<![CDATA[Gizmodo: caffeine]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: caffeine]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/caffeine http://gizmodo.com/tag/caffeine <![CDATA[Google Search Is About to Get a Lot Better]]> For the last couple of months, Google's been testing a new search architecture called Caffeine—a back-end upgrade, but one that changes the results in virtually any search. Today, Lifehacker gets word that Caffeine is ready to go live in Google proper.

So what does this mean, exactly? Well, if you believe roughly 75% of Lifehacker's polled readers, it means that Google search is about to get more accurate, relevant and useful. Or that we're about to feel like Google search has gotten more accurate, relevant and useful, because we read an article about it somewhere. Win/win! [Lifehacker]

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<![CDATA[Battery Refill Required]]> This t-shirt visualizes what we've all known for a long time: He who merges with the caffeine merges with the power. $20. [Glennz Tees via Fashionably Geek]

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<![CDATA[Caffeine Snack Test: Who Needs Coffee When You've Got Cookies and Gum?]]> I'm lightheaded, twitchy and kinda have the runs. This was never going to end well. The mission: Test if caffeine-infused munchies like cookies, mints, chewing-gum, and lollipops pack the same punch as energy drinks and coffee. (Hint: Most do).

Well, at least the snacks I tried. But almost all were a little sketchy on the exact kick you're getting. Packaging tends to only compare the caffeine dose to an average cup of coffee (which is roughly 100mg). Generally speaking, anything over 300mg of caffeine a day is considered as high-intake, but everyone feels the effects differently. Personally, I drink about 3 cups of java to kick start my mornings, and was ready to give this taste test a go.

So in the name of journalism and bad ideas, I drank enough wine Friday night to give me some cob webs (but not a hangover) come Saturday morning. The rules for Saturday were simple: use the caffeinated snacks instead of coffee or energy drinks (and leave caffeine pills to dieters and athletes).

The Ups, The Downs, The Jitters

My thoughts written throughout the day:

11am: Ugh. Want to go back to bed…Holy mother of Brewtus I need a coffee, maybe a bacon and egg bagel, too. I'm trying Buzz Strong's Caffeinated Cookies, instead. They're made with Swiss dark and white chocolate chips, not to mention Brazilian coffee. Let's see here: 12 cookies in a $5 box; 4 cookies equal 1 cup of coffee. Pretty heavy on the coffee flavor, but these things actually taste pretty good.

11:30am: Ended up eating 6 cookies, along with a banana smoothie to better line my stomach. Don't want to get sick, plus milk and cookies is always a win.

12pm: Should not have munched on those extra two cookies. Feeling bloated (my stupid fault), but also more awake. Overall, thumbs up for Buzz Strong's Caffeinated Cookies, and I'm sure they're a much better afternoon snack than breakfast. Gotta shower and brush cookie from my teeth.

12:15pm: Good time to try Jolt Energy Gum, from the guys behind the double dose Jolt Cola. There are 12 chiclet pieces in each pack, and 2 pieces contain about as much caffeine as a cup of coffee. That's 6 cups of coffee per pack ($10 for 6). I have "Amazing Race" Spearmint and Icy Mint flavors here…trying the latter, but both also contain the herbal uppers guarana and ginseng. WTF: Packaging actually says "not a substitute for sleep." Really?

There's a weird aftertaste… I could be wrong, but I think it's the Aspartame (the same artificial sweetener used by Equal, NutraSweet, etc.). Aspartame itself is pretty controversial, so beyond taste, these may not be for you if you're concerned about its debated health risks. I'll press ahead with 2 pieces, though. That brings my caffeine intake so far up to the equivalent of three cups of coffee.

12:35pm: Jolt gum works surprisingly well. It would be cool to take hiking, and I almost feel like I noticed the effects faster than I do with say, a Red Bull. It doesn't have an energy drink's sugar-rush, though. Sort of miss that, but hopefully it means no sugar crash, either.

Between the shower and caffeine, I've shaken off last night's drinking and I'm pretty much good to go at this point. Normally wouldn't need any more caffeine in my day.

1:15pm: Straightened my place up, some friends coming around for a casual game of basketball. Dropped two round tablets of Blitz Energy Gum.

This stuff is clearly targeting Red Bull. Each $3 metallic silver pack has 8 pieces, with the total pack equivalent in caffeine to 6 "leading brand" energy drinks. That's definitely more economical than a single can of everyone's favorite cough syrup-like Vodka mixer.

What's more, Blitz Energy Gum also contains taurine and a bunch of B vitamins; so no surprise that it also tastes a little like Red Bull. Still, there's an odd aftertaste, again possibly due to the Aspartame.

1:30pm: This stuff work pretty quickly, which is good given its box goes on and on about how it's absorbed three times faster than energy drinks. Myeh. It still tastes like a sour bomb crawled into my mouth, farted, then died.

Hopefully a Foosh Energy Mint will wash that crap out. Each medium sized tablet packs 100mg of caffeine (roughly the equivalent to 1 cup of coffee). Flavor is minty fresh, but there's that aftertaste again. Just checked and yep, it's also artificially with Aspartame. That's gotta be what I'm tasting? Getting pretty freakin' sick of that taste. Oh, these mints also have B vitamins and Ginseng. That's kind of cool. 12 pieces in each $3.50 tin.

2pm: The Foosh mints kicked in. I'm at the equivalent of five cups of coffee for the day. Throat still feels parched (despite all the water I've been drinking), and feeling a little sweaty. I'm a little twitchy and eager to get out of the house. Time for some basketball—I'll let you know it goes.

6:30pm: Sooo…a few things. Firstly, I suck at basketball, even when pepped up on Joo Joo beans. I must remember that. Secondly, I'm a pretty fit person (I train in Capoeira every other day). But my chest is tight, and I feel lightheaded. Worse still, in what's clearly due to the caffeine (more than the elbow I took to the stomach) I've had some epic bathroom battles in the last half hour. You probably don't need to know this, but my ass hurts and I don't remember eating Indian.

Like some kind of dealer looking for company on a downward spiral, I also passed around some caffeinated fruit and coffee/chocolate-flavored lollipops at the game. They're sold in packs of 10 for $10, and each giant sucker (1.25-inch wide) contains 60-70mg of caffeine. General consensus: the fruit ones are super sweet, and the berry blast will make your mouth bluer than the Na'vi race in James Cameron's Avatar. The milkier flavors (Irish Crème, French Vanilla, etc.) were the favorites, and a couple of my friends grabbed some for their next exam cram session. (That's me on the far right below, smiling like a mad man.)

7:30pm: Grabbed a bite to eat after realizing I've not been hungry at all today. No surprise given that caffeine is an appetite suppressant.

9pm: Officially crashed out for a while there: feels like my body has been running double speed all day. Going to veg-out in front of the TV; try and shake this light-headed feeling.

10pm: Munched on some Gamer Grub. Four-buck snack is a disgusting mix of cheese curls, tomato almonds, sesame sticks, pita chips, fried onions and pizza cashews. Disturbingly enticing, though…couldn't help but finish the whole pack. Apparently, it contains a bunch of "cognitive supporting" vitamins and nutrients (betacarotene, niacinamide, etc). Over my head, but I'll take whatever brain boosters I can at this point. I'm wiped, and I've still got the intro for this story to write. But I'm so wired, I don't think I'll be getting to sleep before 3am anyway.

Final Thoughts

I clearly had more caffeine than is recommended by the creators and purveyors of this stuff, so it's no surprise my stomach is twisting like a Möbius strip, and I am experiencing the other effects of overcaffeination, too, like increased heart rate and blood pressure plus some headaches and anxiety.

Still, I did it in the name of science, or at least in the name of tasting, so that you know the best and worst snacky stimulants out there. Got any experiences you want to share? By all means, drop them in comments.

Caffeine is said to be the most widely used psychoactive substance in the world, with about 90 percent of North American adults consuming it each day. But in a mug or in a snack pack? Me? I'll stick to coffee.

Special thanks to ThinkGeek for shipping out all the grub—individually linked to their product pages above.

Taste Test is our weeklong tribute to the leaps that occur when technology meets cuisine, spanning everything from the historic breakthroughs that made food tastier and safer to the Earl-Grey-friendly replicators we impatiently await in the future.

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<![CDATA[Nixie Tubes: (Very) Slightly More Adult Pixy Sticks]]> The methods of caffeine ingestion range from typical (coffee) to X-TREEM (energy drinks) to sort of hardcore (5-Hour Energy), but none have been outwardly juvenile—until now.

Each Nixie Tube packs 100mg of caffeine, about 20% more than a cup of coffee, and comes in colors and flavors a million percent less natural. They come in your standard candy flavors, from the classic lemon/lime to blue raspberry, which never has, never will, and does not now exist in the real world. They're available only from ThinkGeek (thank god; we don't need these becoming the new Jolt Cola) and cost $9 for five tubes. [ThinkGeek via CrunchGear]

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<![CDATA[Three Cups of Coffee Makes You Three Times More Likely to Hallucinate]]> Maybe you aren't at work right now. Maybe you aren't wearing a suit. Maybe that giant polka dot bunny can't hear your thoughts. Maybe you just drank too much coffee.

Researchers from Durham University (queried, we believe) 200 non-smoking participants, taking into account their intake of tea, coffee, energy drinks, caffeine pills or coffee consumed on an average day as well as their propensity to see things that were not there, hear voices, and/or sense the presence of the dead.

It was found that 315 milligrams of caffeine (about what you'll find in three standard cups off coffee) increased hallucinations by three times, though it's unclear as to whether or not this data could be correlational with crazy people simply drinking more caffeine to begin with. [LiveScience and image]

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<![CDATA[D+Caf Detects If You're Drinking Real Coffee Instead of Decaf]]> I don't understand drinking decaf coffee. It's like non-alcoholic beer. Both are crappy, neutered versions of the original. But if you've absolutely got to drink decaf, D+caf will make sure it's the real (fake) deal.

D+caf test strips are simply little strips of paper coated with antibodies that tell if you a beverage is properly decaffeinated, turning up blue lines if it's got more than 20mg of caffeine per 6oz serving. Even modern decaffeination procedures can't remove every single trace of caffeine, but between 20 and 30 percent of coffee and tea drinks "contain unacceptably high levels of caffeine" according to the strip's maker, Silver Lakes Research.

The strips are 98 percent accurate for detecting caffeine, plus you have to use them before you add anything else to your coffee tea, like milk or sugar. And at $10 for a pack of 20, you're paying 50 cents a strip, instantly propelling even cheap decaf coffee into Starbucks pricing territory. So I'm not sure these are worth the small bit of security that some smartass doesn't occasionally slip you real coffee instead of decaf.

Besides, how the hell do you decaf people get through the day, anyway? [Discover Testing via MIT Technology Review via Medgadget, Photo: Joshua Scott/MIT TR]

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<![CDATA[Hourglass Coffee Maker Should Be Renamed 12-Hour Plastic Disappointment]]> We took one look at the electricity-free Hourglass Coffee Maker and thought it a simplistic, design-forward product. And then we examined the brewing process...

To be fair, the basic concept of the Hourglass is simple. You put grounds to soak in the bottom, then you flip it to filter your coffee into the empty chamber. Kind of neat, right?

Except it's not that simple.

The system uses cold brewing, meaning that you load system with grounds and water before waiting 12+ hours to brew. Once it's brewed and you do the fun flippy part, you still don't have coffee. You have something called "coffee extract." So you heat some water and add two shots of the extract. And then you finally have coffee.

On the plus side, the system does promise to brew coffee with far lower acid content than traditional methods. In case you're interested, the Hourglass Coffee Maker goes for $70. [Hourglass]

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<![CDATA[I'm No Doctor, But The Health Benefits of Caffeinated Chips Seem Questionable]]> Pardon me while I pander to a stereotype and assume that you, dear reader, are interested in these caffeinated chips by Engobi. Coming in Xtreme flavors like "Cinnamon Surge" and "Lemon Lift," each bag of this snack has 70% more caffeine than the average energy drink. Using Red Bull as a metric, that puts Enobi chips at 136 milligrams of caffeine—or right on line with a cup of strong coffee. Seeing as most of us can down two or three cups for breakfast, that means all those Engobi-eating, Red Bull-drinking X-gamers have been posing for glamor shots at amateur night. Their cute haircuts, tats and piercings can call us when they switch to diesel. [Engobi via Gearlog]

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<![CDATA[The Siphon Bar Pours a $20,000 Cup of Coffee]]> No, it's not a steampunk chemistry set. That picture is of the United States' only halogen-powered siphon bar. Imported from Japan after years of negotiations, the $20,000+ machine is housed at San Francisco's Blue Bottle Café. Each "pot" consists of two globes. Water vapor evaporates from the bottom globe into the higher globe to meet the grounds. The coffee is then stirred with a bamboo paddle, removed from the heat and siphoned back to the lower globe (minus grounds). It sounds delicious...and totally worth whatever it costs per cup. Hit the NYT for the full mad scientist process in photos. [nyt via bornrich]

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<![CDATA[Handpresso, for a Espresso Caffeine Fix Anywhere]]> Most coffee you get on the road tastes like creek mud, so take along this $140 Handpresso, your own portable manual espresso maker that'll press out some skull-popping brew in no time flat. Let's see a video of the thing in action:


Just add a single-serve pod of finely ground burnt coffee beans and hot water, and it won't be long before your brain starts juking the Watusi like it always does. [Handpresso, via Single Serve Espresso]

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<![CDATA[Ariete's You&Me the Smallest Espresso Machine in the World]]> According to makers Ariete, the You&Me is the smallest Espresso machine in the world, bringing you your caffeine fix strongly and silently. With a boiler capacity of one-fifth of a liter, maxi-cappuccino device drip and Thermocream System filter, the You&Me is available in Shiny Red, Anthracite and Satin Gray for around $138. [Ariete via Appliancist]

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<![CDATA[Blue Label -Snail- Espresso Machine Hopefully Makes Espresso That Matches Its Looks]]> We've seen our fair share of high design-minded espresso machines, but the Blue Label -Snail- by Pierre Ittner is without a doubt the sleekest, most comely java juicer we've come across. According to Google's machine translation, it's forged from aluminum, uses nespresso pods—hopefully not just—and has a 19-bar pump, with the alluring deep blue hue coming from a "flip-flop" lacquer. If extremely attractive espresso machines are your cup of coffee (sorry), be sure to scope out the other prototype designs on the site. [room69 via OhGizmo!]

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<![CDATA[In-Wall Coffee Maker Makes Your Kitchen Like Starbucks, Sans the Hobo in the Bathroom]]> Why waste $4 every morning on a venti coffee from Starbucks? That sort of thing adds up, you know. You really should be making your coffee at home. I'd like to say that installing this Siemens in-wall coffee maker in your kitchen would be an example of some financial responsibility, but it clearly isn't. But hey, if being able to stick a mug into a recessed panel above your kitchen counter to get coffee makes you feel like you're in a coffee shop and not at home, go nuts. Otherwise, I'm pretty sure there are cheaper, more responsible coffee makers available at Target. [Product Page via BornRich]

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<![CDATA[Catching a Buzz with Foosh Energy Mints]]> Take it from us bloggers who start our travails at cock-a-doodle-dark, way before the sun comes up: We're going to need all the caffeine we can get. So we tried out some Foosh Energy Mints, looking for just a little kick that might take out some of those cobwebs that won't go away at dawn's early light.

As some of you may be aware, the acronym FOOSH stands for Fall On Outstretched Hand. If the claims of Foosh's makers are true, you're not going to be falling down too much after partaking of these mints. It says on the box they're seriously caffeinated, and one of them gives you the equivalent of a rather weak cup of coffee, or about 100mg of that sweet and legal speed. So how well did they work? Did we catch a buzz?

Opening up the $3.49 tin, I noticed there were 12 of the mints inside, but they're big, about twice the size of an Altoid. I popped one in my mouth and was pleased to immediately discover that like Altoids, these babies are curiously strong. They have a great, sweet taste to them, with no bitterness at all when they're dissolving but a slightly bitter aftertaste. In fact, they taste a lot like Altoids.

As the mint dissolves in your mouth, you can sense a slight gritty feeling, and I suppose this must be those little blue crystals you can see in the photos above. It's not an unpleasant effect, however.

Within a couple of minutes, I felt a good strong caffeine buzz coming on, much stronger than if I just drank a cup of coffee or Red Bull. Maybe it's the placebo effect, but these little mints seen to pack a powerful punch. Hey, I could write all day.

Anyway, to sum up, these are some potent mints, they taste great, and they get the job done. No, they don't make you feel like you just snorted a gram of Peruvian, but they can give you a kick in the pants when you need it. Surprisingly effective, and cheaper than Starbucks.

Product Page [Vroom Foods, via Think Geek]

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<![CDATA[Scientist Bakes Up Nerve-Jangling Donuts Spiked With Caffeine]]> We've heard of caffeinated soap, water, gum, mints, and even beer, but now molecular scientist Robert Bohannon of Durham, North Carolina has figured out how to caffeinate doughnuts and other baked goods without adding that bitter taste. Using Bohannon's technique, each donut has the caffeine equivalent of a couple of cups of coffee baked inside.

Maybe this is good for those who don't like coffee, or perhaps it will alleviate coffee spillage when stuck in traffic. Just think, McDonald's can avoid additional lawsuits from those who whine about too-hot coffee crotch-burning incidents. Bohannon is knocking on doors trying to sell his creation, hitting the usual doughnut suspects such as Krispy Kreme, Dunkin' Donuts and Starbucks.

Scientist develops caffeinated doughnuts [Yahoo News]

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<![CDATA[Caffeine-Laced Pantyhose for Weight Loss]]> Now you can wear your coffee and drink it, too. Slim Fit 20 pantyhose have embedded caffeine microcapsules that are released by body heat, mainlining that java mojo right into your bloodstream and boosting your metabolism. That way, so the fantasy goes, you can burn fat right off those thunder thighs, using this effortless and miraculous method. The manufacturer of this product also claims that if you wear these tights every day you can lose around an inch from your thighs after just one-to-four weeks, and also get rid of cellulite and that horrific "orange peel" effect. Of course, caution the snake-oil salesmen, this may not work for everyone.

We're hoping this is just a joke, because this entire concept is based on a misunderstanding. You can't spot reduce, you can't stimulate metabolism in just one part your body (if you do lose weight your body will decide where it's coming from), and caffeine is not exactly a weight-loss drug. Heck, if caffeine were effective for weight loss, we would all be positively skeletal by now. And we're not. Available for non-skeptical Brits, Slim Fit 20 pantyhose are £27 for a pack of three.

Caffeine Tights [Coolest Gadgets]

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