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January 2001

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Subject:
From:
Ahne Oosterhof <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Date:
Thu, 11 Jan 2001 16:42:51 -0800
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Hey Steve, I would have expected you to wait until tomorrow, when it is
FRIDAY.

By the way, I expect IT to be a motorized version of the scooter, with air
filled tires to reduce its bumpiness and to allow IT to go where any good
Hummer can go. IT will sell like hotcakes.

See you,
Ahne.

-----Original Message-----
From:   TechNet [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Stephen R. Gregory
Sent:   Thursday, January 11, 2001 15:17
To:     [log in to unmask]
Subject:        [TN] Did anybody see the news about "IT"?

 << File: UTF-8.HTM >> Hi ya'll!

This maybe a little off-topic (then again it may not be) but there were some
news stories today talking about something called "IT", or code named
"Ginger". Have any of you heard about this? Here's a paste below from the
story on the MSNBC web page that talks about "IT"

         ALL THEY DO know: IT, also code-named Ginger, is an invention
developed by 49-year-old scientist Dean Kamen, and the subject of a planned
book by journalist Steve Kemper. According to Kemper's proposal, IT will
change the world, and is so extraordinary that it has drawn the attention of
technology visionaries Jeff Bezos and Steve Jobs and the investment dollars
of pre-eminent Silicon Valley venture capitalist John Doerr, among others.

       Kemper - who has been published in Smithsonian, National Geographic
and Outside among others - has had exclusive access to Kamen and the
engineers at his New Hampshire-based research and development company, DEKA,
for the past year and a half. He tags the proposed book as Soul of the New
Machine meets The New New Thing and won over his agent and publisher with
e-mails describing the project in carefully couched language. He also
included an amusing narrative of a meeting between Bezos, Jobs, Doerr and
Kamen.

       In the proposal, Doerr calls Kamen - who was just awarded the
National
Medal of Technology, the country's highest such award - a combination of
Henry Ford and Thomas Edison. Doerr also says, a touch ominously, that he
had
been sure that he wouldn't see the development of anything in his lifetime
as
important as the World Wide Web - until he saw IT. According to the
proposal,
another investor, Credit Suisse First Boston, expects Kamen's invention to
make more money in its first year than any start-up in history, predicting
Kamen will be worth more in five years than Bill Gates. Jobs told Kamen the
invention would be as significant as the PC, the proposal says.

The rest of the story is at:

http://www.msnbc.com/news/513749.asp

Very interesting, huh?

-Steve Gregory-

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