James Dyson Awards
-
Open Bionics, with support from Disney Accelerator, transforms prostheses that kids would rather hide into those that Iron Man or Frozen's Elsa would wear. The company says that for kids it transforms being different into being cool.
-
James Roberts, a 23 year-old design grad from Britain's Loughborough University, has won this year's international James Dyson Award for his portable inflatable incubator. Read on for more details on it, along with the three runners-up.
-
A couple of engineering students at the University of Toronto have created the PrintAlive, a 3D printer that produces skin grafts for burn victims on demand, potentially putting an end to harvesting a person's own body for healthy skin.
-
TipTapTop teaches kids how to wash their hands in a hygienic manner, without wasting water - and trying to make it as fun as possible. The 3D-printed TipTapTop might end up being an incredibly annoying thing to have in your bathroom, but the way it goes about its job is quite clever.
-
A US team from the University of Pennsylvania has taken out the 2013 James Dyson Award with the Titan Arm, an upper body exoskeleton that augments human strength. The team will receive the £30,000 (US$48,260) first prize, with an additional £10,000 (US$16,100) for their university.
-
This year, James Dyson has 20 finalists from which to select the 2013 James Dyson Award winner. And like previous years, it looks like being no easy task. Here are the entries still in the running for the first place prize that has been upped to £30,000 (US$48,500) for 2013.
-
The 2013 James Dyson Award is now accepting submissions for students to stake their claim for the prize that has been upped to £30,000 (US$45,900).
-
The AirGo concept aims to make seats less expensive, easier to maintain and as comfortable as those up in First Class.
-
Dan Watson has taken out the 2012 James Dyson Award with his SafetyNet system that lets juvenile and non-target fish escape commercial fishing nets.
-
We take a look at the 15 projects still in the running to claim a slice of the £20,000+ (US$32,385+) prize pool up for grabs in the 2012 James Dyson Award.
-
Australian student Kieran John's entry in the 2012 John Dyson Awards is the Crawl, a pneumatically powered motorized platform designed to improve the efficiency of power line installation and servicing.
-
Design students from 18 countries are being called upon to enter the 2012 James Dyson Award.
Load More