SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Pitera who wrote (3163)1/12/2001 6:47:05 AM
From: onurbius  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
Guten Morgen, John. So what do you make of this?

Could this be the fabled Orgasmotron?

Thursday January 11 8:32 PM ET
Mystery Invention 'Ginger' Has Tech World
Buzzing

By Eric Auchard

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A planned book about a mysterious invention said
to be more important than the World Wide Web and capable of generating
fantastic riches has gripped a down-on-its-luck technology industry in need of
a miracle.

Harvard Business School Press is said to have paid $250,000 for a book
detailing ``IT,'' a device code-named ``Ginger'' that is set to be unveiled next
year by millionaire inventor Dean Kamen.

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.''

Details of the machine are contained in a book proposal by journalist Steve Kemper, a freelance writer for
publications such as Smithsonian, a popular scientific magazine for which the author profiled Kamen in 1994.

Inside.com, the Web site of the recently launched media gossip magazine, was first to report the story on
Tuesday.

Much of what is known about Ginger is what it's not.

The invention is said to take just 10 minutes to assemble using simple tools. Ginger machines may cost less than
$2,000 a piece when they debut in 2002, Inside.com said.

With headlines bristling with news of the end of the personal computer era and the destruction of many dotcom
businesses, the technology industry has redoubled its irrepressible search for the next big thing.

Technology leaders like as Apple Computer Co. (NasdaqNM:AAPL - news) co-founder Steve Jobs (news -
web sites), Amazon.com (news - web sites) (NasdaqNM:AMZN - news) founder Jeff Bezos and top venture
capitalist John Doerr are said to have been enthralled by a demonstration of a prototype device and to have
invested millions of dollars.

Investment bank Credit Suisse First Boston expects that IT can generate more in its first year than any start-up
ever, which would make Kamen richer than Bill Gates (news - web sites) within five years, according to details
of the proposal reported by Inside.com.

Jobs reportedly predicts cities will be built around the machines. Bezos calls the product ``revolutionary''.
Kamen claims it will transform social institutions and shake billion-dollar companies. None of those involved,
including the publisher, the literary agent or the backers, would comment on the story.

Kamen, who lives in a house of his own design perched on a hill outside of Manchester, New Hampshire,
invented the first portable insulin pump in the 1970s.

For 20 years, Kamen has been at work creating several innovative healthcare and technology products at
DEKA Research and Development Corp. in Manchester. The secretive company has more than 150
employees, a spokeswoman said.

``We are proud of our record of introducing many breakthrough products and we continue to work on
numerous products at any given time,'' Kamen said in a statement issued in response to the attention generated
by the book offer.

Among his Kamen's recent inventions was a wheelchair capable of climbing stairs. He organizes a high school
robotic invention competition that attracts more than 10,000 student participants each April to Walt Disney
World's Epcot Center.

Kamen was named for a National Medal of Technology award by the White House in November for his
invention of the insulin pump, joining the inventors of fiber optic cable, the computer pointing device and data
storage equipment.



To: John Pitera who wrote (3163)1/12/2001 10:35:17 AM
From: Stoctrash  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
....think like a damned Crocodile, evolve like pail of ice water...wonder twin powers activate!!