Device uses movement of ions to generate airflow without any moving parts like in iPads and MacBook Air.

  • @[email protected]
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    9519 days ago

    Counterpoint: stop trying to make laptops thinner and implement realistic and functional air cooling

    • socsa
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      7619 days ago

      Passive cooling is generally better for reliability if you can make it work, since all active airflow systems will degrade as dust and hair works into the airflow paths.

      • @[email protected]
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        4319 days ago

        Plus, the two can be used in combination. Improved passive cooling systems will make active cooling better by reducing the need to run the active system all the time, or at least run it at reduced rates, which will make the whole system last longer and reduce maintenance.

    • @[email protected]
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      4319 days ago

      Or we innovate 🤷

      It isn’t a given that every device needs a fan anymore. For example non intel MacBook air.

    • @Agent641
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      1818 days ago

      Make the chassis out of aluminium so the whole bastard is a heatsink.

      • @ultrafastsloth
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        1118 days ago

        Slaps roof of laptop This bastard can cook so many egg omelettes

        • @Feyr
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          618 days ago

          Two eggs and one sausage

      • @mlg
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        018 days ago

        My laptop and older phone has this and it really does help with the added surface area.

        The only issue is if you go full throttle, the section right above the CPU can fry your hand lol.

        Although I only ever reached that temp doing stupid crap like hashing.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      They already do. My thinkpad T14s is incredibly thin, and it can dissipate 400 40 watts of power. My P1 dissipates 160+ watts and it’s also very thin.

    • @[email protected]
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      517 days ago

      Well there’s no shortage of those, and they’re unusually cheaper too (unless they’re specced out). I prefer a thin silent one myself, so I welcome this innovation.

  • @RubberElectrons
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    19 days ago

    Speaking from experience here, and limited information from the company, this looks like a polished version of a high-voltage grid accelerator.

    https://ventiva.com/how-it-works/

    What can be an expected concern is that besides ionizing air and imparting motion to neutral air molecules as the ionized ones rush from one plate to the other, that same effect can and will charge dust particles. That “collector plate” will need to be easily accessible.

    Sound familiar?

    • @[email protected]
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      619 days ago

      Appreciate the link. I’ve got a hand-me-down Ionic in my house, and knowing that I can skip running it for basically the same effect means I can save a couple of cents on my electricity bill.

      Gonna take another look at those IKEA tables with the HEPA filters built in. Those seem handy to avoid having to dust so often.

      • @RubberElectrons
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        19 days ago

        Sure thing, glad to be of some kinda help. Ozone can be a good irritant, never mind charged dust sticking to stuff it ordinarily wouldn’t.

        I hope this company has a trick for dust control, but I’m expecting that’d be tougher than figuring out the ionic wind part.

    • @[email protected]
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      218 days ago

      They do have a solution for the ozone and dust problems. See this video at about the 9 minute mark:

      https://youtu.be/fyai_kUYhLs?t=539

      tl;dw: they’re using a cataylist to convert the ozone. There’s a lack of specifics on the dust issue, but they apparently have thought about it and have something there.

      One other issue is that the static pressure is abysmal. You can work around that, but it’s not a drop in thing.

  • @[email protected]
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    19 days ago

    Ionic acceleration of air needs high voltages and the air gets ionized (the reason people recommend against vacuuming a PC). I’m surprised that it works at all in close proximity to sensible tech.

    Edit: right, low static pressure, meaning: lower voltages. But still not low.

      • @RubberElectrons
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        519 days ago

        Can’t watch the video rn, anything about the dust problem?

        • @[email protected]
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          719 days ago

          He just mentions they have a solution but it’s patented so they wouldn’t talk about it. Take that as you will of course

          • @RubberElectrons
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            1919 days ago

            Strange, patented means it should be findable on the USPTO system, diagrams and all. And yet…

          • @Duamerthrax
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            218 days ago

            Either there’s a filter or the plates will cycle charging up to repeal the dust partials.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      the reason people recommend against vacuuming a PC

      A regular vacuum isn’t doing anything with ions or high voltages. Moving air can generate potentially harmful static electricity, but usually the reason people recommend against vacuuming a PC is because if you spin the fans doing that, the motors inside turn into generators and drive current back into your PC parts that could damage them.

      • @[email protected]
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        318 days ago

        Moving air can generate potentially harmful static

        Well, and what do you think creates that static electricity? Ionization.

        Feeding back electricity, that’s why motors usually have a diode or something.

        • @[email protected]
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          218 days ago

          The difference between a vacuum and this fanless cooling device is that a vacuum happens to generate a small amount of static, and usually has grounding wires in the hose to prevent it shocking things, while this fanless device is intentionally ionizing as much air as possible to get it to move.

  • Diplomjodler
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    2019 days ago

    I think Dave2D made a video about those. He was cautiously optimistic.

  • @[email protected]
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    1618 days ago

    Doesn’t an ionic air moving system like this put out a big ass EM field?

    Im a fabricator who don’t fuck with the lecky, but maybe someone more educated than me can explain why this doesn’t wipe your memory every time the cooling kicks on

  • @mightyfoolish
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    718 days ago

    I want to put one in a Valve Steamdeck.

    • AvieshekOP
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      -217 days ago

      Nintendo Switch would be more compelling.

      • @mightyfoolish
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        317 days ago

        It would be a good use case; however, you can only do so much with a cut down version of a SOC that was originally made in 2015. It may be work for very little gains.

  • @[email protected]
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    518 days ago

    I’m more excited about those Frore MEMS airjet chips.

    That’s actually in at least one consumer product right now.

  • @someguy3
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    519 days ago

    Is this the same way those bladeless Dyson fans work?

    • Da Bald Eagul
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      7019 days ago

      Bladeless Dyson’s have the fans hidden, as far as I know. But they still have a bladed fan in there.

        • @hOrni
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          19 days ago

          I recently watched some YouTube video that debunked that claim. They are basically pointless.

          Edit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySSo5PmZZJM

          It actually works better when You take the inner fan out of the casing. So they are actually a scam.

          • @[email protected]
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            -1919 days ago

            Not a dyson

            Not a proper test, air volume not measured - only speed. The point is to not have fast air so this only confirms the concept works

        • @[email protected]
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          2619 days ago

          They do not. For a given power input they produce less airflow at lower velocity than a regular fan. They’re a complete scam.

                • @[email protected]
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                  318 days ago

                  Advertising for a product isn’t a citation. That article literally just repeats Dyson’s own claims. Do you have anything that actually tests that claim?

                • @Duamerthrax
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                  118 days ago

                  They’re “bladeless” fans are just regular fans with more steps. Those added steps introduce inefficiencies. Simple as that. If you wanted to make a fan more efficient, you could add a shroud close to the blades, but the energy cost of electric fans are already low enough that it really doesn’t matter.

        • @[email protected]
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          919 days ago

          They literally generate as much as that small fan in the case can generate.

          With the aerodynamics of the case it’s just a matter of converting higher pressure into lower pressure with higher (& a bit more laminated) airflow.

    • Bezier
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      3419 days ago

      They aren’t actually bladeless. The fan is just hidden in the base.

  • @[email protected]
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    419 days ago

    I see what they did there with the “ICE9” name.

    If it works, it sounds like it’d be something meant for a future Steam Deck to experiment with.

  • Echo Dot
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    318 days ago

    So my take away from all of this is that this is a laptop that can propel itself around in space. Pretty neat.

    • @Zron
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      218 days ago

      Sadly, there would be no reaction mass.

      All that would happen is the lcd panel would boil and crack, and the processor would overheat soon after because nothing is carrying away the heat.

      • Echo Dot
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        418 days ago

        Nah, it can use all the dust and bits of carpet fluff. It’s magical stuff carpet fluff, it’s always a different color to any color you actually have as a carpet.

  • @[email protected]
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    -219 days ago

    Sadly, this won’t go anywhere now for the same reason it didn’t go anywhere for the 10 times it has been proposed before. It looks great on first look but longevity is amazingly low and likely will require purchasing of catalyst less than a year after first use. I’m sure investors loved that part of the pitch but compared to current fan tech, with good static pressure, there’s no way someone with half a brain would chuck this in their laptop. And that’s before considering the rest of the downsides.

  • @[email protected]
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    -819 days ago

    Uuuh, the cooling in macbook airs and ipads is just passive aircooling, like in all phones and all other “normal” tablets.

    • @[email protected]
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      1319 days ago

      There’s no rule against using active cooling for tablets and phones, only practicality. This technology seems like it might be practical enough to use in compact devices such as those, but we’ll see if that’s true.

      • @[email protected]
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        219 days ago

        I’d be surprised if they can keep phones with this waterproof and dust proof. Laptops I can see, phones not so much.

        • @[email protected]
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          119 days ago

          Yeah I can only see this being used as an external phone cooler or maybe for niche ‘gaming phones’ that would otherwise have a fan

    • @devilish666
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      219 days ago

      Well passive heat exchanger works as long as your device doesn’t have big power/TDP on it like office laptop, mobile phone, etc.

  • @werefreeatlast
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    -1419 days ago

    I have a house filter that functions on the same principal… Lol!

    Hey! Are you crazy!!! You’re wearing pants while using your new iPad? Those pants club iPads in mere seconds! Try new silicone pants! Silicone pants are as clean as polystyrene without the downsides of other clean fabrics such as glass fabric! Get them at Walmart! Or get a new IPad Thin! It comes with a clean set including underwear, hair removal creme, pants, T-shirt and panties and bra for women. You can get a discount if you don’t want the unisex version. The I-condom comes included with Bluetooth.