Posted on 02/08/2007 11:34:44 AM PST by anymouse
Inventors of the MRI, the Ethernet, the LP record and a popular weedkiller are among 18 people picked for induction into the National Inventors Hall of Fame.
The 2007 class of inductees was to be announced at an event Thursday on Capitol Hill. The honorees are joining luminaries such as Thomas Edison, Velcro inventor George de Mestral and Charles Goodyear, developer of vulcanized rubber.
"Some of these inventors ... have literally changed the way we live our lives," said Rini Paiva, spokeswoman for the National Inventors Hall of Fame Foundation. But, she added, "they are not household names."
Among the latest inductees and their inventions are:
_Paul C. Lauterbur, for the MRI, or magnetic resonance imaging.
_Robert M. Metcalfe, for high-speed networking known as Ethernet.
_the late Peter C. Goldmark, for the long-playing record.
_John E. Franz, for the herbicide Roundup.
The Akron, Ohio-based hall was founded by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the National Council of Intellectual Property Law Associations. It has inducted members since 1973 and will have honored 331 inventors with the new class.
The hall once was at the Patent Office in Washington, but has been in Akron since 1995.
Metcalfe recalls the early days of working on the Ethernet project at Xerox Corp.'s research center in Palo Alto, Calif. "We had no idea in 1973 that it would get that big," he said. "We were just computer guys building our own tools."
Paul Baran was selected this year for developing a decentralized way of networking digital communication, called digital packet switching.
"I think that we give a lot of attention to music and football, why not those who come up with ideas that we use in a different way," said Baran, whose research was conducted while at Rand Corp.
The new inductees include seven living and 11 deceased inventors. The induction ceremony will take place in May in Akron.
On the Net:
National Inventors Hall of Fame: http://www.invent.org
tech ping
Another award to Al Gore for inventing the internet?
..and Global Warming?
I wonder if the reporter realizes that this is what made the Internet possible. Somehow I doubt it...
My hero.
We're talking real science, not junk science.
Paul Baran was selected this year for developing a decentralized way of networking digital communication, called digital packet switching...whose research was conducted while at Rand Corp.
At ten to twenty thousand dollars a pop, the patent system is now just about useless for individual inventors.
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