Bob Roohparvar tells a killer story of industrial espionage. He says the robbery occurred last October at his Batteroo office space in a sprawling Silicon Valley office park. The target was ...
When you throw out your disposable AAs because your remote stopped working, they actually still had about 80% of their power remaining. A new $2.50 battery sleeve called the Batteriser, coming to ...
It’s not on Kickstarter yet, but this product is already making its media debut, with features in all the tech blogs, an astonishing amount of print outlets, and spouted from the gaping maws of easily ...
This tiny new $2.50 gadget could revolutionize the battery industry, save consumers millions, and make a big dent in the amount of junk dumped in landfills each year. Emphasis on the word could. Ahead ...
My mid-August post on the Batteriser ended up being one of my most popular writeups in recent memory, as measured by comment traffic. The bulk of the commenters' observations were skeptical of ...
A small, steel-and-silicon sleeve designed to slip over standard alkaline batteries promises to let those disposable cells run up to eight times longer, saving consumers money and frustration. The ...
It sounds too good to be true, but a new $2.50 gadget promises to bring your AA and C batteries back from the dead. The Batteriser “extends the life of your batteries up to 8x,” the company says on ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. How could we forget those baloney billboards from the Advanced Medical Institute which preyed upon men's sexual insecurities with the ...
Luke has been touching up tech, and writing, for over a decade across FHM, Stuff, T3 and Shortlist to name a few. With an MA and NCTJs in journalism and an unquenchable love of gadgets, no tech ...
Rechargeable batteries are great in theory. You never run out of batteries, because they're always there, ready to be juiced up and used again. In theory. And though they're more expensive to buy, you ...
Disposable alkaline batteries are a staple of modern life. Take a stroll through your house and do a quick count — between all the TV/stereo remotes, game controllers, flashlights, and wireless ...