The Future of Alternative Energy-Powered Gadgets

The folks behind last months Greener Gadgets conference have put together an edited video clip of the panel Earth2Tech organized, which included execs of several startups that are selling mobile devices powered by alternative sources of energy. The panel included kinetic power startup M2E Power, hand-held wind generator Hymini, mobile solar power from Solio, a new lithium ion battery for laptops from Boston Power, and fuel cell company MTI Micro. (The show was organized by Inhabitat Editor and my own lovely sister Jill Fehrenbacher). Have a look-see:

 
Comments & Trackbacks

Excellent information. Here is something interesting I found while browsing.
Samsung to do Fuel Cell Powered Cellphones

There’s been a lot of speculation surrounding the use of fuel cells to power electronic gadgets, but no one of the major cellphone makers have stepped forward and said “We’re developing a fuel cell powered cellular phone” until yesterday’s announcement by Samsung.
From the Businessweek.com article:
The South Korean outfit is backing a project to build handsets

Paul Dodd said on March 20th, 2008 at 4:17 pm

Green energy is definitely the best solution in most cases. Technology like solar energy, wind power, fuel cells, zaps electric vehicles, EV hybrids, etc have come so far recently. Green energy even costs way less than oil and gas in many cases.

Web said on March 21st, 2008 at 12:31 pm

I came across your site while I did a search on Google for best company marketing network and your article on ure of Alternative Energy-Powered Gadgets « Earth2Tech was informative.

Best Company Marketing Network said on August 7th, 2008 at 6:55 pm

[...] cord? Well, that’s still a problem. While some innovators are working on better batteries and alternative power sources, such as methanol fuel cells and motion, investing in expensive power sources without paying [...]

Leave a reply
Recent Posts | Popular Posts
Recent Comments
© 2008 Giga Omni Media, Inc. Powered by WordPress.com. Marketing consulting by ACS. Design by RareEdge Design Group.
Email This Post
  or cancel