Top Most Shocking Modern Technological Invensions That Majority Of The World Are Not Aware Of

 There’s no doubt that technology has transformed and improved our lives for the good ad majority of us can’t live without our smartphones - but there are other weird and amazing technological trends out there that the world might not quite be ready for yet.

Here are some of the world’s most shocking recent inventions and technological creations.

1. Translator earbuds

Google’s Pixel Buds pair with the Pixel smartphone and use Google Translate to translate languages in real time. This invention could remove language barriers and make travelling - and doing business with other cultures – much easier. With these earbuds, someone could be standing in front of you speaking French, and the earbuds will feed you the English translation. You can then hold down your right earbud and speak in English, and your phone will project the French translation from the Pixel's speaker, so the other person can hear. The earbuds can translate 40 different languages!


2. A private conversational headset

 

Dont want anyone listening in to your top-secret conversations? Enter Hushme. This Bluetooth headset muffles your voice to keep conversations private. It’s a ‘personal acoustic device that protects speech privacy when speaking on the phone in open space offices and public places’. But how necessary is it? It’s certainly entertaining, with masking sounds like ‘squirrel’ and ‘Darth Vader’. Imagine Darth Vader’s breathing filling your office! We think this technology was made for fun rather than secret missions…

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3. A whistle that sends virtual SOS signals

This little device could just put your parents’ minds at ease when you go travelling. Using GPS tracking and Bluetooth technology, the Geko Smart Whistle links with an app to alert your selected contacts of your whereabouts. If you find yourself in danger, just blow on the mouthpiece or press on your Smart Whistle’s button for two seconds to activate an SOS alert. It’s a discrete device that you can clip to your bag, and has the potential to save people from dangerous situations.


4. A bed that gives you the sweetest dreams

We spend one third of our lives asleep, so it makes sense to invest in your mattress. This technology takes a good night’s sleep to new levels. The Sleep Number 360 smart bed uses ‘responsive air technology’ to sense your movements and automatically adjusts its firmness and support so you can enjoy ultimate comfort as you sleep.


 

5. Clever cooking utensils

Imagine if sticking to a healthy eating plan was as simple as the pan you use to cook your food in. The Smartypan has inbuilt weights to measure how much you’re cooking, and uses temperature sensors to cook your dinner precisely. The handle’s lights glow red when you’ve got the temperature too high and step-by-step cooking instructions appear on the app as you cook. But here’s the really useful bit: the app calculates the nutrition of your meal as you cook in the pan.



 

6. A very smart toothbrush

There are other smart toothbrushes on the market, but none quite like this one. The Onvi Prophix uses an app to show you photos and live video of the inside of your mouth as you brush your teeth, using a 10-megapixel camera that’s built into the brush itself. The app gives you tips for improving your brushing technique and lets you take pictures too, so you can show any oral issues to your dentist.

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7. Refrigerator content tracking

Don’t you hate it when you’re in the supermarket but you can’t remember what you’re there for? The Smarter FridgeCam allows you to see the inside of your fridge through your smartphone, so you can stock up on anything you’re out of without overbuying. The technology also adds expired or used fridge items to your personal shopping list. It works by taking a picture of your fridge’s contents every time you close the door, and is a great way to save on food waste.


8. Doggy cams

Forget nanny cams – the millennial version lets you keep an eye on your pets when you’re not home via your smartphone. Furbo stands out because it not only lets you see your pet, but you can also dispense actual real-life treats to them from wherever you are, all via your phone! It has a two-way radio that lets you talk to your pet, too, and sends notifications when it senses barking


9: Google Glass

Google Glass, the high-tech specs with a built-in camera and pop-up display, turns the idea of Big Brother on its head. Maybe the surveillance menace of the future won't be a fascist regime with spy cameras on every corner, but rather an army of geeks recording every waking moment of their lives with a nod of the head and the wink of an eye.

Aside from the inherent dorkiness of Glass, privacy is the biggest concern with the search giant's latest foray into world domination. What's to stop a Glasshead from turning on his camera in the subway, the doctor's office or the gym locker room? Several U.S. casinos, bars and movie theaters have already banned Glass [source: Stern]. Google says that Glass isn't that creepy. For example, a small light indicates when video is being recorded and Glass wearers have to look at a subject and wink to take a picture. Yeah, that's not creepy at all.

Another scary prospect is the combination of Glass, social media and facial recognition technology. Some app developers are excited about the prospect of a Glass app that can recognize a stranger's face and pull up information about the person scoured from their Facebook and LinkedIn pages [source: Bloomberg View]. While Google rejects the idea of facial recognition on Glass, the company has patented eye-tracking technology that would record what ads you look at in the real world and charge fees to advertisers on a "pay-per-gaze" basis [source: Rieland].

While we're on the subject of scary surveillance, let's take to the skies.



10: 3–D printers



The MakerBot Replicator 2 offers the remarkable ability to print out a 3-D plastic model of just about anything you can imagine: a child's toy, a gear for a wind turbine, or a perfectly rendered model of your own butt. Desktop 3-D printing is undoubtedly a great leap forward for small-scale manufacturing, but it's also a potential boon for thieves and low-budget terrorists.

In 2011, an enterprising gang of crooks used a 3-D printer to replicate the plastic front of an ATM terminal. By placing their fake terminal on top of a real cash machine, they were able to skim unsuspecting victims' ATM cards and steal more than $400,000 from their accounts [source: Krebs].

But the real scary prospect is terrorists or fringe groups using 3-D printers to build guns, bombs and other weapons with nothing more than downloadable files. In 2013, a University of Texas law student Cody Wilson announced the creation of the Liberator, a fully functional .380 caliber handgun made entirely on a 3-D printer. The fact that it was plastic raised the fright factor, since it could conceivably elude metal detectors [source: Greenberg]. Wilson summed up the threat nicely to Forbes magazine: "Anywhere there's a computer and an Internet connection, there would be the promise of a gun."

Thanks, Cody! While we're on the topic of really great ideas with potentially horrible consequences, let's talk driverless cars.


11: Self driving Cars


A bicyclist rides by a Google self-driving car at the Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. in 2012. JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES

Worldwide, roughly 1.3 million people are killed in car accidents each year [source: Khazan]. And then there's the evil of traffic itself; the American commuter is trapped in his or her car for an average of 38 hours each year [source: Werbach]. That's a full week of lost productivity!

Enter the Google self-driving car, an autonomous vehicle that promises to steer clear of accidents and keep traffic flowing smoothly via algorithm. Powered by Google Chauffeur software, the car uses GPS and a rooftop scanner to stay on course and respond to nearby vehicles. As of 2013, the car was still in its beta testing phase, but dozens of robotic cars were already on the road in California and Nevada.

One of the biggest concerns about driverless cars isn't a software glitch, but the awkward transition from robot mode to human mode. The soothing voice of Google Chauffeur alerts its human driver of upcoming situations that require hands-on control, like a tricky merge or a tollbooth [source: Fisher]. But Google engineers are still working out how much warning time is needed before the hand-off, or what to do if the driver has done something understandably human like doze off [source: Bosker]. No one wants to wake up behind the wheel of an SUV barreling down on a tollbooth at 65 mph (105 kph). And even fewer people want to be in that tollbooth.


12: Geoengineering



The most important engineering innovations of the industrial age — motorized vehicles, electricity generation and industrial manufacturing — are the greatest sources of CO2 emissions [source: EPA]. Since world leaders appear unwilling or unable to take meaningful action to reduce greenhouse emissions, some maverick scientists are proposing a risky solution called geoengineering.

Geoengineering uses science and technology to "hack" the planet back into shape. Since global warming is the biggest threat, scientists are proposing creatively creepy (and very expensive) ways to artificially cool the atmosphere by either blocking the sun's rays or sucking up excess CO2. Among them [sources: Bullis, Kintisch and Madrigal]:

Spraying chemical aerosols like sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere to bounce a fraction of sunlight back into space

Pouring iron into the ocean to spur algae blooms that consume CO2

Spraying a mist of seawater into low-lying clouds to make them brighter, reflecting more sunlight

Planting forests of artificial trees that use chemical reactions to absorb and store CO2

Even geoengineering promoters warn of unintended side effects. Out-of-control it could advance massive dead zones in the ocean; one nation's seawater spray could cause monsoons halfway around the world; it can causedamage to natural habitats and human life. Geoengineers argue there's just as much danger in doing nothing. By researching these techniques now, at least we'll have some hard data when it's time to push the panic button.

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