lego coffee mug amazon

lego coffee mug amazon

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Lego Coffee Mug Amazon

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Check out these sweet mugs for the office or home! Great for coffee, tea, or even something a bit special. Love fondue but sick of sharing with everyone? Give you and your guests a personal mug of fondue deliciousness. Whether you’re making chocolate… Share a glass of romantic tea in the mornings with your loved one using these clear heart shaped tea cups. Great for longing for each… This trendy coffee mug is perfect for the city biker or commuter who needs a little more freedom with their hands and person.… Mind over matter gets serious with this Gigantic Coffee Mug. Have you felt as though your coffee drinking has gotten out of control?… When you take that first sip of hot coffee in the morning does it feel like you flicked your lightsaber on? Watch our coastline disappear on this temperature sensitive mug. The global warming mug is perfect for a scientist who enjoys a cup of warm coffee in the morning. Use the force and stir up any delicious drinks in this Star Wars self stirring mug.




Mix up hot cocoa or even coffee… Who wouldn’t want to play with Lego blocks while drinking their coffee in the morning. This Lego Coffee Mug lets you build on… Serve coffee to your guests with ease using these interlocking coffee mugs. Carrying three coffee cups at time can be difficult well luckily these… Anyone growing up with Legos remembers those tiny little lego mugs. Well now you can relive your childhood joy of creating with this… Bring the 90’s back in your office and get jiggy with it whenever you go to the break room with this retro solo… Hot chocolate is fun. Playing with your food is fun. Using this basketball hoop mug to play basketball with the marshmellows in your… With this heat sensitive Tetris mug you can experience the pleasure of finally getting that last I-block while also experiencing the pleasure of…well then there’s no better way to show appreciation for your pug than by sipping morning coffee out of a…Build This Lego Coffee Maker and Never Leave Your Desk10/28/16 1:29pm




Vending machines are usually terrible at making coffee, but the Lego savants over on the AstonishingStudios YouTube channel have built a vending machine from plastic bricks that serves up a hot cup of joe using Starbucks’ powdered coffee packets. Yes, it’s instant coffee, and won’t come anywhere near close to what you can get from a coffee shop. But if you don’t mind having a miniature vending machine on your desk, after inserting some pocket change and waiting 45 seconds, you’ve got yourself an afternoon pick-me-up without having to leave your desk. The Best Deals OnlineFor the grumpy morning person: For the nerdy romantic: For the writer who needs inspiration: For the Doctor Who fan: For the cookie lover: Designed by Tiago Gonçalves. For the sardonic feminist: For the gun fanatic who’s also really into floral prints: For the snarky designer: For the Pac-Man fanatic: For the messy creative: For the person who doesn’t want to get their mustache wet:




For the person who is not fond of sharing their mug: Designed by Efrat Gommeh. For the animal lover: For the person who wants their coffee to always be hot: Learn more about this design by Ryan Jongwoo Choi here. For the Harry Potter fan: “Hot beverage makes his worries disappear, to be replaced by the soothing thought of a mug of coffee.” For those trying to have a little fun in the office: For the person obsessed with coasters: Designed by Tigere Chiriga. For the person who probably had a mood ring growing up: Designed by Jerome Olivet. For the person of faith: For the visually impaired: Designed by Sang-hoon Lee and Yong-bum Lim. For those who want a color matching guide: For the eternal frat dood: For the tea-rex lovers: For the lazy morning person: And for the person who’s so committed to their love of Legos that they can ignore how much this is not fun to hold:Moss the modular robot is part of New Atlas' round up of some of the best crowdfunded products you can buy right now(Credit: Modular Robotics)In no small part, crowdfunding has changed the game when it comes to bringing product ideas to market – for better or worse.




While backing early always has the baked-in risk of broken promises and snake-oil sales, some of the most innovative ideas of recent years, like the VR-pioneering Oculus Rift and pioneering smartwatch Pebble, owe their success to platforms like Kickstarter. So from major success stories to those that have flown under-the-radar (we'll get to the biggest disasters at a later date), we've picked out the cream of the crowdfunded crop that you can buy right now.Most of the items in our roundup are of the under-the-radar variety, but we'd be remiss to not include the VR headset that started it all.The Rift (which includes both the consumer version and the prototypes and dev kits preceding it) likely needs no introduction at this point, apart from saying that it's been one of the most innovative products from the last decade – and that status will only be accentuated as virtual reality grows in importance.For more on the consumer Rift, you can read our full review and, for a bit of nostalgia, feel free to revisit our first hands-on with it, a few months after its successful Kickstarter campaign.




Phones are already our constant photographic companions, but there's still a place for the printed image. Sure, we can still go and get our pictures printed, but as far as immediacy goes, the classic Polaroid performs better. Prynt is a phone case that aims to merge the charm of the old with the convenience of the new, by instantly printing photos from Android or iOS devices. Filters, stickers and frames can be added with an accompanying app, before printing the shot onto paper that peels off as a sticker. The Zink paper enables ink-free printing, so there's no needs to refill cartridges. A neat little kicker: each photo has a video virtually embedded into it. Through a QR code-like system, users can scan a printed pic with their phone, and the Prynt app will play a short clip captured at the time of the still shot. The Prynt was funded in March 2015, raising $1.5 million from a target of just $50,000. It's currently available for $149, with a 50 pack of paper refills costing $25.Portable projectors are getting smaller and smarter, and Beam is designed to be as simple as switching on the light – literally – as it's designed to screw into a light socket and project images up to 150 in (381 cm).




Unless you have a lot of sideways-facing sockets in your house, Beam will probably wind up mostly using ceilings and tabletops as its screen, but thanks to a slightly flattened edge on one side of its circular shape, you can lay it on a table to aim at a wall. It also functions as a regular bulb. With Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity, users can mirror their phone's screen to the projector, or store apps and media on the device's 8 GB hard drive. The Beam app adds If-Then functionality too, so you can set it up to wake you up at 7am with a video of a rooster crowing, or welcome you home with the news. Beating its goal of $200,000, the Beam was born in March 2015, raising $759,256. The Beam is available for $549.Another app-controlled smart home device, Tado Smart AC functions as an aftermarket add-on to turn your regular air conditioning system into one that senses who's home, and adjusts the temperature accordingly. Standing in for your AC's remote is a wall-mounted unit, which hands control over to your smartphone and relays instructions to the AC itself.




That means you can manually set the temperature of the house from anywhere, but the headline act is the system's geolocation abilities. It knows when the last person leaves the house and automatically turns itself off to save power, and as you head home in the evening, it'll make sure the house is just the right temperature when you get there. The Tado Smart AC raised over $200,000 of its $150,000 goal in June 2014. It's currently available for $169.While it may look like a VR headset in disguise, the Avegant Glyph walks a line between immersion and awareness to deliver a different kind of product. With a crisp HD screen and rich audio, the Glyph is designed to make it feel like you're sitting in your own personal theater. Immersive as it is, you never fully lose awareness of your surroundings either, so you can keep an eye on your luggage at the same time – assuming you're brave enough to wear it out in public, that is. If not, it slides up and (almost) hides in plain sight as a functional pair of headphones.




Social acceptance is a big issue: It makes the most sense in public, yet it also makes you look like a sci-fi character in public. There's also the fact that it won't work with any of Samsung's 2015-16 flagship phones, which lack the necessary HDMI out capabilites.Still, the last time we tried it, we found the Glyph to be a solid and original idea that was quickly gaining polish. The device was successfully funded in February 2014, smashing its goal of US$250,000 by bringing in over $1.5 million.The Avegant Glyph is currently available for US$699.There's no prize for guessing what kind of products Outdoor Tech makes. True to its word, the company's Big Turtle Shell is a Bluetooth speaker designed for the great outdoors: solid and water resistant, with a long battery life and 110 decibels of campground-piercing sound. Big and bulky as it is, the Turtle Shell is still designed to be portable, thanks to a handle for carrying it or hanging it from poles or trees. With a 16-hour battery, you can take the party miles from the nearest power point (or neighbor), and if other devices need a pick-me-up, it has enough juice to charge an iPhone four times over.




Outdoor Tech raised over $315,000 in May 2014, far surpassing its $40,000 goal. The Big Turtle Shell is currently available between $179 and $192, depending on your choice of color.Pebble, the first high(ish) profile smartwatch, got its start on Kickstarter in 2012 and has returned to the crowdfunding trough for the last two years. There are more advanced smartwatches you can buy, but if your priorities lean towards battery life, simplicity and not-quite-as-high pricing, the year-old Pebble Time is still a solid choice.In the modern world, coffee and convenience go hand-in-hand, and the coffee-centered startup Hey Joe set out to make your daily caffeine hit even more readily available. The GoJoe is a tall, battery-powered mug that brews fresh coffee at the push of a button. The top section is filled with water, and when the button is pushed, a heating plate in the middle warms it up. Once it reaches the desired temperature, the water drips down into a coffee pod in the middle, and soon a second reservoir at the bottom is full of your morning cup of joe.




The battery detaches from the bottom for convenience or charging, which it does via USB. In July 2014, the GoJoe campaign made almost $110,000, from a target of $20,000. It's currently available for $99. Smartphones can house plenty of important information about a drive, like when to turn, how fast you're going and if a wild Pikachu has appeared, but letting them distract you can have serious consequences. In response, heads-up displays (HUDs) that project those details into your peripheral vision are finding their way into cars, and Hudway Glass might be one of the most elegant and inexpensive solutions. Unlike others which reflect directly onto your windshield, the device sits on the dash and cradles your smartphone, and with a HUD app open – including Hudway's own – drive information is reflected onto a small glass plate for easy viewing. To avoid cluttering up the screen and distracting the driver anyway, the system only shows the important details, like speed, directions, and what's ahead in the road.




Hudway Glass raised $622,785 in November 2015, after seeking $100,000. It's available for preorder on Amazon, with units shipping in September.Like Lego, Meccano and Minecraft before it, Modular Robotics has tapped into the insatiable appetite kids have for building stuff. Since its original campaign, the company has created a series of MOSS robot kits, culminating in the deluxe set that is the MOSS Exofabulatronixx 5200. This mouthful of a model kit lets you loose with 52 blocks, some of which perform specific functions, while others are there to support the structure. Combine those with the 140 carbon steel balls that act as joints and hinges, and Modular Robotics promises a range of possible robot designs that numbers in the thousands.The block functions on offer include motors, pivots, flashlights, microphone, and light and distance sensors, as well as the Double Brain block, which connects the custom contraption to an iOS or Android device via Bluetooth.Modular Robotics ran a campaign for the MOSS kits in December 2013, bringing in over three and a half times its $100,000 target.

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