Archive for September, 2009

EmTech09: MooBella’s ice cream machine is nerd magnet

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Amid wearable, reality-augmenting computers and 35 up-and-coming innovators, MooBella’s ice cream vending robot attracted the most foot traffic at EmTech 2009 in MIT’s Kresge Auditorium.

At the risk of editorializing, the ice cream was delicious. But whatever, it’s ice cream — if the technology involved a guy in a hollowed-out refrigerator handing out Hoodsies through a mail slot, I’d say the same thing.

Easy there, entrepreneurial community — I’ve already patented that one, though the MooBella exhibition did put into sharp relief the shortcomings of my old startup, hoodZboxx®’s, 2006 demo on the most dangerous street corner in America.

MHT broke the news of MooBella’s existence in 2006, and last week, the BBJ reported the company had landed $18 million in funding from Geneva-based Inventages Venture Capital that will go toward manufacturing its first 100 machines.

Massachusetts man goes postal on Netflix

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

I’m surprised this didn’t happen sooner  — the Smoking Gun has posted the plea agreement struck between the Commonwealth and a guy who worked at a Springfield Postal Service processing center, who had been making Netflix DVDs disappear from the mail. The former post office worker had reportedly lifted more than 3,000 DVDs, which added up to more than $36,000; the Smoking Gun says he can expect to do about a year in jail.

Last week, Netflix gave a group of coders $1 million for improving their recommendation algorithm by at least 10 percent.

Back in 2007, the Globe toured California-based Netflix’ ultra-secret, unmarked processing center in Northborough, where identically dressed employees sort copy after copy of Crash, the Departed and the Bucket List every day. But all the secrecy and algorithms and matching t-shirts in the world won’t help you once envelope leaves the building.

“Born in the Recession”: A look at business survival stories from past recessions

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Look to the past in order to move forward. That’s the mantra we followed in putting together our latest Mass High Tech issue in print today. This isn’t the first recession environment that businesses have faced. And in fact, many well-known companies launched during past recessions and depressions have not only survived, but thrived.

We talked to a few of these companies and got their “survival stories.” But we’re sure there are other stories of birth and survival in a recession for other businesses — stories we’d like to hear about and potentially include in future issues. What are your stories? How did you manage innovation on a restricted budget? And what about those of you who may have launched a business in a recession or depression and were not so fortunate? What did you learn and where are you now? Leave us a comment below.

In the meantime, take a look at our “Born in the Recession” issue:

Harvard, NASA take picture of Milky Way from Cambridge, more or less

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009
Harvard/Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory photo

Harvard/Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory photo

NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory is a telescope orbiting the earth and controlled from a building within walking distance of Paddy’s Lunch. Despite that, the Harvard-run satellite is tracking down X-ray emissions exploded stars, galaxy clusters and the areas surrounding black holes.

Harvard’s Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, which operates the telescope, has released detailed images and video of the Milky Way. The image above is actually a mosaic of 88 separate “pictures” taken by the telescope. Check out the observatory web site for all kind of interactive animations and high-resolution images.

MIT, Harvard, Yale researchers win ‘genius grants’

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

 

Six New England researchers have won “genius grants” from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

MIT economist Esther Duflo, Harvard researchers Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan and Peter Huybers, Yale researchers Richard Prum and Mary Tinetti, and Project HEALTH founder Rebecca Onie each received $500,000 to further their research.

Mahadevan, above tries to answer everyday questions with applied mathematics — how cloth falls, or how skin wrinkles.

After the jump, watch video of the remaining New England grant recipients. (more…)

NVCA report starts VC/entrepreneur slapfight

Monday, September 21st, 2009

The National Venture Capital Association has released its report on VCs’ impact on the U.S. economy. The report says in 2008, VC-backed companies generated about $3 trillion in revenue and employed about 12 million people in the United States. The report also says VC backed companies have out-performed non-VC-backed companies, and that VCs create whole industries more or less out of thin air.

That all sounds good, but Vivek Wadhwa, a researcher at Harvard, Duke and UC-Berkeley (a hat trick I would have thought to be physically impossible) calls B.S. at TechCrunch, saying the NVCA is trying to justify tax breaks and bailout dough for VCs:

How’d they come up with these numbers? They added up all the revenue generated in 2008 by any company a venture capitalist ever invested a dime in. So if John Doerr bought Bill a lunch in 1985, they’d count Microsoft as part of their empire. Maybe I’m exaggerating a bit. But seriously, the NVCA numbers aren’t even remotely credible.

At PEHub, Dan Primack issued a 14-word, parenthetical reaction:

(grating veneration of entrepreneurs as immaculate purists, forced to suffer the indignity of investment)

On his Startable blog, former Atlas VC Healy Jones splits the difference and calls Wadhwa thoughtful but takes exception with his claim that VCs “go where they smell blood,” rather than funding innovation. Jones says VCs are looking to duck capital gains taxes, but aren’t looking for a bailout. 

FastIgnite CEO Sim Simeonov calls the NVCA’s claims “outlandish,” but strikes a different chord than Wadwha:

My two cents are that if VCs are guilty of claiming or receiving too much credit when things go well, they certainly get too much blame when things go poorly. And I certainly think it’s foolish to only blame VCs for investing too much money in companies. It takes two to tango.

Dean Kamen demonstrates robotic, prosthetic DEKA arm on 60 Minutes

Monday, September 21st, 2009


Watch CBS Videos Online

60 Minutes took a look at New Hampshire Inventor Dean Kamen’s latest invention, a prosthetic arm developed by his company, DEKA Research & Development, with a four-fingered hand with an opposable thumb.

MHT first wrote about the arm in 2007. DEKA created the prosthetic with help from Holliston-based Liberating Technologies Inc., and funding from DARPA’s $100 million Revolutionizing Prosthetics project.

The robotic arm is powered by a lithium battery and equipped with multiple microprocessors, sensors and haptics technology. The prosthetic is designed to move and function similar to a real arm and hand that can grasp bottles and lighter objects.

Users control the arm — which is designed to be able to curl weights of up to 20 pounds — with sensors in their shoes and a joystick they can either move with their shoulder muscles or remaining portions of their natural arm.

Last month, MIT researcher Hugh Herr — who lost both of his legs below the knee to frostbite at age 17 — landed $20 million for from General Catalyst and WFD Ventures for his startup iWalk, which is developing robotic ankle and foot prosthetics.

Tauntr would have made yesterday’s Patriots game even worse

Monday, September 21st, 2009

BBJ staff writer Lisa van Der Pool talks to NECN about Boston-based Tauntr, a social network where users can mock and berate friends with different sports-team allegiances, and which landed $1.1 million in angel funding last week. The service, thankfully for Pats-loving nerds, doesn’t launch until next month. The Globe’s wince-inducing video caption “Brady: Lack of touchdowns ‘unacceptable,’” seems like it was made for something like Tauntr, if not the Onion.

This fall/winter should be a good time to launch a sports-themed invective technology, at least locally, with the Sox closing in on the wild card, the Bruins playing at Fenway, and Rasheed Wallace playing for the Celtics. 

Tauntr shares the local sports social networking niche with Boston-based Trumedia Networks, which recently expanded beyond its Sawxheads, Patsheads, Celtsheads and Blackandgoldheads to target a national sports audience. Trumedia has developed an embeddable applet called Slugfest, which lets sports fans argue via widget on sites like Boston.com.

MHT on NECN: Brightcove, PermissionTV change strategies

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Staff writer Julie Donnelly dropped by New England Business Day to talk about local online video companies like PermissionTV and Brightcove — rumored to be bought by Google last week — targeting smaller publishers of Web video.

Modest proposals for MBTA alternatives

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Since our beloved and normally only sporadically dangerous T has decided to be more reliably and consistently terrifying, and since everybody deciding to drive to work en masse would end life in Greater Boston as we know it, what are your alternatives? Even better, what are your science-fiction-y alternatives that won’t really be available any time soon? MHT Blog is here to help.

Terrafugia's Transition

Terrafugia's Transition

Let’s start with the outrageously impractical: If you’ve got about $150,000 burning a hole in your pocket — and these days, who doesn’t? — you could buy a flying car. But that would really just amount to driving, since Terrafugia insists its Transition is a “roadable aircraft” — you drive to the airport and fly to LaGuardia, you don’t just take off while stuck in traffic on 128.

Rail-Pod

Rail-Pod

You absolutely cannot use automated, personal train cars to get to work — but it would be cool if you could. Rail-Pod, started by four UMass Amherst alumni, wants to build feeder lines to the existing fire-and-crash-prone train lines on unused tracks — but even if they accomplish their goals, that’s a ways off. (more…)

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