The inventor who may kill the power cord - best electric toothbrush 2015

by:Yovog     2022-01-18
The inventor who may kill the power cord  -  best electric toothbrush 2015
Santa Monica, California—
Meredith Perry wants all of us to go to and from work on small bikes and communicate with each other through holographic photos you can touch.
Granted, both ideas are a bit hard to achieve, so she starts with what she thinks is simpler: charging electronics in the air.
Perry's company is called uBeam, if 25-year-
The old New Jersey transplant already has her way and the name will soon be as familiar as Wi-Fi.
"The dream is to replace all the power outlets with the uBeam transmitter," Perry said . ".
"You will wake up and spend the day with your equipment and it will charge in your house, car, bus stop, gym, hotel.
We want to go anywhere.
Wires won't be anywhere.
"Agent for change: an educational dream of a technical vet, how it works.
UBeam's transmitter is a wafer-
A thin square of the size of a salad plate, giving out ultrasonic frequency like a speaker, producing sound.
The receiver is currently in the form of a smartphone housing, resonating at the same high frequency, and converting this imperceptible movement into energy to charge the phone.
UBeam's transmitter does not go through the walls, so a square tile is required for each room.
Although uBeam is a few years away from becoming a consumer
Ready, Perry is confident that her "price competitive" work will enter the commercial space of our home and any use of the equipment.
"What I 've seen over the years is that people have made minor improvements in existing technology, not saying, 'Let's throw it all away and do something new, 'she said.
"I know it's hard for me to accept.
But I'm not going to start a company (rear)
For years, unless we're doing something better than anything else.
Putting aside this bluff, some people feel that Perry's way of working might suggest something great.
The list starts with tech columnist Walter mohlberg, who, after hearing that Perry won an invention contest at Penn's big four, at a technical conference in 2011, she asked for a working prototype.
The appearance of success
Her clumsy prototype is now sitting on a small coffee table in an office a few blocks from the beach --
The founders funds of Mark Cuban, Marissa Mayer and Peter Thiel received $750,000 in seed funding.
Perry then ran around for a few years, raised more money, and used the money to pay the contractor to help her reduce her power --
Transmission device.
Last fall, she checked the box and got round a of $10 million under the lead of a pre-investment company.
Perry and her team of dozens of hardware engineers are competing with the current wireless charging standards.
This device, known as magnetic sensing technology, requires contact with the base or padding, whether it is a mobile phone or an electric toothbrush.
In the UK, some Starbucks and McDonald's stores offer consumers such a fee option.
2015 Toyota Camry to Qi-
Wireless charging board of specifications, will be built into the power supply of smart phones
Google and Nokia's Qi receivers, for example. Qi (Nian ci)
It is the wireless power supply standard set by the wireless power supply alliance.
So the question is simply whether what Perry and her team are doing can replace induction as a dominant choice.
"Real Wireless Charging like uBeam, we call it far-
David Green of London said: "The live charging is the farthest from happening and the youngest to develop, but it is on people's radar . "
Research Manager at IHS, focusing on wireless power technology.
Wireless charging is still in the innovation phase, Green said, but noted that as consumers add devices to their lives and become increasingly frustrated with the drudgery of keeping devices powered, wireless charging is expectedIn 2013, pad-
Wireless charging is a $0. 213 billion market in the US. S.
But that number will grow 40 times over five years to about $10 billion.
"I think the key to uBeam will be to prove first that they are a viable solution and then work with giants like Apple or Google," said Green . ".
Mark Suster, a pre-partner who led the uBeam financing round, said bluntly: "There is no major participant (
In science and technology)
It doesn't take the time to see how they work with us.
Although Perry is young and lacks engineering skills, what makes his company invest heavily is her optimistic perseverance and the ability to inspire capable teams, Suster said.
He also convinced this unusual venture capital.
"Most VCs focus on breakthrough apps like Facebook and Twitter ")
In a company worth billions of dollars, there is a reward.
Although Meredith is an astronautbiology major (in college)
"Then who did space research for NASA, and the real result for me was that she was a natural force," Suster said . ".
Her middle name may be tough.
Like jobs and (
Tesla founder Elon)
Musk, she makes you feel that even if it's hard for her to shoot here, you want to finish it with her.
She is not a typical Silicon Valley entrepreneur for Perry.
In fact, apart from her personal alternative
She swore like a sailor that the scathing comedian Larry David was her "spirit animal "--
She chose to set up a uBeam base in Los Angeles because let her tell you.
"The North is expensive and the weather is bad, it's a single technique I'm tired of," she said with a smile . ". "L. A.
Having the perfect weather, the hardware expert I needed, met my other passions like music and comedy.
"That's what Perry is, you know where she stands on things.
When it comes to the thin, white or black accessories currently connected to your phone, computer, toaster, TV, she is determined to get rid of their world forever.
About Meredith Perry, what's 25: The founder of uBeam, a technology to wirelessly charge electronics when you walk into a room in Santa Monica, California
Were you a science nerd when you were a child? "Absolutely.
You know, I did all the science fair and took my mouth and the culture of my dog's mouth to see which one was cleaner.
A lot of people grow up thinking science is a nerd, but I think it's cool.
My dad is a plastic surgeon.
I grew up in the breast augmentation game.
Then when I was in high school, I became obsessed with space and had a little crisis of survival.
"How did you change from a space fan to a power cord killer?
Well, I like to break things down and question everything.
So when I have 14-
I think, connecting to the foot line on my computer, how do I get rid of it?
I was thinking about something I could do.
University of Pennsylvania)
The invention contest, when I wrapped up the computer thread, came to me.
Why can't you zoom in on the signal and charge it if my remote control can fire power?
"So, if uBeam is hit, would you try to get us all traveling to work in blimps?
"I made a lot of fun with the idea, but yes, I want to go through low-cost, high-
Speed bike landing on the roof.
Probably solar. powered.
It will be a magnificent floating experience.
We ran out and it was crazy for me (land)
Sports real estate.
Why not use balloons?
"USA Today's change agency series highlights innovators and entrepreneurs who want to change business and culture with their vision. E-
Postage Mark de la cabatmdellacava @ part. com.
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