Well, the article on CNN (I think) today said this:
quote
According to Dean Kamen, the inventor of “Ginger,” his device will be an alternative to products that “are dirty, expensive, sometimes dangerous and often frustrating, especially for people in the cities.”
I wonder if it has something to do with waste? If we could eliminate waste, esp in big cities, we would eliminate a huge source of income for the NY mafia and pollution, all in one fell swoop. No more worrying about making bio-degradable products, or recycling. No more loud, ugly, noisy, garbage trucks! No more punks going through your garbage trying to get your credit card numbers, or Inquirer reporters diving through your coffee grounds for a scoop(depending on who you are). I was hoping for cold fusion first through. Too bad. Except, in Back to the Future they used garbage for fuel. Oh my god!!!
I think tracer’s got it. It fits all the criteria, including the need to retrofit cities. I’d almost place a bet, but how would I collect from you guys?
[slightly off-topic, but referring to the subject of the thread anyway] Just how big IS a bread box anyway?[/slightly off-topic, but referring to the subject of the thread anyway]
Slightly larger than a loaf of bread, of course. I realise that this assumes a bread-loaf size-standard, but maybe this will all come out with IT.
My guess is that IT has to be something like an electric car-motor that’s cheaper both to run and buy than a petrol-powered motor. Somehow I cannot see all these captains of industry wetting their pants over a scooter.
I won’t be impressed if it is a high speed scooter. I guess it would be cool for teen-agers, until we require licenses and then raise the age so only adults can have them anyway.
I’m all set for a letdown on this one.
(I really want to fly:))
Ah. So it isn’t Dean Kamen himself who’s saying it’ll be “bigger than the Internet,” it’s people like Steve Jobs who are saying that.
Which isn’t surprising. Steve Jobs basically said the same thing about the NeXT workstation – and now, here we are, a decade-and-a-half later, and there’s a NeXT workstation on every desktop.