Archive for September, 2009

WebInno’s Book of Odds: your chances of getting a job increase

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

The Web Innovators Group last night showed a welcome change from the high-tech meetup’s earlier sessions this year. This winter’s WebInno meetings were deluged with job seekers – but last night’s group of about 300 seemed to include more people wearing the event’s trademark “I’m hiring…” name badges, or pitching their own companies in informal networking sessions.

Out of the event’s featured “main dish” presenters, three-year-old Book of Odds Enterprises Inc. was the fan favorite. The company is developing a semantic search site that parses probability statistics from the web and presents them in a format designed for consumers. With a beta invite key, you can find out, for example, that if you live in a city, the odds you average less than six hours’ sleep a night are 1 in 3.5.

webinno

The beta site’s search engine seemed to be having trouble this morning: searches for common odds queries – like car accidents, business failures and plane crashes – yield no results.

But the audience at WebInno liked the idea. They voted it tops in a text-message vote, over Batch Book, a Providence-based small business CRM software, and Epernicus, a social network for scientists.

MIT professor turns pickle into smoldering OLED pixel

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

If I only had a nickel for every time I typed that headline … Vladimir Bulovic, of MIT’s Research Laboratory of Electronics, hooked a pickle up to what looks like a rotisserie spit, and got it to glow like an OLED pixel.

As Bulovic explains, OLED displays are 100-molecule-thick thin films hooked up to electrodes at the top and the bottom.

“The only thing you need to do next, is make sure you have a million individual little devices side by side.”

The gauntlet has been thrown — who among you will build the million pickle TV? MassTLC’s unConference is Thursday — let’s get this thing going as the next X Prize.

Via Popular Science.

Build-your-own puke light instructions prefigure new YouTube video genre

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Last spring, MHT took a look at some of the nonlethal weapons being made by New England tech firms, including Raytheon’s Active Denial System and Foster-Miller’s “ballistic net.”

Billerica-based LED-maker Luminus Devices supplies the LEDs necessary to make a “puke light,” which is exactly what it sounds like. At the time, Luminus CTO and 2008 MHT All-Star Alexei Erchak joked that making weaponized flashlights was actually his original vision for the company.

Now, thanks to the Series of Tubes, you can build your own flashlight which, when you shine it at a person’s face, will make that person vomit. What could go wrong?

Incidentally, a sound cannon also briefly mentioned in that MHT story, made by California-based American Technology Corp. has been used on American citizens for the first time. Pittsburgh police fired “shrill beeps” at protesters trying to march on the G20 summit last week. After the jump, subject yourself to the same shrill beeps via YouTube.

Via Gizmodo.

(more…)

Craigslist booms with Boston business discards

Monday, September 28th, 2009

By Galen Moore

Galen MooreFrom the windows of Mass High Tech’s newsroom, I can’t count construction cranes on the Manhattan skyline. Other folkloric indicators of economic activity, such as men’s underwear sales, are also closed to my view. However, as I chew over the good news that our recession is over, I’ve had my eye on another trend that may not augur well for our region: Business is booming on Craigslist’s Boston site. As of August, listings in the Boston site’s “business” category ­­— where business owners go to sell unneeded furniture and equipment — have doubled over the past two years.

Similar listings quadrupled nationwide, according to a Craigslist spokeswoman. The listings include everything from office supplies to entire businesses — such as La Bella’s Fine Foods, a catering and café business in Medford that the owner says needs a capital investment to get profitable again.

Craigslist’s overall traffic has grown steadily through the recession. In August 2009, the San Francisco-based online classified marketplace saw 11.6 million more visitors than it saw in August 2008. The site’s 25.6 percent growth, compared with its traffic a year ago, vastly outstripped the Internet at large, where the number of monthly users grew by 4 percent in the same time frame.

“Things are really slow,” said Tony La Bella, the eight-year owner of La Bella’s Fine Foods. “From where I am, it’s probably best to let somebody take it and see what they can do with it.” (more…)

MIT’s “Stickybot” gecko robot will not sell you car insurance

Friday, September 25th, 2009

A robotic gecko has been added to the local robotic zoo that already includes a tuna, a dog, a smaller dog, a lobster, a lamprey, a clam, and a whole school of fish.

The MIT Biomimetics Lab’s “Stickybot“ has footpads that mimic a gecko’s, allowing it to scale walls. The robot could be used in military surveillance and search and rescue.

The biomimetics lab is also working on a robot inspired by the cheetah, according to MIT. Yikes.

Antigen Express synthetic H1N1 flu vaccine in the works

Friday, September 25th, 2009

By Julie Donnelly

Julie Donnelly

Worcester-based synthetic vaccine company Antigen Express Inc. is hard at work making the next generation of vaccines against both avian and swine flu.

The company wasn’t among the five pharmaceutical giants to be approved to produce the H1N1 vaccine that will be distributed throughout the U.S. in the next few weeks. In fact, Antigen Express is still waiting for the FDA to approve protocols for clinical trials of its H1N1 vaccine — company President Eric von Hofe said he expects those conversations to happen in the next few weeks. Von Hofe said the company is currently doing trials in Lebanon and is seeking approval to do clinical trials from European Union regulators as well.

The FDA has never approved a synthetic vaccine for prophylactic use. But von Hofe said that he thinks the regulator is starting to warm up to the novel technology.

“Back when there was the H5N1 (avian flu) scare, the FDA was very skeptical of synthetic vaccines. But then they tried to make a vaccine out of eggs and they just couldn’t do it because it was so toxic. Now I think they may be more open new technologies,” von Hofe said.

Antigen Express uses a combination of three peptides, which are strands of linked amino acids, to develop its vaccines. Von Hofe said the company discovered that one of the peptides the company is using for its H5N1 vaccine, also in development, is from a part of the virus that is identical with H1N1. So now the company has to identify the other two peptides for the combination, get approval from U.S. and/or EU regulators to start trials and do the trials. This whole process should take more than a year, which means the company won’t be a player in this year’s fight against pandemic flu.

… Unless things go horribly, horribly wrong. Von Hofe said that if the swine flu mutates halfway through the season, and the vaccines being manufactured now are ineffective, the government could push up the time lines for other vaccines in development, including, perhaps, Antigen Express’ vaccine.

Internet’s full potential finally, fully realized: Bigmouth Billy Bass reads your tweets

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Live video by Ustream

Two English guys working for ARM have developed either the ultimate Twitter peripheral or a sure sign of the imminent decline of Western civilization as we know it: A Big Mouth Billy Bass that reads tweets sent to @mbedmicro

Either way, they presented at the Embedded Systems Conference at the Hynes Convention Center this week. The bass runs on a microcontroller platform developed by ARM engineers Simon Ford and Chris Styles. In the live streaming video above, you can watch Billy read your tweet. Here’s a list of Billy’s recitations, and here are some reactions from conference-going twitterers

If this thing ever goes into mass production, I’m dropping out of society. After the jump, watch Billy lip sync to Homer Simpson and Office Space. (more…)

Mass. Biotech Council renames to ‘MassBio’

Friday, September 25th, 2009

0925_MassBio-LogoMassachusetts Biotechnology Council is a mouthful, and MBC, as local life sciences insiders call it, doesn’t mean anything to anyone outside of the state. So just call them MassBio.

The organization has officially changed its name, its logo and its website. The new site prominently lists the services and educational programs the organization provides.

In this economy, it’s not all about the miniatiure crabcakes. Biotech companies want to know their dues — which range from $1,500 per year for tiny companies all the way up to $18,000 for the Pfizers of the world — are getting them something of tangible value. So the new MassBio offers everything from group purchasing for natural gas to partnering events geared to spur deals between the small companies and big pharma.

The new name creates congruence between the Massachusetts organization and several other high profile groups, including the San Francisco Bay region’s “BayBio.”

“It also helps because we are doing more work in Washington, and before people would say, ‘MBC? Is that a TV network’?” MassBio President Bob Coughlin said.

Finally, the name casts a wide net. Coughlin said if any biomass or biofuels companies want to join, they are more than welcome.

- Julie M. Donnelly

Emo Labs CEO blows DEMO crowd away with invisible speakers playing the Beach Boys’ ‘Kokomo’

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Mashable catches up with Emo Labs, the Waltham-based company making invisible speaker technology for flat screen TVs that, detailed explanations aside, makes no sense beyond “sound comes out of the screen.”

Emo was launched in 2005 by “venture engineering” firm Manifold Products — one of a few design and engineering firms taking an active role in the startups they’d funded.

The company was a hit at the recent DEMOfall09 emerging tech conference in San Diego. After the jump, watch Carlson demonstrate his technology with the bizarre choice of the Beach Boys’ “Kokomo.”

Via Gizmodo. (more…)

Boston Dynamics’ Little Dog robot: Just like the Big Dog, except …

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Boston Dynamics, the Waltham-based maker of military robots that are incidentally quite entertaining, should really look into monetizing its test videos. Gizmodo posts videos of the Little Dog, the Scrappy-Doo of the headless robotic dog set.

Designed by Katie Byl of Harvard’s Microrobotics (typing that word almost shut my brain down) Lab, which has also developed robotic flies.

Boston Dynamics has the Big Dog and the Precision Urban Hopper in the can, and announced in April it’s developing a humanoid robot. This should be good.

After the jump, watch another video of the Little Dog operate in view of an organic version of a robotic dog made from biological materials, who does not seem happy about the whole situation. (more…)

Affiliate publications: ACBJ.com, Boston Business Journal, Bizjournals.com, Portfolio.com, Wired.com

Web Site Developed by Neptune Web, Inc.

Use of, registration on, this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement. Please read our Privacy Policy (updated) A publishing partner with Portfolio