| Introduction: | This page offers up some of my highly marketable ideas for free. All of these should be (and would be) profitable, life-improving products or services. |
| Purpose: | Threefold: first, to help bring some good to the world; second, to inform you my better ideas are worth buying for $5000 or $10000 a piece; third, to create something economically lasting for my family. |
| Who? | I am Dan Fruzzetti, seven-year veteran California mathematics educator and product process savant. I love what I do, but my abilities are worth so much more both to me and to you. I am naturally gifted at improving products including by altering designs to cut production costs without loss of function or quality. Quite frankly, I can improve anything. I can see all aspects of a product, which liberates me to play simultaneously from the perspective of the engineer, the designer, the procurer and the manufacturer. |
| How? | Before we begin I will sign an NDA for any prospective client. We will make an appointment to sit down together either face-to-face or via telephone or Skype® (or equivalent) and discuss your product and manufacturing or servicing abilities and what you hope to gain from our conversation. Depending upon your needs, I may need to tour your facilities. At the end of between one and five hours of becoming familiar with your product and needs, I will inform you of how you may improve your product from either or both ends. Everything we speak about is your property alone. If you only need to cut production costs, call me before you tool up any factories. If you have a product and want it improved, call me any time. Any patentable ideas that come from our discussion are also yours exclusively. Only at the end of our discussion will we will discuss improvements and payment. |
| Guarantee: | Your purchase of one idea will:
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| Price: | For product or service ideas: US$ 10,000 each after lengthy, thorough discussion of your needs and production abilities For cost-cutting ideas: US$ 5,000 each after mutual NDA and thorough discussion or walkthrough of your production and delivery systems |
| Expertise: | My areas of expertise are vast:
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| Contact: | Call any time +1 (925) 23-TEACH. If I don't answer, leave a voicemail and I'll call you back within one business day to discuss whether I can help you. |
| Halbach array vacuum flask | 2010-11-22 |
| As liquid hydrogen becomes a more viable fuel source, it and similar fluids and solids must become easier to transport cold (or hot). Use of Halbach arrays in a round, double-pressure-chambered flask would allow very hot or very cold substances to be kept at their ideal temperatures for extremely long times due to the magnetic levitation system installed within the vacuum chamber of the flask. Items would be packed, spun up, sealed, and then the air would be evacuated from the middle chamber by a pump. A special baffle is required inside the inner chamber when storing liquids. | |
| Baby formula dispenser and tablet system | 2010-11-22 |
| Like every parent, I'm tired of spilling bits of formula everywhere when I make a bottle. And I'm a tidy person, too. Formula should come pressed into pre-weighted tablets, optionally enveloped in rice paper, which could then be dispensed by the click of a button directly into a bottle. Users don't need the total control offered by the common scoop system; tablets for use with two ounces of water would suffice; click once, drop a two-ounce tablet in. Click twice, drop two tablets. Zero mess and easier to do at night. | |
| Hybrid electric key lock system | 2010-11-22 |
| By putting the battery in the key and conducting rods at different heights through ceramic tumblers, a simple electric circuit is created only when (a) the correct key is inserted, lining up all tumbler rods and (b) the current is passed through the lock by the key battery for a prescribed time. Even a 0.1 second delay is enough to make lock bumping impossible, and because the tumblers don't allow any actual motion it is literally impossible to pick one tumbler at a time. No internal or bus power required. | |
| Keyboard with a "repeat last keystroke" key | 2010-11-22 |
| What's the slowest thing you have to do when typing? Well, for those of you using QWERTY as your layout, everything is slow. For those of us in the know (and using at least DVORAK), the only slow act in typing is repeating the last key you typed. Example: Mississippi is a very slow word to type, but if I had a thumb key near the spacebar (but out of its way) I could type it in blazing fast time. This way if I type the first "s" then the second one is this new key, pressed with (of course) my opposite thumb. | |
| Orally controlled mobile device | 2010-11-22 |
| Long document in download link provided; this device will put a personal assistant in everyone's hands 24 hours per day. This is my finest development ever, as it comes with five separate markets and a self-propelled development schedule. Unfortunately, it's such a huge undertaking that only the biggest companies could ever try to do this. Requires creation of a communication protocol which must be kept in private hands but licensed for free. | |
| Air powered anti-structure weapon | 2010-11-22 |
| With a design similar to a Thigpen® rotary woofer, pulled behind an overpowered jet aircraft, it is easily possible to knock over buildings and infrastructure installations using only the air between the weapon and target. | |
| Safer kitchen range | 2010-11-22 |
| For no additional cost, and only a few extra parts, a gas range which uses electronic gas control and ignition and (a) cannot let out unspent fuel, (b) will not leave the fire on for long if nothing is placed on top to cook, (c) ignores the hands of children. | |
| Inkjet-like tattoo printer | 2010-11-22 |
| File... Print... now it's permanent on my skin like Zune Guy. Requires two Wii® remotes. | |
| Cookware and handle set | 2010-11-22 |
| Cookware with a painted rim that displays the word HOT in red when heated past safe handling temperature. A full set has only as many handles as you have burners, plus as many half-handles. Handles quickly clip on securely and clip off easily (but not accidentally) during and after use for handling and storage. A chef may keep the second-handle in hand all the time, clipping it to each pot or pan to stir or shake and moving on to the next. Then they store neatly in even the tiniest apartment kitchens. | |
| Heat-powered range hood | 2010-11-22 |
| Using the Seebeck effect, it should be quite possible to use the heat in range and oven exhaust to power the hood that sits above it. | |
| Flywheel-driven push lawn mower | 2010-11-22 |
| Much to my dismay, a year after I wrote about this Fiskars released a terrible copy. A proper push mower with high precision cutter cartridge which should regularly be changed (complete with mail-in program for refurbishment). Rip-cord used if desired to spool up flywheel. Double-braking clutch to ensure forward or rearward pull still charges flywheel. Flywheel turns cutters, with a simple pressure brake that when pressed by incoming rock will disconnect blade from flywheel and halt blade. Nearly zero friction when in use means incredibly high efficiency. | |
| Toroids-in-cones continuously variable racing transmission | 2010-11-22 |
| Interface is important here: a lever the user pulls to whatever ratio desired. This means engines can be built with extremely steep torque and horsepower curves which the driver then harnesses by adjusting the gear ratio continuously by pulling or pushing the shift lever. My design handles up to 800 lb-ft of torque. | |
| Skyscraper evacuation rescue double-rotor helicopter system | 2010-11-22 |
| A device using a jet engine hooked up to the fuel line and bolted into the hull of a double-rotor helicopter. Land the helicopter onto the appliance, bolt on the wrist-pin tops, hook up the fuel lines and go. Device has a platform at 45 feet (past reach of rotors) and opposing jet engine placed at 30 feet oriented vertically to provide variable "virtual counterweight." Can rescue 12 people per minute from 1000 feet up. Uses jet engine to counter-balance people's weight as they step onto (and are fastened to by rescuer) platform. | |
| Private, in-venue "GPS" | 2010-11-22 |
| On the SAME APP. You go to a multi-stage concert event but you want to know where the chicken can be bought. Or margaritas. Your traditional GPS app stops short, but our app doesn't. You pull it up on your phone and it guides you there using a map or augmented reality or both. But say you're the promoter and it's your event. You can take pictures and submit the map by walking the venue once and entering in the names of all the vendors that will be there, or better yet by setting which users will be at which locations and letting them enter things like their menus and prices or bands to play whatever set lists at whatever times. Complete freedom. That way we never have to ask, do they serve food here somewhere, again. | |