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Steve Bosserman

dailywireless.org » Open Source Tricorder - 1 views

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    Head's up!  Dr. Peter Jansen: A possible collaborator with SENSORICA
Steve Bosserman

Scientist beams up a real Star Trek tricorder | Reuters - 1 views

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    While it may sound like the stuff of science fiction, Jansen isn't the only one to take notice of just how useful a real functioning tricorder would be - especially as a medical tool. Telecommunications giant Qualcomm Inc this year launched the "Tricorder X-Prize Contest" with the slogan "Healthcare in the palm of your hand." Qualcomm hopes to motivate developers with a $10 million prize to make medical tricorders a reality. Wanda Moebus of the Advanced Medical Technology Association, who is not affiliated with Jansen or Qualcomm, told Reuters the X-Prize "is really cool," but cautioned that making a real medical tricorder device "would have to be measured on its safety and effect, like all other medical technologies." Jansen said he has been approached by "a couple of teams" about the X Prize, but added that his prototypes are more for science research than medical tools. Besides, he said he already is on to his next frontier, making a sort of "replicator," another "Star Trek" device that will create 3D objects and foods that are dimensional copies of real items. Jansen's "replicator" is a 3D printer, which in itself is not really new, but the scientist thinks about it in terms reminiscent of "Star Trek's" famous prologue. It's "like nothing we've ever seen before," Jansen said.
Steve Bosserman

the Tricorder project - 1 views

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    More about Dr. Peter Jansen
Steve Bosserman

Wave Glider Concept - 3 views

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    Potential sensor technology applications?
Steve Bosserman

A blood test without needles: Optical microscopy looks directly at blood cells through ... - 0 views

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    spectrally encoded confocal microscopy (SECM)
Steve Bosserman

When Cities Run Themselves | WOUB - 0 views

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    Machines talking to machines No doubt that the Olympics will have a profound effect in shaping London's future. By the time the Games begin, for instance, it will have Europe's largest free WiFi zone, with the city's iconic red phone booths converted, fittingly, into hotspots. But another opportunity London landed earlier this month could have just as much impact, perhaps more. A company called Living PlanIt announced that it will begin testing its "Urban Operating System" in the Greenwich section of the city. What does that mean? Put simply, London would have its own operating system, much as your PC runs on Windows or your Mac runs on Apple's IOS. This ties into the latest hot buzz phrase, "the internet of things," which describes a world where machines talk to other machines. No human interaction required. So, for a city, this means sensors in buildings would connect to sensors in water treatment plants which would connect to sensors in stoplights. It would be one gigantic, computerized urban nervous system, which a lot of experts think is the only way cities can survive a future when they'll contain more than two out of every three people on Earth. Based on what sensors reveal about the location and movement of humans in a section of a city, for instance, buildings will automatically adjust their temperatures, streetlights will dim or brighten, water flow will increase or slow. Or, in the event of a disaster, emergency services would have real-time access to traffic data, trauma unit availability, building blueprints. And soon enough, our smart phones will be able to tap in to the Urban OS. So will our household appliances. This is not some 21st century analogue of the personal jet pack. The Urban OS is the driving force behind a smart city being built from the ground up in northern Portugal. Construction is scheduled to be completed in three years; eventually it will have about 150,000 residents. It will also have more than 100 million sen
Steve Bosserman

'Biochemiresistor' sensor is fast, super-sensitive | KurzweilAI - 4 views

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    this sensor is amazing ! very close to the vision we have for personal portable sensors: fast to immediate reading, detection of any compound...
Steve Bosserman

physician inventors flock to ohio - 1 views

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    Opportunities for collaboration?
Steve Bosserman

Collaboration Leads to New Technology Center - ThePlus: Northeast Ohio - 2 views

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    Brad Masi is a good contact!
Steve Bosserman

Fuel Cell Taps Into Roach Power | Chemical & Engineering News - 2 views

  • Their cockroach biofuel cell is a bundle of thin carbon wires sealed inside a glass capillary tube.
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    Their cockroach biofuel cell is a bundle of thin carbon wires sealed inside a glass capillary tube. The cell is about 0.05 cm in diameter and a few centimeters long. To make up the cell's anode, Scherson and his team coated the wires with two enzymes: trehalase to break the sugar trehalose into two glucose molecules and glucose oxidase to extract electrons from the glucose. To create the cathode, the researchers coated the wires with the enzyme bilirubin oxidase to shuttle the generated electrons to oxygen to produce water. Because the enzymes alone can't efficiently transfer electrons to and from the electrode, the researchers also added an osmium complex to the carbon wires to act as an electron shuttle. The researchers selected trehalose, says Scherson, because of its high concentration in cockroach blood, 30 mM.
Steve Bosserman

My name is Drone, James Drone - Global Guerrillas - 2 views

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    A look at where sensor technology is heading.  Is it time for SENSORICA to get suited up and into the robotics game?
Steve Bosserman

Xth Sense | Res, a matter. - 0 views

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    The music of a single cell?
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