-Caveat Lector-

New member here...


What is the it website URL?
I'm working on a project called Gilligan. It will change the world too. What
a coincidence ;)

peat




>From: Jenny Decker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Conspiracy Theory Research List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: [CTRL] IT will change the world!
>Date: Thu, 11 Jan 2001 06:32:48 -0800
>
>-Caveat Lector-
>
>I finally got through to the "IT" website--everyone in the US must have
>been
>accessing it over the last 24 hours.
>     Does anyone know if there is a chat site that is recording guesses as
>to
>what "IT" is?  I have ideas, based upon the reference to "Ginger" . . .
>Jenny Decker
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Kelly" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2001 8:19 PM
>Subject: [CTRL] IT will change the world!
>
>
> > -Caveat Lector-
> >
> > Tuesday, January 9, 2000
> > >From The Inside,
> > http://www.inside.com/jcs/Story?article_id=20218&pod_id=8
> >
> > What Is 'IT'? Book Proposal Heightens Intrigue About Secret Invention
> > Touted as Bigger Than the Internet or PC
> >
> > Steve Jobs quoted on accomplished scientist's new device: 'If enough
> > people see the machine you won't have to convince them to architect
> > cities around it. It'll just happen.' A venerable press pays $250,000
> > for a book on project cloaked in unprecedented secrecy. EXCLUSIVE
> >
> > Got a clue? Post your guess as to what IT is.
> > by PJ Mark
> >
> > Tuesday , January 09, 2001 01:43 p.m.
> >
> > Harvard Business School Press executive editor Hollis Heimbouch has just
> > paid $250,000 for a book about IT -- but neither the editor nor the
> > agent, Dan Kois of The Sagalyn Literary Agency, knows what IT is.
> > 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.
> >
> > The invention itself is as interesting as the inventor. Kamen is 'a true
> > eccentric, cantankerous and opinionated, a great character,' the
> > proposal says, with large gaps when it comes to pop culture.
> >
> > 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.
> >
> > And though there are no specifics in the proposal as to what the
> > invention is, there are some tantalizing clues. Is IT an energy source?
> > Some sort of environmentally friendly personal transport device? One
> > editor who saw the proposal went as far as to speculate -- jokingly
> > (perhaps) -- that IT was a type of personal hovering craft.
> >
> > Consider the following items, culled from the proposal:
> >
> > IT is not a medical invention.
> >
> > In a private meeting with Bezos, Jobs and Doerr, Kamen assembled two
> > Gingers -- or ITs -- in 10 minutes, using a screwdriver and hex wrenches
> > from components that fit into a couple of large duffel bags and some
> > cardboard boxes.
> >
> > The invention has a fun element to it, because once a Ginger was turned
> > on, Bezos started laughing his ''loud, honking laugh.''
> >
> > There are possibly two Ginger models, named Metro and Pro -- and the
> > Metro may possibly cost less than $2,000.
> >
> > Bezos is quoted as saying that IT ''is a product so revolutionary,
> > you'll have no problem selling it. The question is, are people going to
> > be allowed to use it?''
> >
> > Jobs is quoted as saying: ''If enough people see the machine you won't
> > have to convince them to architect cities around it. It'll just
> > happen.''
> >
> > Kemper says the invention will ''sweep over the world and change lives,
> > cities, and ways of thinking.''
> >
> > The ''core technology and its implementations'' will, according to
> > Kamen, ''have a big, broad impact not only on social institutions but
> > some billion-dollar old-line companies.'' And the invention will
> > ''profoundly affect our environment and the way people live worldwide.
> > It will be an alternative to products that are dirty, expensive,
> > sometimes dangerous and often frustrating, especially for people in the
> > cities.''
> >
> > IT will be a mass-market consumer product ''likely to run afoul of
> > existing regulations and or inspire new ones,'' according to Kemper. The
> > invention will also likely require ''meeting with city planners,
> > regulators, legislators, large commercial companies and university
> > presidents about how cities, companies and campuses can be retro-fitted
> > for Ginger.'' The invention itself is as interesting as the inventor.
> > Kamen -- ''a true eccentric, cantankerous and opinionated, a great
> > character,'' according to the proposal -- dropped out of college in his
> > 20s, then invented the first drug infusion pump; he later created the
> > first portable insulin pump and dialysis machine.
> >
> > Kamen, an avid aviator who commutes via a helicopter, is also the
> > founder of FIRST -- For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and
> > Technology -- a nonprofit organization that encourages young people to
> > pursue studies and careers in math and science. He's a single man
> > obsessed with his work and out of touch with popular culture. According
> > to the proposal, Kamen was seated at a White House dinner next to two
> > people he'd never heard of: Shirley MacLaine and Warren Beatty.
> >
> > Kamen's most recent invention is the iBot, an off-road wheelchair that
> > can climb stairs, cover sand and gravel and rise to balance on two
> > wheels. A prototype iBot was showcased by wheelchair-bound journalist
> > John Hockenberry at last year's TED conference in Monterrey, Calif.; the
> > demonstration was greeted by wild applause.
> >
> > IT/Ginger won't be revealed until 2002, the proposal says. No one has
> > seen the project except Kamen, Kemper, the engineers and the investors
> > -- which include Doerr, a partner in the venture capital firm of Kleiner
> > Perkins Caufield & Byers, which helped launch Netscape, Amazon, Juniper
> > Networks, Excite, and @Home, among others; and Michael Schmertzler,
> > managing director of Credit Suisse First Boston. Others who have seen
> > the invention and signed confidentiality agreements include minor
> > investors Paul Allaire, CEO of Xerox; and Vern Loucks, recently retired
> > CEO of Baxter. Bezos, Jobs and writer/venture capitalist Randy Komisar
> > sit on the advisory board. Kamen retains 85 percent of his new company,
> > according to the proposal.
> >
> > Why the secrecy? Kamen fears, as he states in a letter to Kemper that is
> > included in the proposal, that ''huge corporations'' might catch wind of
> > the invention and ''use their massive resources to erect obstacles
> > against us or, worse, simply appropriate the technology by assigning
> > hundreds of engineers to catch up to us, and thousands of employees to
> > produce it in their plants.''
> >
> > But such secrecy may have been enough to turn publishers away. ''The
> > Internet changed the world, too'' said one editor who considered the
> > project, ''but books about it don't really sell.'' As for the
> > quarter-million-dollar price tag for North American rights: on the one
> > hand, it doesn't seem to be a lot for a book about an invention which
> > has mesmerized such well-known technology moguls. On the other, $250,000
> > is a lot to pay for a story about a product that hasn't been seen,
> > defined or named.
> >
> > ''We were well aware of Kamen,'' says book editor Heimbouch, who says
> > she's been publishing in this technology circle for a long time.'' (The
> > bestselling The Monk and the Riddle: The Education of a Silicon Valley
> > Entrepreneur by Komisar is hers.) So jumping on board for the book
> > wasn't such a dilemma. Besides, says Heimbouch, Harvard Business School
> > Press had intended to approach Kamen about doing a book anyway. ''He's
> > an inventor of great technologies that make people's lives better,'' she
> > says.
> >
> > Harvard Business School Press, a division of Harvard Business School
> > Publishing, is a wholly owned, nonprofit subsidiary of Harvard
> > University. The Sagalyn Agency retains all but North American rights to
> > the book.
> >
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>
><A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
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>==========
>CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing
>propagandic
>screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
>sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
>directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
>major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
>That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
>always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
>credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.
>
>Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
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