting $250,000 before it can release the hardware. Pre-ordering now means that you can get the bike for $1,700 with a year's worth of subscription to the spin classes, after which point will cost you $40 a month. Interested in learning more? There's a video after the break.

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Source: Kickstarter