Sony to Launch New Wearable Cooling Device

 The Sony logo is seen at company headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters
The Sony logo is seen at company headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters
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Sony to Launch New Wearable Cooling Device

 The Sony logo is seen at company headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters
The Sony logo is seen at company headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters

The recurrent climate changes around the world have urged inventors to create easy and sustainable solutions to help face both hot and cold temperatures.

In early 2020, Sony plans to launch a wearable cooling device that, according to the company, is a lightweight gadget that slides into the upper back pocket of a specially designed t-shirt, which allows its wearer to use it during summer and winter.

A report published by the Tech Xplore website said the device connects to the wearer's smartphone to adjust the temperature via a Bluetooth connection through an app available for Android and iOS. Users can increase the temperature during cold weathers, or reduce it during extreme heat.

As many regions in the world suffer from unprecedented hot temperatures, mainly Europe and the Gulf, Sony officials said: "The credit card-like pocket device will be able to cool a user's body temperature by 13 degrees Celsius or raise it by about eight degrees."

The new device adopts the Peltier effect, a dynamic thermal method discovered by the French scientist Jean Peltier. This effect, which is widely used in cooling systems, creates an electric current that flows between two metals and transfer the heat from a metal to another, to obtain a hot side and a cold one. The Peltier effect is adopted by many cooling units used in electronic devices.

The report cited Stephen Johnson, a columnist specializing in technology news, who reviewed the device's details and some of its features, saying the wearable device is equipped with a 24-hour battery that require two hours of charging. It also includes a USB-C port that is compatible with many devices of different sizes.

"The device weighs 85 grams, so the wearer won't feel any additional load in his shirt, and people won't notice it."

Speaking about the connection between the device and the specially designed shirt that includes an upper rear pocket, and the fact that it is hard to suit people of different sizes, the report explains that "the company plans to produce shirts of different sizes (small, medium, large).

The shirt will be sold for about $130.



Mystery of North Sea Message in a Bottle Solved After 47 Years

The mystery of a North Sea message in a bottle found on a Swedish island after 47 years has been resolved. Photo: Getty images
The mystery of a North Sea message in a bottle found on a Swedish island after 47 years has been resolved. Photo: Getty images
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Mystery of North Sea Message in a Bottle Solved After 47 Years

The mystery of a North Sea message in a bottle found on a Swedish island after 47 years has been resolved. Photo: Getty images
The mystery of a North Sea message in a bottle found on a Swedish island after 47 years has been resolved. Photo: Getty images

The mystery of a North Sea message in a bottle found on a Swedish island after 47 years has been solved by BBC Scotland News.

Friends Ellinor Rosen Eriksson and Asa Nilsson found the bottle on Sweden's west coast back in February.

Inside was a damp note that was almost unreadable. They laid it out in the sun to dry, and were eventually able to make out some text. The full date appeared to be: “14.9.78.”
The two friends posted about it on social media in the hope of learning more.

It has now been established the letter referred to fisherman James Addison Runcie who had been on board the fishing boat Loraley, but who died in 1995. It was written by his then crewmate Gavin Geddes - who was amazed to be told it had been found 47 years after they dropped it overboard.

Runcie's sister Sandra Taylor, 83, happened to be visiting Cullen where she is originally from, and was stunned to be told the story behind the find in Sweden.

“It's absolutely amazing,” she said.

Asked what she thought her older brother would have made of it all, she said: “He would have been in stitches, he would find it hard to believe.”

She added: “He would have poured out a dram and said 'cheers'.”

Ellinor said they were “completely amazed” to find a “real message in a bottle,” and hoped to discover the story behind it.

“Where I live, we call this activity vraga - it means going out to find something lost or hidden, and to uncover its story. And that's exactly what we've done here, with your amazing help,” she said.

The two finders in Sweden said it was “fantastic” the mystery of the source had been solved, and Jim's sister described the story unfolding as “amazing.”