Oh no, IT is back in the news!

I logged out of Hotmail and though I usually ignore the simpering excuse for news that gets posted on the MSN logout page, this caught my eye.

The Times article offered little more. I remember discussions of what IT was were quite prolific a while back, so I assume that some folks may know a bit more. Anyone with the Dope?
Rhythmdvl
Resuscitator of long dead topics, yet promises never to ask about gry, the missing dollar, or ever mention Alex Chew.

Slow news day.

I personally think there are only about six of those Segways in existence, and the lack of demand vs. cost of manufacture (not to mention the fact that they’re illegal on just about all public roads and pedestrian sidewalks) keeps any more from being made.

Remember, the Segway was called ‘Ginger’ to compliment its inventors other creation, a wheelchair that could climb stairs, which was code-named ‘Fred’.

Don’t see many stair-climbing wheelchairs around these parst, either.

The wheelchairs are still going through FDA approval process as far as I know. I expect they will be pretty desirable to people that need them when they are available. If I was wheelchair bound, the increase in mobility provided by Fred would be almost impossible to resist, damn the cost.

I personally think there are only about six of those Segways in existence…

Since the Atlanta Police Department and the U.S. Postal Service are giving them a tryout, I think there may be a few more than six of them out there.

My gut reaction is that Kamen (the inventor) is just trying to keep himself in the news. The company that makes Segways is almost bankrupt; most people can’t affort to spend $20,000 on a toy.

I ran into four parked at an Italian restaurant in Manchester, NH, of all places.

Boy, they aren’t small. If the owners had parked them outside instead of inside the restaurant, we could have fit 2 more tables into the already packed room.

A friend of mine writes for Current Biography magazine. She has just submitted an article about Dean Kamen to the editors. I forwarded this whole thread to her, because I thought she might be interested. Here’s what she has to say about it:

"If the Segway isn’t “IT,” a good possibility is the Stirling engine. This is a hot-air engine invented in 1816, but no one has ever been able to produce one that didn’t cost roughly as much as the U.S. military budget. Kamen and his team have been working on the development of a relatively cheap Stirling engine for years, and if successful, the device could possibly be used to fuel cars, provide electricity, purify water, etc. The effect would be particularly powerful in developing nations, where other energy sources are scarce to nonexistent for most of the population.

It’s not surprising that someone would have seen Segways in Manchester, N.H., since that’s where Kamen’s research and development company, DEKA, is based, as well as Segway, which he founded to produce and market the Segway human transporter (scooter). The police department of Manchester is reportedly testing Segways as well."

Doh. I guess that make sense, then! Forgot about where DEKA’s based … I was thinking Connecticut, for some reason.