This perfect kitchen gadget developed in MIT uses AI to make personalized recipes from kitchen leftovers

This perfect kitchen gadget developed in MIT uses AI to make personalized recipes from kitchen leftovers

I’m a stickler for not wasting food. So, every piece of vegetable, final spoonful of yogurt, or stray cubes of cheese has to find its way into a recipe. Most of the time, things turn out pretty well. But occasionally, a dish is marred because one ingredient just didn’t belong. That’s when my confidence dips, and I find myself scrolling through YouTube, searching for a recipe that’ll make use of what I’ve got at home. Of course, when the refrigerator is packed with ingredients, you can turn any page in the cookbook or scroll through a reel on Instagram and make an exact delicacy. But the kitchen is a place of uncertainties where improvisation is important because of constraints that can come up during your meal prep at any time. So, what do you do when you don’t know what to make from the ingredients you have? If you had the Kitchen Cosmo, you could just place all the ingredients you had in front of it, and it would print you the ideal recipe you can make. An ideal kitchen gadget for improvisation, you say. Yes, but you can’t own it. Designers: Ayah Mahmoud and C Jacob Payne When the established industry names and the innovative startups are focused on creating AI-based kitchen technologies with high-definition displays and voice controls to automate tasking and optimize our efficiency in the kitchen; the Kitchen Cosmo, built at MIT, looks at the past for its inspiration, while integrating AI to make inconsistency in cooking its printable motive. To that accord, Kitchen Cosmo, in its deep red body is an AI-powered cooking device, which generates recipes from ingredients you place in front of it. It draws its inspiration from the Honeywell Kitchen Computer, which promised to bring computing to the domestic sphere, but never really kicked off. The Cosmo, brainchild of designers C Jacob Payne and Ayah Mahmoud (developed in the MIT course ‘Interaction Intelligence,’) looks to be on the right path, since it intends to solve the everyday kitchen dilemma of “what should I cook” into a simple task, without the hanky-panky display or voice. The interface of the device is retro futuristic with knobs and sliders – all tactile controls onboard. So, place the items you have on the platter in front of the Cosmo, tune it to your preference using the six analog inputs: mood, time, dietary needs, and more, and Cosmo prints you the possible, personalized recipe right there and then. To make this possible, Cosmo uses GPT-4o, capable of processing both images and text in real time. For the processing, a webcam acts as its eyes to identify the ingredients, while a “single API call” translates this into a recipe, which is then printed by the built-in thermal printer. Opportunities for creatives can be hard to come by, but if you’re a 3D designer/modeler, Elegoo’s offering a unique opportunity to be a part of… Can your wallet charge your phone or even your smartwatch? Sure, if someone came up to you on the street and asked you that, you’d… Sometimes good design is all about striking the right balance when converting an idea into something substantial. Who would have thought that a nudge by… Have you ever stepped on a LEGO piece and have your whole life flash before your eyes or are you normal? Kids love to play… The Dual Cleaner is a unique combination of a vacuum cleaner at one end and steam cleaner at the other end. It’s process is such… Going above and beyond anything your HEPA-based air purifiers can do (or even some of the UV ones), OneLife X uses plasma-field technology to purify…

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