Archive for the ‘Hardware’ Category

Flagsuit wins another NASA Astronaut Glove Challenge

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Peter Homer

Southwest Harbor, Maine’s Peter Homer won $450,000 in NASA’s Astronaut Glove Challenge yesterday.

This is Homer’s second time winning the contest. Homer’s first win in 2007 launched his startup, Flagsuit. Flagsuit is developing pressure suits using the same technology as Homer’s prizewinning gloves — for use as a wearable substitute for hyperbaric chambers used to treat conditions such as cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, traumatic brain injury, stroke and autism. Down the line, Homer plans to target the the space tourism industry, which Homer sees growing in the next two years.

Last summer, Flagsuit also won the Heinlein Business Plan Competition.

Sounds like gibberish, but it isn’t: Pranav Mistry demos SixthSense hand camera; paper laptops

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

The MIT Media Lab’s Pranav Mistry recounted the history of his SixthSense project at TED India this week. SixthSense started when Mistry took the rollers out of two computer mice (mouses?), attached some pulleys, and made a glove-like hand-gesture interface. Moving through SixthSense’s evolution, Mistry talks about some Internet-synced sticky notes, pens that draw in three dimensions, Google maps that interact with physical objects, and other things that, if said by anyone else, would just be crazy talk.

From there, he explains how he inverted the process, in an effort to “paint the physical world with that digital information.” He started with a projector mounted on his bike helmet that would project pixels onto the physical world. He added a camera and the system eventually shrank down to the pendant we recognize as the current incarnation of SixthSense.

In the video, Mistry demonstrates the system by casually doing things that shouldn’t make any sense: Digitally painting on a physical wall, taking a photo of the Boston skyline by framing it with his index fingers and thumbs, dialing a phone number on numbers projected on his palm, watching video of President Obama’s MIT speech on a print newspaper; reading a tag cloud — “comedian,” “geek,” etc. — that appears on comedian/blogger Baratunde Thurston’s shirt when Mistry meets him; playing a video game on a piece of paper; and copying text and charts from the regular kind of paper and pasting them to his crazy, digital paper, just by picking it up and moving it.

MHT’s Women to Watch make an impression: Now to recognize more

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

By Jim Connolly

Jim ConnollyThere are those people who walk into a room and enter into a discussion and you know right away, there’s something special about them. They are bright, well-informed, focused and energetic. They’re leaders. Put 10 of them in the room, and you have something dynamic.

That’s the way it was with the 2009 MHT Women to Watch event last spring.

Women to WatchYou had a room full of people like Cambridge Nanocomp’s Jill Becker who has been building and then selling “atomic layer deposition” systems, sort of like an oven used to develop nanoscale thin films, such as coatings for drillbits. But she often did it one-handed, with a baby in the other arm.

Intel’s Mondira Pant has a batch of microprocessor-related patent applications in the pipeline and has authored some 30 technical papers. She also has focused on developing her skills as a public speaker, being honored as the best speaker at an Intel technical conference, while reaching out to the community to teach dance.

Then, there was Anna Mracek Dietrich, one of the MIT rocket team alums that are building a roadable aircraft, what the rest of us might call a flying car. But Dietrich isn’t just a techie, she’s the business person behind the business at Terafugia. In addition, to show the wisdom of youth, as one of the youngest Women to Watch, she observed that she awaits the day when there will be no need for an event that focuses just on the achievements of women.

For now, though, it’s important to continue to recognize the accomplishments of the women who are driving forward the New England technology sector. So, for the seventh year, Mass High Tech will recognize the women who have contributed to the tech community, but also are poised to be industry leaders of the future.

Time is running out. We need you and your peers to nominate great candidates for the 2010 Women to Watch awards. As members of the tech community you know best who they are.

Nominations close on December 4, with honorees being celebrated on March 18. Please submit your nominations here.

HP to acquire 3Com

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

By Rodney Brown

3Com Corp., the company that gave birth to Ethernet, has agreed to be acquired by Hewlett Packard Co. for a total of approximately $2.7 billion in cash, in a deal that already has approval from the boards of both companies.

Buying Marlborough-based 3Com gives HP a well-developed roster of Ethernet switching products, a much stronger corporate presence in China, and a leap into network security products through 3Com’s subsidiary, TippingPoint, which the company acquired for $400 million in 2005.

HP also gets access to 3Com’s large research and development team in China, which came about from 3Com’s partnership with Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. Officials at Calif.-based HP say that the purchase will allow it to boost its next-generation data center strategy built on the convergence of servers, storage, networking, management, facilities and services.

The agreement calls for 3Com stockholders to receive $7.90 for each share of 3Com common stock that they hold at the closing of the merger, which is expected to happen in the first half of calendar 2010.

3Com, which has 5,800 employees globally, posted revenue of $290.5 million and $7.5 million in net profit in the third quarter, a year-over-year drop of 15 percent and 91 percent respectively. It held $200 million in long-term debt, including $46 million due this fiscal year and another $46 million due in its 2011 fiscal year. The company has a market cap of $2.23 billion.

Click here to watch HP’s webcast announcing the deal.

Pranav Mistry taking SixthSense open-source?

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Pranav Mistry, of the MIT Media Lab’s Fluid Interfaces Group, is reportedly planning to release the code for his augmented reality system, SixthSense.

The computer system, which you wear around your neck, projects information on the world around you, which you can then manipulate with your hands. Pretty soon, you may be able to build your own for about $350. Mistry told a TED India panel this week he didn’t want to subject SixthSense to corporate whims.

After the jump, watch Fluid Interface Group director Patti Maes present the technology to the TED conference in March. (more…)

In 20 years, we’ll all be wearing one: Behold the Happiness Hat

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

happiness hat from Lauren McCarthy on Vimeo.

Local designer Lauren McCarthy, ex- of MIT’s Media Lab, CSAIL, and Visual Arts Program, developed a hat that detects whether or not you are smiling, and if not, it stabs you in the back of the head: The Happiness Hat.

McCarthy’s web site says the hat is the first in a series of “tools for improved social interacting.” She further explains:

An enclosed bend sensor attaches to the cheek and measures smile size, a servo motor moves a metal spike into the head inversely proportional to the degree of smile. Through repeated use of this conditioning device you can train your brain to smile all the time. The device runs on Arduino.

For my dollar, when I see someone walking down the street with a constant smile on their face, I think “deranged,” not “happy.” But then again, that might be exactly why I need a Happiness Hat.

Four locals among PopSci’s ‘Ten Young Geniuses’

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Popular Science has chosen “10 Young Geniuses Shaking Up Science Today,” and not surprisingly, four of them come from New England. Take that, Rest of the Country.

Among the 10:

PopSci also helpfully notes that, John Cusack notwithstanding, the planet Nibiru will not collide with Earth, wiping out all life, in two years.

Digital, shmigital: Polaroid instant photography to return

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Anyone who says they saw this coming is lying: Polaroid plans to relaunch its instant photography products in 2010.

Summit Global Group, PLR IP Holdings LLC, and the Impossible Project, a group that had bought a former Polaroid plant in Amsterdam with the intent to manufacture its own instant photography product, have made a deal to manufacture new Polaroid instant cameras and film in 2010.

According to the Boston Herald, PLR IP Holdings is co-owned by Boston-based financial services firm Gordon Brothers Group.

The former Route 128 powerhouse  auctioned off its former headquarters in Waltham on Friday. Its assets, including its intellectual property and name, were sold in April to New York-based private equity firm Patriarch Partners.

The company has been selling a portable photo printer, the Pogo, with technology from its Bedford-based spinout, Zink Imaging.

Even as it fell, Polaroid’s instant photography technology had fans — organized, proactive fans that started projects like Poladroid, a web site that gives digital photos that slightly off Polaroid color; Polanoid, an online gallery of the world’s scanned Polaroid photos; the unnecessary-to-explain Save Polaroid; and the Impossible Project, which had been buying capital to manufacture a similar product. So bringing the product back isn’t that shocking given that some people were bent out of shape enough to buy a factory.

William Kamkwamba, ‘Boy Who Harnessed the Wind,’ @ MIT this month

Friday, October 9th, 2009
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
William Kamkwamba
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Ron Paul Interview

On the Daily Show, William Kamkwamba talked about building an electricity-generating windmill for his family’s farm in Malawi, using a library book as a guide, at the age of 14. He’s since presented at TEDGlobal 2007 in Tanzania, and wrote a book, “The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind.”

Toward the end of the interview, Kamkwamba explains how he found out about Google, at the TED conference: “I was like, ‘Where was this Google all this time?’”

Kamkwamba is scheduled to speak at MIT’s Technology & Culture Forum on October 21.

After the jump, watch Kamkwamba’s presentation at the TED conference in Tanzania in 2007. (more…)

Good luck getting anything done tomorrow, tech community: Red Sox-Angels at 9:37

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Tonight is Game 1 of the Red Sox’ five-game divisional series against the Angels, which creates two near-certainties: Another Sox/Yankees ALCS; and “worker productivity” becoming an oxymoron at offices throughout New England tomorrow. This thing doesn’t start till 9:37 p.m., for Hendu’s sake, and postseason baseball tends to go well with alcohol.

But what baseball taketh away, it can also giveth, or whatever. The sport has inspired some nifty innovations in analytics, robotics and … let’s call it life sciences.

MIT News Office photo

MIT News Office photo

• In spring training, the Sox, who even give their IT guy World Series rings, supplemented hitting coach Dave Magadan with the MIT Media Lab, naturally. For the last few years, researchers from the Media Lab’s Responsive Environments Group, has been strapping sensors to minor leagers while they’re batting at the Sox camp at Fort Myers. The info from accelerometers and gyroscopes could provide insight on differences in swing mechanics during a hot streak or a slump.

• Using an arm developed at MIT, University of Tokyo researchers have developed baseball-playing robots that could make the Fall Classic either more interesting, or entirely pointless, to watch. Think of all the time and money the Sox would save on scouting, not to mention free agency. And J.D. Drew would presumably be injured far less often if he were a robot. (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