Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Computing
  4. Legacy Archives

Heineken Ignite LED smart bottles are essential frat party accessories

Add as a preferred source on Google
Heineken Ignite smart bottle lights
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Describe the scene at the typical frat house party: Techno music, dimly lit rooms, multicolor lights, generic beer. Ah, the essence of American youth. Now, Heineken will monopolize on your good ol’ pastimes by putting some tech in your beer with its Heineken Ignite project to create LED “smart bottles.” These interactive bottles will come with motion sensors and tiny lights that will illuminate in correspondence to certain party gestures. For example, the LED will glow when people cheer and clink bottles against one another, or blink quickly while the person is chugging one back. It’ll also come with a software to help bottles tune in with the music and coordinate a synchronized light show.

Heineken Ignite smart bottleNone of this is real just yet. Heineken unveiled the concept during Milan Design Week along with a special Tumblr to explain the thought process. “This innovative approach lets people be a part of the party in a whole new way and opens up possibilities in social situations,” the company boasts.

Recommended Videos

At the moment, Heineken has only developed a “clunky” prototype consisting of an external module attached to existing bottles, but the team aims to embed the tech directly into bottles going forward.

“Everything should fit underneath a bottle of Heineken, and there’s electronics on this board to rival your iPhone: eight led lights, a processor, an accelerometer, gyroscope and a wireless transmitter with antenna,” the blog reads. “With a custom designed board the tech team manages to squeeze the whole board to just over the size of a 2 Euro coin.” The prototype currently runs on one AA battery and is covered by what looks like felt and electrical tape.

We don’t imagine Heineken will turn every single bottle it produces into a smart bottle if the concept ever reaches commercial market – which is a relief for those who prefer drinking alone without the pushed notion of social interaction. Heineken has yet to release an estimate of how much extra the Heineken Ignite bottles will cost, but it seems like a fun solution for those looking to add a high production value to their otherwise boring frat party. We still have to wonder how one recycles these sensor-laden bottles though.

Watch the promo video below to see the Heineken Ignite smart bottles in action, complete with oddly dressed dancers and people having way more fun than I am.

Natt Garun
An avid gadgets and Internet culture enthusiast, Natt Garun spends her days bringing you the funniest, coolest, and strangest…
Robots just ran the Beijing half-marathon faster than the world record holder
humanoid robot running a marathon

A humanoid robot just ran a half-marathon faster than the world record holder. It might not seem impressive at first, but considering last year, the fastest robot at Beijing's humanoid robot half-marathon finished in two hours and 40 minutes, this is a huge achievement. 

As reported by the Associated Press, the winning robot at this year's Beijing half-marathon crossed the finish line in 50 minutes and 26 seconds, comfortably beating the human world record of 57 minutes recently set by Jacob Kiplimo. 

Read more
As if the plate wasn’t already full, AI is about to worsen the global e-waste crisis
New report highlights a rising environmental concern
Stack of graphics cards and motherboards in a landfill site e-waste

AI is already changing how the world works, but it’s also quietly making one of our biggest environmental problems even worse. And no, this isn’t about energy consumption this time. It’s about the hardware. Because every smarter AI model comes with a physical cost.

AI is about to supercharge the e-waste problem

Read more
Smart glasses are finding a surprise niche — Korean drama and theater shows
Urban, Night Life, Person

Every year, millions of people follow Korean content without speaking a word of the language. They stream shows with subtitles, read translated lyrics, and find workarounds. But live theater has always been a different problem — you can't pause or rewind it. That's the problem: a Korean startup thinks it's cracked, and Yuroy Wang was one of the first to try it. The 22-year-old Taipei retail worker is a K-pop fan who loves Korean culture but doesn't speak the language. When he went to see "The Second Chance Convenience Store," a touring play based on a Korean novel that was a bestseller in Taiwan, he expected supertitles. What he got instead was a pair of chunky black-framed AI-powered glasses sitting on his nose, translating the dialogue in real time directly on the lenses. "As soon as I found out they were available, I couldn't wait to try them," he said. Wang is part of a growing audience discovering that smart glasses, a category of tech that has struggled to find mainstream purpose for years, might have just found their calling in the most unexpected of places: live Korean theater.

How do the glasses work?

Read more