Wall Street Journal's Technology Innovation Awards 58
Carl Bialik writes "Gene-sequencing company 454 Life Sciences was selected as the Gold Winner in the Wall Street Journal's 2005 Technology Innovation Awards. 'Around 750 applications were screened by a Wall Street Journal editor, who narrowed the field to 104 semifinalists. Then a panel of expert judges from industry, research organizations and academia scored each entry and picked the winners.' (Listen to an MP3 clip on how the judges chose.) Other winners include a company that has developed a low-cost method for manufacturing RFID tags; Riverbed Technology's network appliances; Fujitsu's ID system that uses the veins in a person's palm instead of fingerprints; and the Agitator tool to debug code."
Fujitsu's ID system... (Score:2)
Definitely an advance in security.
Now identity thieves will cut off a hand at the wrist instead of just a finger.
Re:Fujitsu's ID system... (Score:1)
Re:Fujitsu's ID system... (Score:2)
Re:Fujitsu's ID system... (Score:1)
Honest question: can a D battery heat blood to nearly 100 deg. F like the human body can? You'd think it would take more than 4.5 volts, but I'm probably wrong.
Re:Fujitsu's ID system... (Score:2)
Yes, no problem. After all, a D battery can heat a lamp filament to burning incandescence in a fraction of a second, then keep it there for hours; it takes far less than that to heat a little (more) blood to a lower temperature and keep it there for a few minutes. If, in the unlikely case it was insufficient, one could always get a lantern battery from the hardware store. That'd boil some blood for a while. :-)
Re:The Keith Curtis Perspective (Score:1, Offtopic)
/ The checkbox thing has been done
WTF? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Half-Life 2 is hardly innovative. (Score:2)
Dude, it's a joke... Thus the '1337' speak.
Re:Half-Life 2 is hardly innovative. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Other Awards (Score:5, Insightful)
Kinda have to keep in mind what Wall Street is really interested in.
Flamebait (Score:5, Insightful)
"Clean water is not sexy, and $20 a year won't make anyone rich," says Robert Drost, a scientist at Sun Microsystems Inc.
from the overall Honorable mention award. The overall Silver went to a company that is reducing toxic pollutants and decreasing greenhouse gas emissions through energy reduction.
Re:Flamebait ? (Score:1)
"Clean water is not sexy, and $20 a year won't make anyone rich," says Robert Drost, a scientist at Sun Microsystems Inc.
from the overall Honorable men
Re:Flamebait ? (Score:1)
Sorry, but that's not in the criteria to apply for the award, it's simply a characteristic of an award winner. You really must try to see the difference.
Re:Flamebait ? (Score:1)
Exactly-- the criteria do not include profit nor any of the above factors. If you take the article at face value, it is a general innovation award.
I see no evidence that the choices will actually lead to a better world.
I'm sorry to hear that you don't think cheaper clean water isn't going to make for a better world, or that a reduction in toxic chemicals and greenhouse gases might not make things better overa
Re:Flamebait ? (Score:1)
This is you talking, not me. But since you were so off initially I figure this is the only way you figure you can save any face, by building a straw-man and then knocking it down.
Re:Flamebait ? (Score:2)
Re:Flamebait (Score:2)
How many worthy applications were lost? (Score:1)
I have to wonder if there were any ideas that didn't make the final 104 that might have been better than the others but didn't sound as interesting or "cool" to the editor.
Re:How many worthy applications were lost? (Score:2)
How... (Score:1, Insightful)
Doesn't Matter... (Score:5, Insightful)
Their IP will live on forever and be accumulated by some little holding company with a PO Box in rural Wisconsin. A year after any company produces a product anything like what their portfolio includes and they'll up-end the Bucket o' Laywers and it's Game On!
Re:Doesn't Matter... (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't Matter... (Score:2, Funny)
As someone who has lived in rural Wisconsin, I assure you there is nothing remotely close to "Intellectual" there.
Re:Doesn't Matter... (Score:1)
Well, as someone who actually DOES live in rural Wisconsin [mapquest.com], I can assure you that you're quite wrong.
Re:Doesn't Matter... (Score:2)
Way to go. The ensuing flamewar to end all flamewars in on your head.
Re:How... (Score:2)
Re:How... (Score:2)
454 will be around (Score:2, Interesting)
Also, this company does not do "gene-sequencing" as the summary states, but it instead goes "genome sequencing". This is a huge differenc
Riverbed's stuff rocks! (Score:3, Informative)
Fujitsu's ID system is Big Brother scary! (Score:3, Funny)
Fujitsu's system can not only identify you, but alert authorities to the last time you masturbated.
Re:Fujitsu's ID system is Big Brother scary! (Score:1)
Its nice to see (Score:5, Insightful)
Found the related MIT Webpage (Score:3, Informative)
I'm applying next year for my company (Score:1)
Palm Vein identification? (Score:2)
Now think about id theft. With fingerprints, the thief requires to cut a finger from you. That, I could live with (unless I was a pianist of course). But having my entire hand ripped off? No, thanks, I think I'll pass.
Re:Palm Vein identification? (Score:1, Insightful)
Daakon
Solar Power (Score:5, Informative)
Too bad that 50% roof coverage only generates 25% of the power they need. Perhaps they could get the rest from geothermal energy, although at some plants that would certainly be out of the question.
It pains me to see new buildings going up without any form of solar panels, or light tubes put into them, when it wouldn't cost much to do so, and saves energy in the long run.
Re:Solar Power (Score:4, Interesting)
Why too bad? Depending on the durability of the solar cells, it sounds like getting 25% of your energy needs for a fixed cost and no recurring costs would be quite efficient. Further, cover 100% of the roof (if possible) and get 50% of annual needs from solar? Sounds great. Add a fuel cell storage system to the mix and you've mitigated the risk of business stoppage from blackouts. Sounds like there's a lot of potential there.
Re:Solar Power (Score:2)
The solution is simple. They just new to cover their car park with solar cells. The roofing would keeping cars cool by being in the shade, and they would get the additional power. But only during Sunny days.
mp3 clip (Score:2, Funny)
Re:mp3 clip (Score:2)
Re:mp3 clip (Score:1)
Academic experts were involved in the process?? (Score:2, Interesting)
Agitar for Java code (Score:2)
Fairness ? (Score:2)
More people should hack DNA (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)