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"It" Gets Around (Segway/Ginger)
ABC News ^ | 12/3/01 | Antonio Mora

Posted on 12/03/2001 4:17:56 PM PST by spycatcher

Testing
ABCNEWS' Charlie Gibson and Diane Sawyer joined inventor Dean Kamen for a ride on his new invention — the Segway Human Transporter. (ABCNEWS.com)

 
'IT' Gets Around
Mysterious Invention Moves People
ABCNEWS.com
N E W   Y O R K, Dec. 3

— After nearly a year of speculation, Dean Kamen's mysterious machine — IT — was revealed on ABCNEWS' Good Morning America.


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In Internet discussions, eager technology enthusiasts and those ready for a Jetsons-like lifestyle guessed "IT" would be anything from a hovercraft to a high-speed scooter powered by an ultra-efficient Stirling engine.

While Kamen's invention, the Segway Human Transporter, does move people, it doesn't leave the ground — and it's powered by a battery.

The inventor revealed his two-wheeled personal transportation device, intended for a single standing rider, today on Good Morning America.

"This is the world's first self-balancing human transporter," Kamen said. "You stand on this Segway Human Transporter and you think forward and then you go forward. If you think backward, you go backward."

A Smooth Walker

The transporter, which can go up to 12 miles an hour, looks more like a lawn mower than a scooter and has no brakes. It is designed to mimic the human body's ability to maintain its balance; riders control the speed and direction of the device simply by shifting their weight and using a manual turning mechanism on one of the handlebars.

"All of the knowledge that went into knowing how to walk is transferred to this machine," Kamen said. "When you stand on this machine, it kind of walks for you. It just does it smoothly and gracefully."

The 65-pound device, also known by its former code name, "Ginger," looks simple, but its inner workings are intricate.

Tilt sensors monitor the rider's center of gravity more than 100 times a second, and are able to signal both the direction and the speed to the device's electric motor and wheels.

Segway Human Transporter Is this "IT?" A two-wheeled, battery powered transportation device, known as the Segway Human Transporter, is displayed at a studio in New York on Dec. 3. (Peter Morgan/Reuters)

Kamen says the Segway can take its rider up to 15 miles on a six-hour charge from a regular wall socket. He bills it as an environmentally friendly alternative to cars, and expects that in the future the devices will replace the car in urban centers.

The first models are expected to be available to consumers in about a year at a price of about $3,000, said Kamen.

Source of Endless Speculation

Kamen already has a series of high-profile inventions under his belt. He created a dialysis machine that is the size of a briefcase, a portable insulin pump and a wheelchair that climbs stairs, called iBot, which he had code-named "Fred."

Word of IT first leaked out in January when the media learned that a publisher had paid a $250,000 advance for a book about a device by Kamen the editor said could transform our lives, our cities and our thinking.

That sparked off a media frenzy — and the guessing game. But the high-powered innovators and thinkers Kamen showed his invention to — including technology heavyweights Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos and Apple CEO Steve Jobs — remained tight-lipped.

Bob Metcalf, a computer engineer who helped create the building blocks for the Internet, revealed a few details to ABCNEWS about Kamen's invention nearly a year before IT was revealed.

"I've seen it, and it is… more important than pantyhose and it's more important than the Internet," said Metcalf in an interview in January.

He said that on a scale of one to 10 — one being mundane and 10 being revolutionary — he would rank Kamen's invention "in the high nines." He implied that the device would contain a computer chip, that it may have to do with transportation, and that people would probably want to own more than one.

Kamen, who kept his invention a secret in the face of mass speculation, said his silence was not part of a plan to build public interest.

When information about his invention was leaked, he still had to file hundreds of patent claims.

"We always work on our confidential projects confidentially," Kamen said. "Unfortunately, somebody in their excitement let the world know what we were working on a year ago and we weren't ready."

Next Best Thing?

The United States Postal Service and the National Park Service have plans to field test a number of the personal transportation devices next year.

"We've got a quarter of a million letter carriers out on the street," said John Nolan, the deputy postmaster general, "and we've got the opportunity to increase efficiency reduce the wear and tear on their bodies and improve the environment all the same time."

But will it transform lives, cities and even thinking, as first hyped in the media? Futurists who considered themselves skeptics were initially impressed.

"This is a marvelous first device," said Paul Saffo, the director of the Institute for the Future. "It remains open to see if it's going to grow up and go out into the world at large, but it's clearly gotten far enough to be practical in places like warehouses and industrial campuses."

There does seem to be a clear consensus: It is a bold attempt to not just reinvent the wheel but to reinvent the ways wheels can be used. 

ABCNEWS' Antonio Mora contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2001 ABC News Internet Ventures.
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TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events
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To: spycatcher
This has got to be the height of laziness.
61 posted on 12/03/2001 5:56:54 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: js1138
I can see the Trial Lawyers lining up behind this vehicle waiting for someone to fall off.

Did someone say $$$ Lawsuit City $$$ ???

62 posted on 12/03/2001 5:57:55 PM PST by keithtoo
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To: Old Professer
The only way that this can work in practice is for the "rider" to expend as much energy "rocking" the device as it would require to walk or run the same distance while the mini-battery supplies the power to balance this silly, wheeled "pogo stick"; I hope the people who have committed to purchase this have the good sense to demand guarantees of performance.

It's like when you get a wheelbarrow tilted up just high enough and it takes off on its own. The genius of the device is that is able to correct for all tilting that goes too far one way or another.

This is the real thing. It's impact is significant in the short term and it's just going to get bigger. If people can't see that, they're blind.

63 posted on 12/03/2001 6:00:48 PM PST by Harp
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To: germanshepherd
..just about anything is possible...

Yeah...but does it come with snow chains?

64 posted on 12/03/2001 6:01:00 PM PST by Liberty's Pen
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To: Arkie2; Voltage
I think the issue of balance is addressed by several high speed gyros...

What I read was that they're solid state attitude feedback sensors, not mechanical gyros. The way it works is it accelerates the wheels in the direction you lean, forward or back, so you continuously "fall" against the angular acceleration of the wheels.

Which again brings me to my, and aparently Voltage's concern...what if you break the nice control loop with a rock or pothole??

It's just another inherently unstable platform, like the F-117 or B-2, that has been "made to fly" with the magic of DSP's in a feedback loop. Problem is, this thing only has $100Million in firmware, not Billion$ like the others.

65 posted on 12/03/2001 6:01:01 PM PST by sam_paine
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To: spycatcher
Better find out how much the damn thing weighs. When the battery goes dead you have to throw it over your sholder and walk back home!
66 posted on 12/03/2001 6:03:28 PM PST by Flint
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To: sam_paine
Time mag says it has 10 microprocessors, "aviation-grade" gyros, a bevy of sensors and an accelerometer
67 posted on 12/03/2001 6:07:19 PM PST by spycatcher
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To: Liberty's Pen
They say it runs on snow and ice, but not sure how deep or how steep respectively
68 posted on 12/03/2001 6:08:39 PM PST by spycatcher
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To: Flint
A classic Rube Goldberg invention....a 3000.00 people mover which replaces a more efficient and versatile 1600.00 scooter........................ROTFLMAO
69 posted on 12/03/2001 6:09:17 PM PST by 1 FELLOW FREEPER
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To: Strange Black Musket; codebreaker; testforecho; lowbridge; Come get it
Our friend who treads the earth is, yet again, ahead of us.


70 posted on 12/03/2001 6:12:33 PM PST by Shermy
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To: spycatcher
se·gue
intr.v. se·gued, se·gue·ing, se·gues
1. Music. To make a transition directly from one section or theme to another.
2. To move smoothly and unhesitatingly from one state, condition, situation, or element to another: “Daylight segued into dusk” (Susan Dworski).

The real question should be: What is this going to segue into?

71 posted on 12/03/2001 6:13:19 PM PST by DouglasKC
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To: All
Have you heard the last transportation revolution? I could've had a Yugo!!!
72 posted on 12/03/2001 6:16:07 PM PST by Toidylop
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To: spycatcher
"They say it runs on snow and ice, but not sure how deep or how steep respectively" Speaking of steep, how well will this thing do up and down hills? That't another thing they didn't demonstrate this morning.
73 posted on 12/03/2001 6:17:50 PM PST by Harp
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To: Harp
It went up a small incline then froze in place and spun around in the middle of the grade. Pretty sweet
74 posted on 12/03/2001 6:21:58 PM PST by spycatcher
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To: spycatcher
It looks like a walker for yuppies. This piece of crap is nothing but a Pet Rock on wheels. A media driven fad. PT Barnum was wrong. A sucker is not born every minute. There's several born every second.
75 posted on 12/03/2001 6:23:04 PM PST by P-Marlowe
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To: MediaMole
Kamen is too used to selling medical devices where price is no object. Three grand will buy a nice used motorcycle.

Therein lies a BIG market (medical devices) ...

Apparently NOBODY here on FR has a 'mobility/walking problem' -

- like my Mom - from polio many years ag and my Dad who has had to have knee replacement surgery ...

76 posted on 12/03/2001 6:38:48 PM PST by _Jim
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To: sam_paine
what if you break the nice control loop with a rock or pothole??

Geez ... the answer is obvious - more control input 'til the loop error is once again within limits ....

77 posted on 12/03/2001 6:41:11 PM PST by _Jim
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To: L_Von_Mises
This sounds like excessive hype to me. I can see some practical uses for it such as making it easier to get around in very large places such as automotive assembly plants.

And again, YOU have no mobility problems (I'll wager) ...

OLD PEOPLE are going to love this.

78 posted on 12/03/2001 6:42:38 PM PST by _Jim
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I see an AWFUL lot of people thinking comfortably WITHIN the box.

Congratulations.

You will be left in the dust (once again) along with heaps of buggy whips, wooden wagons, point-and-condenser fired internal-cablooey carbon-based-fuel steel framed 'barges' ...

79 posted on 12/03/2001 6:48:17 PM PST by _Jim
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To: P-Marlowe
A media driven fad

I don't think so. I saw this thing in person today and it is indeed VERY COOL !! It is one of those things that really impresses you when you see it operating in person. Seeing Segway operate on video doesn't really do it justice. When adults get on it they become like joyful little kids with a new toy. IT is fun.

Ultimately, it will have to come down in price (say $1500 to $2000) to gain wide popularity but I predict it will and we will see these things all over the place in about five years.

80 posted on 12/03/2001 6:49:27 PM PST by COL. FLAGG
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