The farm bot is actually pretty cool. I might actually think about it when I set my stuff up. I'd need to see how expensive they are though. ah, 4k or so depending on its size. Little pricey, but it'd also depend how big my garden is and how often i'd use it.
Already being tested on 𝙧𝙚𝙖𝙡 farms for 𝙨𝙪𝙥𝙚𝙧-𝙥𝙧𝙚𝙘𝙞𝙨𝙚 seeding, watering, applying pesticides and adding fertilizers, thus reducing the need for all those materials and to reduce inadvertently supplying weeds with the necessities of life. Also limits chemical runoff into streams. The delivery system can be pulled behind a track or drone-based.
That farm bot does sound pretty cool for automating gardening tasks! If you're looking for other innovative home solutions, you might also want to check out the Segway Portable PowerStation Cube Series. It's a versatile and powerful backup power source that can keep your devices running during outdoor adventures or power outages. Definitely worth considering!
From what I heard, of collecting rain water...it was legal in NYS until a few years ago now, for personal/yard/garden+ use only, and not to sell though.
@@levibates Thinking about dangerous eventualities just in case was how I was raised. Hope for the best, plan for the worst. There's a big difference between "This could happen." and "I'm so worried that this is going to happen that I can't sleep." I fall into the first category so I think my mentality is safe.
I can only imagine how much insurance will cost on all these new toys. That goes for the "smart homes" too. Especially for the people (like myself) that can only afford a monthly payment.
Most of these have been in the houses for many years! I used to clean houses on the beach and I was amazed by the tech in these homes.. twenty years later I sit here watching this video like.. 😊
My sister had a version of the whole house vacuum. It was hilarious when it decided to blow instead of suck. Filled every inch of her house with a layer of dirt and dust. They had to leave the house and wait for a disaster/hazmat clean up crew to go through the house and certify it habitable.
I am in my late 50's and my uncle built his house when i was 6. he had a central vac in the garage with outlets in most every room. does not seem to new to me
Yeah, my parents had one 30 years ago in their business. Reduced noise pollution at vacuum location. Easy to install if you are fine working with PVC. The national average cost to install one is about $1,500. (Says Google.) Everything was simple and low maintenance. The vacuum is powerful enough to power the rotating brush attachment without problems as long as you take the hair out periodically. The exhaust is at a different location so it keeps the air cleaner where you are vacuuming. However the bigger the room the bigger the hose you need, thus more weight and bulk. If you don't clean the hose out it gets heavier as dust cakes on. It's unlikely to be hard to clean just something you have to do. As the system ages the plastic attachment parts may get brittle and break easy, but by then you got your value out of it.
I enjoy gadgets as much as the next person but I like REAL gadgets. Unfortuately, your research department is dropping the ball here more and more frequently. I am sure with the staff you have considering the number of videos and views you pull in you can deploy one to verify the products are the real thing. This time you missed the scam that was the Spinx toilet cleaner which is a fradulent product and been dodging it's Kickstarter backers for 3 years as of the time of this posting. Please take research more seriously.
Damn Chanel got called out. Also I highly doubt they give a shit. They are just doing this for views and money. As long as it gets people to click that’s all that matters.
I'm not sure whether or not they care, but I am confident they don't research in depth every creator, inventor, company they are showing products for. Thats just not what they are here for, they want to show products that most people haven't seen, they really aren't promoting any of them, just showing cool stuff and people like this.
Every home and business should install a rain water collection and storage system along with solar panels. Even in areas where rain is infrequent it is crazy to waste the little rain that does fall and waste it. We need to stop planting green lawns and switch to local native plantings around homes. It is crazy to plant lawns and build golf courses in dry desert areas. We waste too much water and electricity.
TS 2:24 I'm handicapped and can't shovel show. This snow melting system would be a life saver. What company is developing it? I would like to follow them. TS 13:05 Love the rainwater system. What company is presented here? Thank you.
Snow melting systems are made by a lot of companies. It's not a new idea. It is however expensive to install since you have to pour new concrete, unless you want to place the mats everywhere. (Which I'm sure have a daisy chain limit and aren't likely meant to be driven on.) However it may be cheaper then hiring a snow removal service in the long run. (Depends on the house layout, snow frequency, average temperature in winter, and who you hire.) Generally what they put in the concrete is a pipe that they circulate an antifreeze liquid in that is heated at a central location. So if you're planning a new driveway, or simply have the money to spend, might as well ask for a quote. If you want to heat your public sidewalk you might need to get permission from your city.
Exactly I literally had a PTSD moment just watching that... My 5 year old deciding to go off one afternoon and be adventures... playing with buttons and such... There should be a 2 by 10 by 8 wrapped in membrane attached under the base of the platform to prevent accidents like that from happening. That way if it shuts down, you could come up and breathe. A sensor instillation would help too.
That city ordinance is total bullshit, and I would say "piss off" as well. What exactly could the issue with collecting rain water even be? In my opinion they should be urging people to be resourceful and lower the demand on the city's water system and thanking you for doing so. (How dare you try to utilize the free water that falls from the sky). My father created trash bins that collected gutter rain water and we used this to top off our pool in the summer because we had a well for water.
Every single new house built in Australia by law must have a minimum of 2000lt rain water tank installed. We have regular bush fires and drought, so we save all we can just in case
Homevac saves energy? Heavily doubted, as the air has to be dragged thru a much longer pipe system, including lots of bends, This is creating a high amount of friction compared to a usual vacuum cleaner with a reasonably short hose length. The longer pipe reduces the suction force and makes the system therefore much less efficient. So please strip the "energy saving" part out, it is simply physically not true. And what about germs and fungus/spores in the pipes? Much higher surface area for something to grow on. You need to clean them out regularly.
I'm a bit confused at the central vacuum system, I have seen these in homes for over 20yrs. Granted they didn't have touch screens and bluetooth, but it's the same thing. There is nothing new about this idea and product.
The pergola for example - what does it cost. This is what's frustrating about most of your videos, you do not mention costs - as IF that does not matter! Not everyone's a millionaire where costs do not matter - perhaps something to consider.
Every single time the data is conveniently displayed in a mobile app, I disregard. Data brokers are making it so your just paying someone to sell every bit of data they can about you.
All secured by technology, until burglars and home invaders brake-in using signal jammers and low tech counter-measure equipment (like casing your home with spy cams and hacking your system, etc).. *It's not even a possibility, it's already happening
So many flaws, the lighting system that is powered by batteries, the security drone system just requires a tarp wrapped over the charging unit, and yes you get an instant alert which only gives the observer the green light when they realize you aint home.
ok if you guys have a product on your page just make sure its real. that toilet washer spinx does not look good. its not even real from what i read in the comments.
A'ight @8:50 the actress has obviously NEVER cleaned a toilet. You don't leave the seat down when you go scrub the bowl because when you lift the soaking wet brush out of the bowl it drips poopy water all over the seat. Actress: What's my motivation? Director: Don't get poopy water on the seat.
Thousand$, but $100US next year, after the Chinese copy the plans and start selling it themselves. Shortsighted American corporations spend millions in R&D, then send it to China to have them manufacture it. The American companies completely disregard the “transfer of technology” clause in their contract - all to make money 𝙩𝙝𝙞𝙨 quarter.
I wouldn't be able to stand listening to that shriek even if it was over my own house. If my neighbor had one, we'd have a conversation. I don't want to go to jail for shooting a drone.
That would put YOU in jail for discharging of a firearm (unless you live in a Red State) or willful destruction of property. YOU do not own the air space above your property. I live very close to an airport flight path; I don’t have the right to shoot at the planes, because they make a lot of noise or 𝙘𝙤𝙪𝙡𝙙 see through my window.
@@itsROMPERS...MIT has come out with a new propeller design that can sneak up behind you (and slap you in the head), or at least a lot quieter than the swarm of angry bees that exist now.
@@sambrusco672 yeah I watched a video on that, wondering if it could result in quieter drones, although when you think about it, that's a double-edged sword: the noise is annoying, but i don't want them so quiet that they can sneak up on me! 😲 It's like all technology: no matter how cool it is you usually wind up regretting it was ever invented.
you meen must that individuals should be self-reliant in dealing with challenges and emergencies without relying solely on external help. means to stay alert and composed, emphasizing the importance of self-sufficiency and proactive problem-solving.
Oh how amazed by your range of tech devices for making life a little more easier as one ages(laugh)! God Be Praised and wishing you the very best of luck in all of your endeavours! Khadeeja Alghali-Rahman (London, UK)👍💪😭🤣🥳🕴️🦔🦌🙉🐾🐞🐓🦃🐌🐎🐐🦋🦗🐡⚓🐑🐔🕊️🤼🦕🐉🐸🐊🦖🐢🌴🏖️🏜️☀️🌜🌛
Its getting annoying to see everything repackaged as "smart" and passed off as "innovative". just water you damn 3'x6' raised bed by hand for fudge sake
I appreciate how you explain this topic clearly. Your passion for your RU-vid channel is evident. Your content has given me some great ideas for potential new videos. I'll be sure to follow your work and share ideas!❤😁
i'm wondering how the security company can tell the difference between a neighbor coming over and a burglar if neither has tried to break into your home yet? Even a neighbor or delivery person might knock on the door which would trigger this alarm (that would be less then 8 inches) 09:33 time in video.
It's amazing how much tech there is for turning lights on and off, when now we have LED bulbs that use so little electricity and last so long you can just leave them on all the time, which deters break-ins better than an alarm system. And you don't have to install an expensive system.
ON THE OTHER HAND, “randomized” lighting within a home makes a burglar wonder. He will probably choose another house! I’ve been doing this for at least 35 years. I had told our neighbor that we would be away for a 3-week family vacation. Upon our return, he asked if I had someone staying at the house while we were gone. He said “Every time I looked across the street, there was a different light on.”
@@sambrusco672 that's good too, but unless your house is a bank, or looks like it has a lot of jewels in it, I kinda doubt many burglars case it for more than a few minutes. I mean, you're not gonna see any changes unless you sit still and watch for a couple hours, and I don't think many burglars have that kind of attention span. Plus they have to think, "the lights haven't changed in awhile, does that mean it's safe to go in?" I think most thieves will have gone on to the dark house next door long before that. Also with lights on, they know that anyone outside can see them through the windows, and any cameras inside can easily get bright clear images of them. So your approach is definitely good, but IMHO, not worth the expense and effort. I'm cheap and lazy! 🤪
+1 from me. This population isn't decreasing. It's increasing 5k per week atm. We aren't leaving, we're being forced out. We're being replaced. This was once paradise.
It was very dumb to show and talk about the hidden hot tub in the yard then immediately show almost a minute montage of strait up in ground pools that are not in anyway related the product