this shit is really really coolhttp://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,354735,00.html
8/9/2008 3:25:47 PM
Is Don Henley bald now?
8/9/2008 3:32:49 PM
im predicting knockoff versions that dont do shit and end up killing people
8/9/2008 3:49:59 PM
i'm surprised this wasn't named the iBottle.
8/9/2008 3:59:18 PM
^ if it did, they'd have to put genius bars in third world countries.plus the things would overheat and break all the time, but the users would still covet them.
8/9/2008 11:02:22 PM
awesome<3
8/9/2008 11:06:11 PM
8/10/2008 2:01:44 PM
haha harlot is a great word
8/10/2008 2:17:10 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloth_filter
8/10/2008 3:07:05 PM
I think people were selling these on the brickyard, or they were raising money to ship them...
8/10/2008 3:44:19 PM
9/21/2008 9:09:03 PM
Yeah, but if the options are no clean drinking water or pumping a few times to have sanitary water, pumping seems trivial. This is a great idea.
9/21/2008 9:17:17 PM
but the ceramic backpacking filters have been around for years. they're almost exactly like the Lifesaver except for the filter material. Why aren't people already using them? Maybe it's a money/distribution problem.I'm just saying that a portable water filter isn't a new invention. Did the Army just find out about water filters? Here's the MSR Miniworks, a ceramic filter that's been around a while and that I used on the Appalachian Trail ]
9/21/2008 10:46:26 PM
9/21/2008 10:54:16 PM
if it breaks theyre just back to where they started, at least we tried
9/21/2008 10:57:21 PM
It sounds like an improvement on existing filter technology, but it probably costs $son_of_a_bitch. Probably why it's being pushed as a more awesome military tool than anything else.
9/21/2008 10:58:55 PM
does this mean i can pee in it?
9/21/2008 11:01:06 PM
Hell yes you can pee in it. You can even pee on it.
9/21/2008 11:02:50 PM
ceramics remove particulates, bacteria, and amoebas but not viruses. But that's waaaaaay better than nothing. If people really cared about cleaning the water in 3rd world countries, they'd have ceramic filters by now.And I don't believe that "20 seconds" figure. They probably mean it only takes 20 seconds to fill the bottle. The pumping takes longer. There's no way on earth that you can pump water more quickly through a filter with smaller holes. The Miniworks also stops filtering when it's clogged, same as the Lifesaver. ]
9/21/2008 11:08:37 PM
these things are 200 bucksi'm gettin one
9/21/2008 11:11:49 PM
so the hitch here is that it's just not very... interesting? if it ran on like, radar, would that make it more workable
9/22/2008 2:05:29 AM
I'd use those ceramic filters then plop in some chlorine tablets. I'd use flavored powder to mask the taste. I did that a lot in boy scouts.
9/22/2008 2:24:26 AM
9/22/2008 2:31:24 AM
I think the initial pumping starts the suction action, kind of like a water tower where it's gravity fed. At least that's the principle that I'm thinking on how it works.
9/22/2008 2:36:10 AM
15 nanometers? I'd say that's a little smaller than "microscopic" If I'm thinking right, then the process to make these nanopores isn't very expensive at all. During my REU we would make nano-porous aluminum pretty easily. Getting the process to a lower cost than 200 shouldn't be that far off.
9/22/2008 2:39:40 AM