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Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2506)1/12/2001 2:57:53 AM
From: Uncle Frank  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12231
 
Did you see this piece on Kamen, Mq?

wirednews.com

uf



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2506)1/12/2001 9:42:10 AM
From: DWB  Respond to of 12231
 
I'm not sure Maurice... I think we need to seperate the issues. The Patent you dug up is probably the one that is the basis of the iBot wheelchair. I think IT/Ginger is a differnet beast, based on the ways the stories to date have depicted them. Everyone knows about the iBot, so a minor modification, or differing incarnation of that for non-handicapped people would probably not knock Jobs/Bezos.Doer socks off, or engender a need for the cloak and dagger secrecy we're seeing around IT/Ginger. I agree that something along the non-handicapped iBot would probably not be bigger than the web, which is what Doer seemed to think.

But then, who knows? Guess we'll have another 12 months or so to speculate, unless somebody leaks something.

DWB



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2506)1/12/2001 9:42:43 AM
From: DWB  Respond to of 12231
 
I'm not sure Maurice... I think we need to separate the issues. The Patent you dug up is probably the one that is the basis of the iBot wheelchair. I think IT/Ginger is a different beast, based on the ways the stories to date have depicted them. Everyone knows about the iBot, so a minor modification, or differing incarnation of that for non-handicapped people would probably not knock Jobs/Bezos.Doer socks off, or engender a need for the cloak and dagger secrecy we're seeing around IT/Ginger. I agree that something along the non-handicapped iBot would probably not be bigger than the web, which is what Doer seemed to think.

But then, who knows? Guess we'll have another 12 months or so to speculate, unless somebody leaks something.

DWB



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2506)1/12/2001 6:09:03 PM
From: S100  Respond to of 12231
 
Mystery invention "Ginger" may be motorized scooter
NEW YORK, Jan 12 (Reuters) - The mystery invention code-named ``Ginger'' that has set the U.S. technology world abuzz may be little more than a motorized mini-scooter, judging from a recent patent application that came to light on Friday.

A Dec. 14, 2000, filing with the World Intellectual Property Organization available on the Internet at wipo.org describes a ``class of transportation vehicles for carrying an individual over ground...that is unstable with respect to tipping when...not powered.''

This ``personal mobility vehicle'' pictures what appears to be a young girl balanced on a two-wheeled scooter. The patent application by millionaire inventor Dean Kamen and six co-inventors fits descriptions made in broadcast reports by people claiming to have seen prototypes of the vehicle.

Harvard Business School Press is said to have paid $250,000 for a book detailing ``IT'' that is set to be unveiled in 2002 by Kamen, creator of devices such as a portable insulin pump and a wheelchair that climbs stairs.

The invention is said to take just 10 minutes to assemble using simple tools, according to details from the book proposal published by media industry watchers Inside.com. Ginger could cost less than $2,000 a piece. Top computer industry leaders and investment bankers were named as backers, Inside.com said.

In a statement issued on Thursday, Kamen, 49, declined to reveal much on the device other than saying: ``While our projects are in the development phase and have client confidentiality requirements, it is impossible for us to comment further.''

Kamen and his company, Manchester, New Hampshire-based DEKA Research, did not return calls on Friday seeking comment on the patent application.

biz.yahoo.com

picture at

delphion.com



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2506)1/21/2001 6:33:47 PM
From: S100  Respond to of 12231
 
Nextel Communications Inc.
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Nextel Communications Inc. said it plans to team up with a unit of Motorola Inc. and Clearnet Inc. to offer voice and data service on pocketphones in Canadian markets.
Nextel, Rutherford, N.J., earlier agreed to issue about 35.5 million shares in exchange for certain dispatch communications properties held by Motorola. Motorola will transfer part of its stake in Clearnet to Nextel. Motorola's stake is held by its Motorola Canada Ltd. unit.
"At the end of the day we'll own about 35% of Clearnet," a Nextel spokesman said. Clearnet, a closely held provider of dispatch services in Pickering, Ontario, is considering plans to go public this year . Nextel, which operates dispatch services for taxicabs and other fleet services, has ambitious plans to build a digital communications network in the U.S. and sell voice, data and dispatch service on cellular-like phones. The latest agreement would allow Nextel customers to use their phones in Canada. MCI Communications Inc. recently agreed to invest $1.36 billion in Nextel, in return for a 17% stake. 7 March 1994

Smoking Dried Toad Squeezings had Drug Users in a State; Arizona Toads Should Watch Their Tails.
San Francisco For the record, Mojo Nixon says neither he nor any member of his rock band, Mojo Nixon and the Toad Lickers, has ever actually licked a toad. Still, with a name like that, Mr. Nixon's band can hardly help but attract attention from what authorities say is a small but growing segment of the drug culture that has taken up the bizarre practice of ingesting venom squeezed from live toads. ..People come up to us all the time and ask if we get high licking toads," says Mr. Nixon, who calls the very idea "insane." Mojo knows. He read something about toad-licking in the underground press about four years ago, and his band, the Burger Eaters, became the Toad Lickers. Although tales of getting a buzz from lapping toad squeezings have circulated through underground lore since the 1960s, drug authorities on both sides of the law agree on one thing: Toad-licking is not just weird but dangerous.
Warty Hoppers
Toad venom contains dozens of chemically active compounds, including enough poison to kill dogs that sometimes catch the warty little hoppers and try to eat them. "I would think you could poison yourself pretty badly before you got high licking toads," says Andrew T. Weil, an ethnopharmacologist at the University of Arizona's College of Medicine in Tucson. Thus, after a spurt of experimentation, toad-licking tapered off. Toad-smoking, on the other hand, seems to be less risky and is on the rise, says Cecil Schwalbe, a research ecologist for the Interior Department. Dr. Schwalbe says the heat from smoking venom appears to break down the toxins while retaining the psychedelics. "The people who believe in better living through chemistry found out you could get the same hallucinogenic reaction from smoking toads as from licking them, he says. Dr. Weil, a physician and drug-culture researcher, says that when he and a fellow researcher smoked dried venom from a Colorado River toad, it produced "a sense of wonder and well-being."
Dr. Weil's report, published two years ago in an obscure anthropological journal, Ancient Mesoamerica, apparently sent a smoke signal through the drug under-ground.
Arizona wildlife authorities recently raided the home of an unlicensed reptile- dealer near Tucson and discovered dozens" of football-sized Colorado River toads sitting placidly in the man's living room. (State law does allow possession of up to 10 toads if you have a fishing license.) John Romero, Law enforcement program manager for the Arizona Department of Game and Fish, says his agents puzzled awhile over why anyone would have toads around the house. "Then the light came on," Romero says.

On the Southern California drug market these days, drug agents say a healthy toad can fetch up to $8. One alleged dealer was arrested for illegal trading in wildlife last fall after he ran an ad in the University of Arizona student newspaper seeking a toad supply.
.'Cane Toads," a 1989 documentary film that describes smoking toad venom in Australia, has become a cult-video favorite. Toad-licking also came up recently on the television series "LA Law" (which mistakenly showed a bullfrog instead of a toad) and in an MTV "Beavis and Butthead" cartoon. "The show reflects what's going on in the youth culture," explains a 'Beavis and Butt-head" spokeswoman.
Still, the whole toad thing is so bizarre that even critics are hard pressed to maintain a straight face. South Carolina lawmakers giggled when a bill was introduced four years ago that would have made the state the first to outlaw toad-licking. Rep. Patrick B. Harris, finding the practice '.repulsive but amusing," proposed sentencing violators to 60 hours of public service in a local zoo.
Toads made the news again last month when California drug agents arrested Robert Shepard, a 41-year-old Boy Scout troop leader in Angels Camp, Calif., about 100 miles east of San Francisco. Mr. Shepard was charged with several drug offenses, including possession of bufotenine, a chemical constituent of toad venom and a recognized hallucinogen. The agents also impounded Mr. Shepard's four Colorado River toads -Brian, Peter, Hans and Franz.
Gregory Elam, the officer who made the arrest, says Mr. Shepard was so contrite he helped drug agents make a training video showing how venom is squeezed from kidney-shaped parotoid glands on the back of a live toad, then dried and smoked. "It was pretty disgusting," says Mr. Elam, who has a big photograph of a toad on his office wall. "This is not something you would brag about to your mama."
Mr. Shepard won't talk to a reporter about toads or anything else. But James Webster, his attorney, says he himself had never heard of toad-smoking. "I've heard of a princess kissing a toad " says Mr. Webster, misremembering the story of the frog prince. "I guess these days she'd be busted, too."
Illegal Drug
Narcotics agents say Mr. Shepard may be the first person ever arrested on toad- smoking charges. Bufotenine, as a hallucinogen, has been on federal and state dangerous-drug lists for years, and its possession is illegal. In his Ancient Mesoamerica article, Dr. Weil reported that toad skins and artifacts depicting toads have turned up at Indian ceremonial sites in Mexico and Central -America dating back more than a thousand years. The researcher and others speculate that Mayans, Aztecs and other ancients may have used toad venom as an intoxicant in their rites.
Dr. Weil and his co-author, Wade Davis, theorize that the Colorado River toad has become the smokers' choice not because of bufotenine, but because it contains large amounts of the chemical compound, 5-MeO-DMT, a powerful psychoactive drug. Experts describe the toad as a shy reptile found mostly in the Sonoran desert in northern Mexico and in the southern parts of Arizona and California. The toads live underground most of the year, emerging only during the brief rainy season in midsummer. The Colorado River toad, Dr. Weil says, is a virtual psychedelic factory, whose venom produces a 20-minute high that is so intense it can be frightening to the uninitiated. .'I've seen people take one deep puff and fall over backward as they exhale," he says.
, A Magical Slap'
Toad puffers, Dr. Weil says, usually are unresponsive for five minutes or more, making little noises until they open their eyes. Mr. Davis, a Washington anthropologist, calls the effect "a magical slap in the face. " That may be pleasing to toad-smokers, but it could mean problems for toads in the wild. Dr. Weil says he has already received telephone calls from Californians eager to visit southern Arizona, where the critters are plentiful, to catch Colorado River toads. "This looks like it could be a trend, and the toad is the one that will suffer," says Mr. Romero, the Arizona Game and Fish official worried about depleting the toad population. The toad's protector, say officials, will probably be environmental laws, not drug laws. California, for example, began implementing a law last week that makes it a misdemeanor to possess any of the shrinking population of Colorado River toads in the state.
"Eventually," says Mr. Elam, the Angels camp drug agent, "you'll probably see a much stiffer penalty for possession of a toad than for a controlled substance. The environmentalists have more clout than the Cops."



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2506)12/6/2001 3:19:10 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12231
 
Well, now we know, IT is indeed Ginger, the electric-motorized self-balancing scooter.

It certainly does look good and I think there will be plenty of demand for many applications.

Mq