Friday, February 15, 2008

Display Demo Night at Cambridge Innovation Center

Two interesting news tidbits emerged at this past Wednesday's "Entrepreneurs on the Edge" demo night at Cambridge Innovation Center.

We brought together five representatives of companies working on new kinds of display technologies. I was least familiar with QD Vision, a Watertown company working on "quantum dot" based LED screens, so it was nice to hear more about their technology. (Their backers include Highland Capital and North Bridge.)

Dan Bricklin was there, and he recorded a podcast of the panel discussion part of the evening.

Two of the companies there shared some interesting news, both related to spin-outs.

Adam Bogue, formerly vp of bizdev at Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs, is spinning out a new company called Circle Twelve, Inc. Circle Twelve will commercialize the DiamondTouch table developed at MERL over the past seven years, which turns a tabletop into an interface, allowing four users to sit around and interact with data by touching it. Bogue says that Mitsubishi will have a stake in the new company, and earn royalty payments from every sale. He's looking to raise about $1 million to get the company off the ground.

The system sells for $10,000, which doesn't include the LCD projector it uses to project images onto the table, or the laptop or PC that serves as a CPU. (A Computerworld article mentioning DiamondTouch is here.) Bogue was getting a lot of questions last night about how the table is different from Microsoft's Surface technology, and also the Perceptive Pixel technology used on CNN during election nights. For one, DiamondTouch is available now...

Here's a video of Bogue's demo that I shot:



And David Rose, founder of Ambient Devices, said he's helping to launch a new company called Vitality, to bring to market smart pill bottle tops called GlowCaps. (Rose stepped away from day-to-day responsibilities at Ambient earlier this year.) GlowCaps will not only remind you when to take important medications (and perhaps e-mail your doctor to let her know you're sticking to the regime), but could send a reorder request to the pharmacy when your stock of pills dwindles. (More from Engadget. Rose said he has raised some seed funding already to do some consumer trials from a West Coast angel investor.

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Friday, January 4, 2008

Next-Gen Display Technology Demo Night, on Feb 13th

I'm really excited about a panel coming up on February 13th, focusing on innovation in display technology. We're going to have representatives from *six* local companies talking about how their products could change the way we interact with text, audio, and video -- and what business opportunities that could create.

Here's who will be there, and what they're up to:

- Ambient Devices (http://www.ambientdevices.com), integrating "glanceable" information into objects like umbrellas
- DiamondTouch, from MERL (http://www.merl.com/projects/DiamondTouch), turning a table into a touch-sensitive display
- E Ink (http://www.eink.com), whose paper-like display is built into the new Amazon Kindle
- Emo Labs, which layers an invisible audio speaker onto an LCD screen
- Myvu (http://www.myvu.com), which makes wearable displays that can plug into your iPod
- QD Vision, using quantum dots to make power efficient, next-generation displays

Everyone will have a product/prototype there to demo -- so you'll be able to see stuff first-hand.

Since the space at Cambridge Innovation Center is limited, we're forced to filter the crowd a bit, this time focusing on entrepreneurs and investors. So e-mail me if that sounds like you (kirsner at pobox dot com), and I'll send you the top-secret code required to register.

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Adobe starts to assemble R&D lab in Newton

Xconomy.com reports that Adobe is hiring some of the former researchers from Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs in Cambridge and setting up a research department at its Newton facility (which was once Macromedia/Allaire's home.) Wade Roush writes:

    So far, Adobe executives are treating the MERL acquisitions without fanfare. “We have hired a few people from MERL…[and] started a small outpost in Newton,” remarked senior vice president and chief software architect Tom Malloy, who heads Adobe’s Advanced Technology Labs, in a recent conversation with Xconomy. Malloy said employing researchers in the Boston area will help cement ties with local research institutions. “We’re interested in sort of pairing up with our colleagues in our Newton development office and also being partners with some of the local universities out there,” Malloy said.

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Friday, August 3, 2007

Fading out? Cambridge's own Xerox PARC

Xerox PARC is the Palo Alto lab famous for developing the graphical user interface, Ethernet, the mouse, and the laser printer. But while it was a petri dish for great research (and great researchers), Xerox PARC famously never did much for Xerox's product line or bottom line.

The Mitsubishi Electric Research Lab in Cambridge is one of the closest things our area has had to a Xerox PARC - a place where cool projects were cultivated that never seemed to have much impact on the parent company back in Japan.

Now, according to this piece in Xconomy, the lab is shrinking. And longtime leader Joe Marks has decamped for Disney, where he's heading up software R&D for the animators.

I'm reprinting, below, an excerpt from an article I wrote for the Globe in 2002, which explored some of MERL's coolest projects at the time.

@ @ @ @ @

"Building Ideas" - Boston Globe, September 18, 2002

- Scott Kirsner

Nervous young researchers are scrambling in and out of a windowless room at the Mitsubishi Electric Research Lab in Cambridge. They’ve just tripped a circuit breaker by trying to run four digital projectors simultaneously.

Once the power returns, a program they’ve written begins to neatly stitch together the images from each of the projectors, creating a massive single image – an IMAX movie for the corporate conference room. But the program keeps crashing in mid-stitch.

If it worked perfectly the first time, it just wouldn’t be the technological bleeding edge. A few minutes later, the snafu has been surmounted, and the projectors begin to harmonize. They paint a rush of colorful imagery against the uneven wall, adjusting flawlessly to its odd angle.

Despite the technology sector’s lingering funk, research groups like the Mitsubishi’s are still working on new hardware and software that could prompt future growth spurts. And Mitsubishi is just one of dozens of commercial and academic research labs in the Boston area that continue to cultivate and prototype promising new technologies.

Even as many tech companies continue to struggle and fail, “the research infrastructure doesn’t die in the Boston area,” says Donald Fraser, currently director of the Photonics Center at Boston University and a former director of Draper Labs, the MIT spin-off that devised the guidance systems for NASA’s Apollo moon missions. “In slow economic periods, you may have a smaller number of people or projects at some of the labs, but you can’t really argue that the sky is falling.”

....

Mitsubishi Electric Research Lab

The researchers at Mitsubishi Electric Research Lab in Kendall Square conduct demos more like magicians than engineers. Hold this telephone to your ear, they’re apt to instruct a visitor. Now pull it away from your ear. Now put it back.

Somehow, you’ve missed not a second of the conversation – everything that the speaker has said while the phone was away from your ear has been stored digitally. The phone senses when it’s against your ear and when it’s not, and when you’re listening after a break, it replays what you missed at a slightly faster-than-normal rate, until you catch up with the real-time conversation. Potentially very useful for cell phones used in the car.

MERL, as it’s known, attempts to improve and simplify the way humans interact with technology. “Everything that Mitsubishi makes, from elevators to power plants to white goods, requires an interface between a human and the machine,” says Joe Marks, MERL’s director. Marks says that despite corporate budget cutting at many Mitsubishi divisions and the recent strengthening of the dollar relative to the Japanese yen, Mitsubishi hasn’t reduced MERL’s budget, and that the lab’s contingent of 45 researchers has remained stable over the past few years.

One team of MERL researchers is devising software so that multiple LCD projectors (which Mitsubishi makes) can be used together, to create large images on sometimes irregular surfaces. Another team is working on analyzing faces in a video image, discerning which direction people are looking, what sex they are, and, perhaps eventually, their age and facial expression. That technology might be used to conduct a demographic analysis of the audience at a rock concert or count the number of people waiting for an elevator on a particular floor to determine how many cars are needed there.

The most fun project: an interactive table called DiamondTouch, which allows several users sitting around it to use their fingertips to manipulate images – like maps or photographs – projected onto the surface. Your fingers become the mouse, and the table can tell the difference between your and those of a colleague sitting across the table. It feels like an entirely new way of working with information, which, the MERL magicians say, is exactly the point.

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