The creations can be as industrial or as whimsical, as simple or as complex as kids want. |
“You can look at anything and see the potential for improvement,” Scarborough, now president and CEO of Überstix, told TDmonthly Magazine.
Scarborough looked at the building systems available to kids and thought he could design a better system — a system accessible to all kids and one in which the structures they built worked.
Scarborough achieved this and more. Kids can incorporate commonplace objects such as paperclips, straws and Popsicle sticks into the designs. A water bottle makes the boat float, egg cartons are castle walls, and a shower cap transforms a polygon into a Frisbee.
Scarborough believes that kids have tremendous potential, and he wanted to create a building system that would allow them to use their problem-solving skills and creativity.
" When an engineer or architect designs something, unless it is strictly utilitarian, they have an aesthetic in mind," he told TDmonthly. "The challenge is to achieve that aesthetic while maintaining the structural integrity of the project. Kids solve these same problems when they build.
And what they build is limited only by their imaginations. According to a math-whiz friend of Scarborough’s son, the total different ways to put four Überstix pieces together is 125,757,744,913,221,000, which is 7 billion times the 1.75 millions species discovered on earth.
But Scarborough doesn’t want kids to be intimidated by that statistic. The creations can be as industrial or as whimsical, as simple or as complex as kids want. The point is to discover something new every day — new ways to connect the parts, new parts created by modifying existing ones, new structures that grow out of the builder’s imagination.
Toys break. As Scarborough sees it, if an Überstix part breaks you have two choices: you can cry like a baby or you can take an emery board and nail clippers and create a new component. And you don’t have to wait until a part breaks to do this. The Überstix parts are meant to be modified. In fact, the basic Überstix I-stick can be modified into at least five different components.
Überstix are also designed to be compatible with other manufacturer’s toys — Lego, K’Nex and Zoobs.
“We want to be an integration hub,” said Scarborough, whose ideal is for kids to optimize their creativity by using all the building systems together. In fact, he wanted to market Überstix with one of the other building systems, but that company refused to promote their product in conjunction with another manufacturer’s product.
To Scarborough that attitude is self-defeating: “It’s not us versus them. It’s about opening up potential.”
What follows is more information on a few Überstix products.
UberArc by UBERSTIX
The UberStix in this set are variously colored and composed of varied materials. The Stix have been designed specifically for constructing “fantastic representations of buildings and bridges or your own designs,” inventor Dane Scarborough told TDmonthly Magazine. “They don’t look like toys. They look very industrial, modern or gothic — whatever the builder’s intention is. The product debuted at Toy Fair 2006 and will ship in July 2006. Sets range in price from $99.99 to $300.00.
UberPult™ - Science Project Series™ by UBERSTIX
Kids can build a functional catapult and learn the physics that make launching objects through the air possible. The catapult itself only requires 90 of the kit’s 181 pieces, leaving plenty of extra pieces to upgrade and explore new design options. As part of the company's Science Project Series, this kit includes a Lab Sheet to test and record a series of suggested experiments."Our construction system is much more diverse than other products, offering integration with other construction sets (Lego, K'nex, Zoobs, Zomes) as well as with recycled materials (Popsicle sticks, McDonald's straws, egg cartons, water bottles). This offers limitless possibilities for children (and adults) to build structures taller than themselves. [Our products] are not available in the mass-market stores," COO Julie Bell of Uberstix told TDmonthly. The Uberpult received the 2007 Parent to Parent Adding Wisdom Award in both Toys/Games and Educational Products categories. It also received The Toy Man Online 2007 Seal of Approval, Award of Excellence and eChoice Award. Launch date: September 2006.
UberStix Starter Set (450 piece kit) by UBERSTIX
Future architects, engineers, and even rocket scientists will love using this versatile construction system that utilizes principles of physics and mathematics to build, float, and fly their wildest projects. The highly flexible, yet sturdy links, crossbeams and connecting panels interlock to form rigid structures that soar. This 450-piece set has plans for a tower, boat, bridge, ray-gun and UFO. Complete instructions are included. 3/30/2006 (MSRP: $44.99; Age: 7 and Up)
Uberbot by UBERSTIX
With the Überbots construction and RC kits, kids spend most of their time designing and building offenses and defenses and then testing their assumptions on the field of battle. If they are knocked down three times, they return to their lab and redesign to come back stronger. The more kids play, the more sophisticated their designs become. Dane Scarborough, inventor of Überbots and Überstix, told TDmonthly, “Build a boat and it floats or sails; build a UFO and it really flies; build a skyscraper and your ceiling may get in the way. More than one retailer told me that placing the order felt good because Überstix are designed to work with recycled items, including water bottles, Popsicle sticks, McDonald's straws, paperclips, etc. … This feature allows kids of all economic backgrounds to build big.” The kit builds two Überbots with 250 Überstix, two controllers and two flags. Each Überbot will operate on a different RC frequency, with up to six Überbots capable of battling simultaneously. The kit can also be purchased with rechargeable batteries. ( Watch Video) 3/20/2006 (MSRP: $149.95)
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