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Disney's 'Sum of All Thrills' Ride Lets Kids Use Math Skills


Thanks to those imagineers at Walt Disney World, you no longer have to be an engineer to design a theme park ride, or be a nerd to have fun doing math. A new interactive feature, developed by Disney and military contractor Raytheon, and called Sum of All Thrills, opened yesterday at Disney's Epcot park. Both of the parties involved hope it'll teach kids that engineering and math can be fun and useful.

According to The New York Times, visitors to the exhibit use a touchscreen to design a roller coaster, bobsled, or jet ride. While you add head-spinning corkscrews and stomach-churning drops via onscreen tools like rulers and dials, mathematical formulas for velocity and acceleration appear on the screen. When your dream ride is complete, you can even hop into a robotic simulator to experience your custom creation.

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New 'Harry Potter' Theme Park Promises Coasters and Castles


It's time to brush up on those spells, you would-be wizards. Monday, Universal Studios revealed more details about its 'Harry Potter' theme park than you can shake a wand at.

According to an Associated Press report, The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, which will open in the spring of 2010 at Universal Orlando Resort's Islands of Adventure, will offer a journey deep into into the heart of J.K. Rowling's beloved world. The author even named the park's marquee ride, the 'Forbidden Journey,' which takes visitors through scenes from the Potter movies, including a Hogwarts Castle model that's made to appear 700-feet tall. Of course, there's high-speed thrills, like the twin-coaster 'Dragon Challenge,' and plenty of Potter-themed souvenirs, too, like chocolate frogs from Honeydukes, magic wands at Ollivander's, or Butterbeer by Three Broomsticks.

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Summer Fun

Roller Coaster Offers High-Speed and High-Tech Thrills

Summer is roller coaster season, folks. Those extra hours of daylight means less time in the office and more time strapping into hard plastic seats in order to barrel down a track at the whim of nothing but gravity. We don't expect the dual threat of long lines and nausea to deter anyone from hopping onto Universal Studios Florida's newest thrill ride, either. That's because, according to the theme park's Web site, the 'Hollywood Rip Ride Rockit' combines your average coaster's eyelid-peeling speed with the multimedia and social-networking features demanded by today's 21st-century amusement park goer.

Passengers climb into cars (equipped with stadium seating) and buckle down with lap restraints that boast touchscreen panels. These panels are used to select a personalized soundtrack (from five music genres) that blasts out of all-weather speakers as you careen down 3,800 feet of track. Along the way, 14 cameras -- six on the car and eight on the track -- are triggered by laser to film a video of the ride, which is then wirelessly downloaded to a kiosk where riders can purchase an edited copy to take home. As if that wasn't enough, the coaster also features an LED light show that changes with every ride.

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Summer Fun

World's First Personal Roller Coaster


Those positively fed up with lengthy lines for coasters at amusement parks will likely dig the concept here. Evento's BuzzBall is essentially a personal roller coaster, which reportedly features a "single seat inside a large outer ball that's able to spin and roll independently of the ball itself" alongside a pair of electric motors used to power it. Better still, you don't even need a hill to ride, just a wide open field (or a road, if you're the daredevil type) to frolic in.

As it stands, the BuzzBall is simply a prototype waiting to flourish, but it sure looks like this company is serious about selling at least a few to those with enough resources (you know, cash and spare time) to enjoy it. [Source: BuzzBall via OhGizmo]

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