Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Lockbox for fridge keeps medication and alcohol away from kids, wins hackathon

Add as a preferred source on Google

Technology can keep kids away from X-rated TV channels and internet sites, so why shouldn’t it secure food and drink? Maybe someday it will: A locking refrigerator drawer won the top prize at a GE Appliances-sponsored hackathon.

Other winners among the 30 products submitted last week at FirstBuild’s fourth annual Hack-the-Home competition in Louisville, Kentucky, included a washing machine load sensor and a dishwasher handle that heats up to dry out wet dish towels.

Recommended Videos

The top $3,000 prize at the 35-hour event went to contestants Josh Weil, Eric Ott, and Alex Vance for “My Fridge Safe,” a locking refrigerator drawer designed to safeguard food, liquor, and/or medications from children or others who shouldn’t be taking them. This smart refrigerator innovation was the trio’s third effort at the contest.

Second place winnings of $2,000 went to a group of engineers and designers from Mexico, Colombia, and the United States for the washing machine load sensing technology, which uses a series of lights to issue warnings when the machine is overloaded.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

The group, which called itself Team Borderless, says the technology can help consumers avoid unbalanced loads and conserve water and energy. A group of GE Appliances Edison engineers won the $1,000 third prize for the “Multi-Dry” towel-drying dishwasher handle, so called because it recirculates warm air from inside the machine.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Several hackathon sponsors also awarded prizes to projects that used their technology. For example, GE Appliances gave $500 to a group of Columbus College of Art & Design students for a cooktop concealed in a countertop.

Samtec awarded a sponsor prize to the creators of Toast-e, a warming drawer for clothing that used Samtec’s connectors and cables. A group called Team Fresh won FirstBuild’s community favorite award for a refrigerator with slide-out pantry-style shelves.

FirstBuild is a worldwide GE Appliances-backed community of creators who focus on smart home ideas products. It has offices in Louisville, Shanghai, and Hyderabad, India, and claims 30,000 members online.

Competition judges, in addition to FirstBuild staff and sponsors, included Dr. Emmanuel Collins, Dean of the J.B. Speed School of Engineering; Grace Simrall, Chief of Civic Innovation and Technology at Louisville Metro Government; and Jimmy DiResta, renowned Master Maker.

Denny Arar
Former Contributor
A longtime PC World/TechHive editor and contributor, Denny Arar (a.k.a. Yardena Arar) has also written for The New York…
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer review: A massive, gorgeous dryer with one AI-sized asterisk
The LG SIGNATURE DLEX8900B is a beautiful dryer with a AI brain and plenty of capacity. Just be ready to pay a premium and take over from time-to-time.
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer

View at LG

Quick Review

Read more
Fraimic’s E Ink art frame generates art from your voice and looks incredible doing it
Fraimic's AI art canvas is one of the most thoughtfully designed smart frames I've come across.
Indoors, Interior Design, Person

We’ve seen a lot of "smart art frames" at CES over the years. Most of them feel like glorified digital photo frames in turtlenecks. However, there’s one that feels genuinely different: Fraimic, and I say that as someone deeply skeptical of this category.

The pitch appears quite compelling at first. Speak a prompt into the device, and its built-in mic sends the command to OpenAI's GPT Image 2.0, which then generates full-color artwork that lands on a Spectra 6 E Ink display. 

Read more
Google Home’s latest update makes it easier for you to start using automations
With version 4.20, the app will offer pre-built automations you can start using with a tap.
Google Home Automations tab screenshot on gradient background

Google is rolling out a fresh batch of updates to Gemini for Home and the Google Home app, and the headline change is one that could get more users to try out automations. Version 4.20 of the Google Home app adds a handful of pre-built routines to the Automations tab, so instead of building one from scratch, you can pick one and turn it on with a tap.

No more starting from zero

Read more