You don’t have to be a demanding rock star to live a life without brown M&M's or purple Skittles—all you need is some engineering know-how and a little bit of free time. Mechanical engineering student ...
Ever open a bag of candy and want to remove your least favorite flavor? Or maybe you get a certain satisfaction out of sorting your candies by color before eating them? One 19-year-old student found a ...
In January 2018, the Anonymous Facebook page shared a video that seemingly showed a simple machine automatically sorting hundreds of small balls by color along with a request for someone to explain ...
Tropical Skittles are my jam. Well, except the yellow ones; fuck you Banana Berry. Willem Pennings, a Dutch inventor, feels my pain. After seeing a color-sorting machine years back, Pennings decided ...
War. Famine. Drought. Imagine Dragons. The world is full of horror and what better way to assuage that grief then by watching this M&M and Skittles sorting machine do its amazing work in real time.
Sensing color: Many products (from automotive parts to food packaging) either have color requirements or are color-coded. Industrial color sensors are used to inspect these items for quality, key ...
Skittles are the candy that let you taste the rainbow, but sometimes you don't want the full rainbow. Maybe you're someone who picks out all the red ones. A 19-year-old mechanical engineering student ...
The sorting technology provider says its latest Finder device can sort red metals, stainless steel and other mixed metals and alloys streams. A Finder Color batch sorting option allows operators to ...