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为了美好的未来,
传播支撑社会的科技

TANAKA是“贵金属”的专家,为世界提供创造“社会价值”的“制造”。
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等方面信息的网络媒体。
在急速发生范式转换的现代,我们将不断传播促进实现更加美好的“社会”和富饶“地球”的未来的启示。

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Samsung’s fancy new fridge prototype promises to grow your food for you

Stan Horaczek

From across a room here at the Consumer Electronic Show, Samsung’s Bespoke Plant fridge looks like a typical high-end refrigerator. Walk up to the door, however, and a proximity sensor triggers it to become transparent, revealing a series of plants growing inside where you’d typically expect to find mustard and milk.

The Bespoke Plant fridge is only a prototype for now, but the device is an interesting mishmash of Samsung’s technologies, even some from outside of its appliances division.

The growing chamber inside occupies half of a typical French door-style fridge and can accommodate roughly 45 plants, depending on what you grow (cabbage can be a real space hog, after all). Plants come in self-containing pods full of soil that fit snugly into slots on the shelves. Individual irrigation spouts line the trays and pull water through a filtration system in the bottom of the fridge, which is connected to your plumbing like you’d expect for an ice maker. QR codes on the plant pods tell the fridge what kind of seeds live within so it can dish out the correct amount of water and light. Pods could contain all of the same plant, or a mixture of herbs that go well together.

The water filtration system lives in the bottom of the fridge and looks a bit like a desktop computer tower.

In order to monitor the plants’ progress, Samsung employs optical sensors similar to those in its typical Bespoke fridge. They monitor the contents of your refrigerator so it can help you make a shopping list, or suggest recipes based on what you have on-hand. The Bespoke Plant sensors can track plant growth to send updates to a companion smartphone app, and also automatically adjust the height of the shelves so the greenery doesn’t get crowded and inhibit its expansion.

Samsung's Bespoke line lets users choose from an array of different appliance arrangements that match an interior.

The lighting system supplies each plant with the required amount of illumination, using LEDs that Samsung pulled from its TV division.

Water from the filtration system pumps straight up through the bottom of the trays.

In practice, it feels like a mix between something you’d find in a laboratory and a high-end kitchen gadget. It’s just a prototype for now, but it’s also surprisingly fleshed out. The app even functions fully, allowing users to order new pods and track their own plant progress as they go. We wouldn’t be surprised to see it hit the market in some form or another down the road.

This article originally appeared on Popular Science

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The pods full of plants could have playful designs in addition to the QR codes that tell the fridge what plants it includes. (Stan Horaczek /) The water filtration system lives in the bottom of the fridge and looks a bit like a desktop computer tower. (Stan Horaczek/) Samsung’s Bespoke line lets users choose from an array of different appliance arrangements that match an interior. (Samsung/) Water from the filtration system pumps straight up through the bottom of the trays. (Stan Horaczek/)

 

This article was written by Stan Horaczek from Popular Science and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.