Archive for the ‘Instrumentation’ Category

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.

20% chance Forbes’ Boost Your Business winner will be Massachusetts tech startup

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
i-Nalysis president Drew Hession-Kunz

i-Nalysis president Drew Hession-Kunz

Four of the 20 semifinalists in the Forbes.com Boost your Business Competition are local tech startups: tour guide podcast-maker Audissey Guides Media, online SAT tutor I Need A Pencil, chemical analyzer-maker  i-Nalysis, and rebootless computer software updater Ksplice  made it to the second round. Charlestown-based yoga apparel-maker Plank Design also made the cut, but you don’t care about that, do you?

At the contest’s website, you can watch video profiles of the contestants and vote for a winner.

MHT covered i-Nalysis and its handheld material analyzer in February. Ksplice won the MIT$100K in May, and was also a favorite of our informal panel of judges who weighed in on the prospects of this year’s $100K crop, which you can check out after the jump.

Rocket shortens trip to Mars to 39 hours, links the red planet to Dianne Wilkerson in four degrees

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

Ad Astra Rocket Co. has developed an ion rocket that could shorten the trip to Mars to 39 days.

Aside from simply being a snazzy rocket you could use to fly to Mars, the technology also has a provincial Bostonian angle. Ad Astra is based in Texas, but its CEO, Franklin Chang-Diaz, is an MIT alum and former astronaut whose daughter, state senator Sonia Chang Diaz, defeated her scandal-plagued predecessor, Dianne Wilkerson, in last fall’s election. 

MIT researcher Oleg Batishchev, whose Mini-Helicon Plasma Thruster is based on the elder Chang-Diaz’ technology, called the Ad Astra rocket a Ferrari, while his plasma thruster, intended for steering satellites, is an ecnomical hybrid.

To demonstrate his thruster ’s simplicity, Bathshchev and his team made a version of his rocket out of a Coke bottle and a Coke can. After the jump, watch video of the bottle/can rocket. (more…)

Lumos Catheter unites things you wouldn’t think would go together

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

lumos_catheterThat would be catheters and lasers.

From the MHT print edition, the Brookline-based company is using low-powered lasers to help guide catheter insertion.

It sounds funny until you consider the old way, which “involves guesswork.”

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

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