Inventing a new product feels amazing. You start to envision people using your invention. You imagine it being sold on store shelves, maybe even TV. You’ve never seen anything like it, you think. Why ...
Consider all of the innovations that went into something as simple as your breakfast: the flakes of cereal in your bowl, the ceramic burr grinder that macerated your coffee beans, the toaster that ...
Larissa Behrendt receives funding from the Australian Research Council. Ian J. McNiven receives funding from the Australian Research Council. Sean Ulm receives funding from the Australian Research ...
Invention is rarely a straight line from idea to end product. More often, it is a circuitous route that involves iteration and failure. For inventors, however, finding solutions to societal problems ...