Simone Center News

February 11, 2013
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A. Sue Weisler

Jordan Darling brings his Jet Ski into the RIT pool to demonstrate the Retriever, a beacon to help locate a submerged personal watercraft. The bright pouch floats above the water and is connected to the vehicle with a 50-foot rope and can save thousands in search and retrieval costs.

Personal watercraft users could save time and money


When Jordan Darling’s new, custom-made personal watercraft experienced engine trouble in Lake Ontario last summer, it sunk in eight feet of water about 200 feet from shore.

It took him, his family, friends and sheriff’s deputies five days searching the water to recover the vessel. Darling found it after spending $500 to rent a helicopter for an aerial search. “You couldn’t see it. The water was so murky,” he says.

Not only did he want to get his $6,000 Jet Ski back, he could have faced a $1,000-a-day fine for having a vehicle in the water. Any leaking gas or oil from its engine could pose an environmental hazard.

The frustrating episode sparked Darling, a third-year mechanical engineering technology major from Oswego, N.Y., to continue work on a prototype he had made on a personal buoy that could have helped him find his Jet Ski.

His patent-pending concept is fairly simple: “Retriever,” which comes in neon yellow or orange, is a pouch with a 50-foot polypropylene rope coiled inside. The end of the rope is connected to the vehicle and the pouch is secured with Velcro.

Should the vehicle start sinking, the operator can detach the device and deploy it, leaving the marker floating on top of the water to make retrieval easier.

“When you know you’re in trouble and your vehicle is going down, at that moment you can deploy the system and focus on your safety and the recovery of the vehicle later,” he says. “It’s cheap insurance. You hope you don’t need it, but it’s there if you do.”

The Retriever was first shown at a recent competition in Daytona Beach, Fla. Darling expects to show it at an upcoming boat show in Syracuse as well.

Darling patented a second device and hopes to develop a system that would automatically inflate a bladder of air under a sinking vessel using a carbon dioxide blast when the pressure of the unit goes under six feet of water.

Personal watercrafts can cost $30,000 or more. Darling says the $59.99 price for the Retriever is a good investment, and he hopes insurance companies will agree by offering its buyers a reduction in premiums.

“It’s wonderful that RIT is willing to work with the students,” says Carl Lundgren, a professor in the College of Applied Science & Technology and Darling’s faculty advisor and mentor at the Simone Center for Student Innovation & Entrepreneurship. “And even better is the collaboration between students helping on each other’s projects. Jordan is something of a lone eagle in his innovation and invention, but he couldn’t go forward without other students’ – from other majors – contributions.”

Darling has taken the Retriever to Florida and plans to show it at a boat show in Syracuse next weekend. It is also available for purchase online.

“The Retriever is only the beginning of what there is to come,” Darling says.

January 29, 2013

Drum roll, please!  Congratulations - The finalists for the Shark Tank competition this quarter have been selected.  It was not easy with over 50 teams submitting proposals so these teams are truly the cream of the crop.  

You will notice below that we selected 6 teams because the preliminary judges just couldn't narrow it down to 5. 

The teams in the finals in alphabetical order are:

1.  ABCD - Sourabh Jain and Dmitry Liapitch

2.  Antipiracy Agent - Samuel Nelson

3.  APPture LLC - Auston LeRoy and Evan Starkman

4.  The Canalyzer - Tegan Spinner, Ben Drobiz, and Jonathon Lunt

5.  The Pirates - Mahesh Galgalikar

6.  Turas - Angela Corrado, Alex Dupont, Jared Rube, and Steven Asselanis

Due to unforeseen circumstances, the date of the competition has changed.  We will be having the Shark Tank on Wed March 6 at 6pm in the Student Innovation Hall (USC-1600).

Please join us!

January 28, 2013

I would like to welcome you to the first edition of the Simone Center for Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship’s newsletter.  The biweekly newsletter is designed to introduce you to the various Innovation and Entrepreneurship offerings and events available to the RIT community. The Simone Center was created to assist students with experiential learning associated with innovation and entrepreneurship.  More specifically, we help students learn as they advance and realize their own ideas and projects. 

This year, the Simone Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship and the Center for Student Innovation merged to become a new single organization:  the Simone Center for Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship.  This new organization will continue to provide students with extraordinary multidisciplinary innovation and entrepreneurial training and assistance.  

Listed below are some of the resources, activities, and courses provided through or in partnership with the Simone Center.

  • Innovation and Commercialization Coaches:   The Simone Center has faculty and industry coaches on staff throughout the week.  These coaches can help you shape and structure your innovation or business projects, provide commercialization advice, assist you in locating team mates, etc.
  • Resources Locator:   The Simone Center staff can help you locate facilities, expertise, and activities throughout the RIT community to assist your innovation efforts.  For example, did you know that RIT possesses three prototyping labs?
  • Access to Funding:  RIT offers a number of cash awards for early stage innovation projects to a limited number of students for outstanding innovative ideas. Some of this funding is available through such programs as the Saunders College SharkTank and business plan competition.   The Simone Center also provides on a limited and competitive basis $1,000 student innovation challenge grants.  In the past few years, the Center has also helped students submit applications to national grants that have resulted in significant outside funding for our student teams. 
  • Workspace: The Simone Center includes a number of useful workspaces. The Student Innovation Hall (formerly the Center for Student Innovation) is available for meetings, events, and light fabrication activities. The Entrepreneurship Center Office and Prototyping Lab are available to student business startups and product assembly respectively.
  • Various Workshops:  The Simone Center offers and sponsors various workshops related to such topics as generating ideas (the RIT IdeaLab), opportunity shaping, funding businesses (monthly venture capital consultations), managing innovation teams, Intellectual Property development, etc.
  • Applied Entrepreneurship and Innovation Course (102-545). This course is offered by the Saunders College of Business and is focused towards student teams who wish to advance a business or social venture concept.  Teams typically advance both a business case and prototype product/service development.   Students accepted into the course enter the RIT Student Incubator.  For more information, contact Rich Notargiacomo (rcnbbu@rit.edu).
  • Innovation Capstone Course (3097-511 or 512).  This course is offered through the Center for Multidisciplinary Studies and is focused towards individuals and teams wishing to advance an innovation or develop an innovative product.   For more information, contact Professor Carl Lundgren (calite@rit.edu)
  • Innovation and Invention Course (4080-555/4085-855).  This integrated Grad/Undergrad course is open to adventurous students from any discipline.  Every quarter, the class takes on a new innovation project and learns to collaborate and communicate across disciplines by doing something no one (including the professor) knows how to do.  For more information, contact Professor Carl Lundgren (calite@rit.edu) or Professor Jon Schull (jschull@gmail.com)
  • Coop Credit.   With the permission and support of a student’s home department, the Simone Center can supervise students wishing to gain coop credit for working on their business or innovation project full-time.   These activities require close interactions among students, their home department advisors, and a Simone Center coach.   Approvals come from the home department/college.

We are here to help students in all stages of their innovation projects.  Stop into the Student Innovation Hall (USC – 1600) to find out how we can help you.

 

Richard DeMartino, Ph.D.

 

Endowed Chair and Director, Simone Center for Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship

 

January 18, 2013

Computer engineering students develop prototype for inexpensive heart monitor


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The BioTelemetrix prototype heart monitor is a non-invasive heart monitoring system. The biomedical device uses a combination of microprocessors, wireless technology and sensors to monitor several patient physiological signals.

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Cody Cziesler, Nick Desaulniers and Nick Sereni, all fifth-year computer engineering students in the Kate Gleason College of Engineering, are the product designers behind BioTelemetrix, a non-invasive heart monitoring system.



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What began as a senior design project, motivated in part by personal loss, is taking on a new life as a lifesaving device.

When Nick Desaulniers’ father had a heart attack just over two years ago, he was expected to make a full recovery. However, a month later, while still in the hospital, he had another heart attack in his sleep. He was discovered about an hour afterward unresponsive.

His passing prompted Desaulniers to wonder: If the hospital had patient monitoring devices, might his father have survived?

Desaulniers, Cody Cziesler and Nick Sereni, all fifth-year computer engineering students in the Kate Gleason College of Engineering at Rochester Institute of Technology, developed BioTelemetrix, a prototype for a non-invasive heart monitoring system.

“I asked the doctors, how does something like that happen? A hundred dollars worth of parts for a monitor could have prevented this,” says Desaulniers. “Every patient should have monitoring equipment like they have a bed.”

In spring 2012, he and his team won the Xerox Corp. Award for the BioTelemetrix equipment at the RIT Imagine Innovation and Creativity Festival and placed third in the RIT Shark Tank, a business plan competition for student-entrepreneurs. This past fall, the students began extensive testing and seeking venture capital support for the BioTelemetrix technology, a new product they believe may be as useful to medical personnel as the families of individuals who need medical monitoring.

Patient monitoring equipment varies from high-tech hospital systems to medical alert bracelets patients must activate to connect with emergency personnel. Costs also vary with the equipment, and medical facilities install equipment in restricted areas such as intensive care units.

“We thought we could significantly bring down the cost of the monitoring equipment by using something like an inexpensive microprocessor, similar to the little tiny chip that you find in a cell phone,” says Desaulniers, from Bristol, Conn.

The microprocessor is the core technology and acquires physiological signals processed through sensors and wireless architecture. Anchored by a dedicated server capable of being accessed by multiple users, the system connects to a secure website to access, store and review data. The student-developers are also testing different encryption methods to further ensure patient privacy.

As they continue the development process, the students are looking beyond hardware and software to how they establish themselves as credible product developers. “Hospitals like to go with something that has already been tested,” says Cziesler, from Chittenango, N.Y. “We are working to prove that our system would work as well as existing systems. We think our architecture can scale well beyond anything a hospital would need. It is also modular, so we are able to add on software and components quickly.”

Beyond heart patients, the team believes the technology has multiple uses such as support for individuals and medical staff monitoring the elderly or newborn infants.

“A hospital wouldn’t need to be the only market for this device,” says Sereni, who is from Sanborton, N.H. “It’s closest competition might be the Life Alert bracelet, but this doesn’t do live monitoring, it just sends an alarm. Our product is like Life Alert on steroids.”

December 19, 2012

October 25, 2012

Seed-funding effort will award $100,000 for research in assistive devices


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Elizabeth Lamark, ETC Photo/The Wallace Center

A team led by Edward Brown, associate professor of electrical engineering, is developing orthotics and robotics that could improve mobility for persons with physical disabilities. Electrical engineering student Adey Begregioris, right, controls a robotic manipulator using sEMG signals obtained from her bicep muscles.

 

More than 1 billion people, or approximately 15 percent of the world’s population, live with some form of a disability. RIT is seeking to spur research that assists people with disabilities and the agencies that serve them through a new seed-funding effort offered by the Office of the Vice President for Research.

The Effective Access Technology Program is offering a total of $100,000 in funding to faculty-led student teams to address access issues for disabled persons in the Rochester community. Individual seed grants will range from $5,000 to $10,000. The program is open to tenure and tenure-track faculty; proposals are due Nov. 12. To learn more about the program, including how to apply, go to www.rit.edu/research/srs/news.

“Experience has shown that when barriers to inclusion are removed and persons with disabilities are empowered to fully participate in societal life, their entire community benefits,” says Ryne Raffaelle, RIT vice president for research and associate provost.

Proposals must address some aspect of improved access for people with differing abilities. Areas of interest include: technology for improving the mobility of persons with visual or hearing impairment, the use of interactive media to help persons with cognitive or physical disabilities, or technology that improves the safety of and accessibility for individuals living in assisted living or group residences.

Emphasis will also be placed on projects that provide near-term benefits for local service agencies that address the needs of the disabled. RIT is partnering with the Al Sigl Community of Agencies, its affiliates and sister organizations as part of the program.

“Through this effort we seek to advance the cutting-edge research already being conducted on campus and better connect it with the needs of those serving the disabled community in our region,” Raffaelle adds.

The winners will be announced at the RIT Celebration of Research, 4 to 6 p.m. Nov. 16 in Louise M. Slaughter Hall, room 2240.

September 25, 2012

September 25, 2012

Welcome to “Innovation Pipeline,” an online newsletter updated regularly, highlighting innovation and entrepreneurial activity by RIT students, faculty and staff–as well as companies of RIT’s Venture Creations.

Click here for the full newsletter.

September 25, 2012

BestCollegesOnline.com, a website that assists people in their search for colleges, ranks Rochester Institute of Technology’s student incubator, the Simone Center for Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship, as the top student incubator program offered by universities and colleges nationwide. RIT is in prestigious company on the list of 10 along with universities including Harvard, Syracuse and Boston University.

“RIT’s program really sticks out as an innovative program for new business, as it’s the only program we’ve seen that teaches entrepreneurship as a way of life,” says Jessica Merritt, staff writer for BestCollegesOnline.com. “It’s truly remarkable that RIT offers such a high level of immersion, collaboration and support for college entrepreneurs, and we’re proud to spread the word about this great program.”

The Simone Center for Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship was formed in 2007. It houses several entrepreneurship programs and gives students the opportunity to test out business ideas and create commercialization plans under the guidance of faculty mentors.

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“We are proud to receive this recognition from BestCollegesOnline.com,” says Richard DeMartino, the Albert J. Simone Chair and director of the Simone Center for Student Innovation and Entrepreneurship. “RIT’s strategic strengths are in its unique technology, design/art and business academic portfolio combined with the university’s foundation in cooperative education. These factors allow RIT to create a student business incubator that differentiates from other universities and colleges.”

Student start-up companies created in the Simone Center could then transition to Venture Creations, RIT’s business incubator located just off the RIT campus. Venture Creations works with start-up companies with high growth potential that are beyond the proof-of-concept stage.

“After years of working with them, we see students whose products and business concepts evolve in the commercialization process go on to become client companies at Venture Creations,” DeMartino says. “It’s all part of the innovation ecosystem that RIT has created to build entrepreneurs and innovators from the ground up.”

To view the entire list of featured student incubators, go to www.bestcollegesonline.com/blog/2012/07/30/10-college-business-incubators-were-most-excited-about.

September 13, 2012

RIT well represented at Digital Rochester GREAT Awards


Students Justin Hillery and Sean Petterson were among the winners with RIT connections at Digital Rochester’s second annual GREAT Awards on Sept. 11. Standing for Greater Rochester Excellence and Achievements in Technology, the awards honor “entrepreneurial spirit in technological achievement” and innovation in the Greater Rochester region.

Petterson, an industrial design major, and Hillery, a multidisciplinary studies student, won in the Student Achievement category for their Strong Arm Ergonomic Lifting Safety System.

The two other finalists in that category, both from RIT’s Kate Gleason College of Engineering, were Jeremy Jensen, the project leader for TigerBot, a “humanoid” robot that mimics human behavior and movement, and Praneeth Pulusani, the project leader for the Wandering Ambassador robot, which autonomously carries a plant around in search of the most ideal growing conditions.

OptiCool Technologies won the Going Green Award for its innovative energy-efficient data center cooling solution. The system uses an oil-free, pumped refrigerant and a modular cooling-unit design that increases cooling capacity, decreases overall energy usage up to 95 percent and takes up significantly less floor space than traditional methods of cooling.

OptiCool Technologies recently graduated from RIT’s Venture Creations business incubator and moved to a new facility in Webster.

Vnomics earned the Rising Star Award for developing a mobile tool to monitor the performance of commercial trucks and light-armored vehicles. Vnomics, which also started in Venture Creations, is now based in Bushnell’s Basin.

The winners were announced Sept. 11 during a dinner at the Rochester Plaza Hotel and Conference Center. For more information, go to digitalrochester.com/events/2012-great-awards.

For the full article, please click here