Alumni Online

None

Alumni Login

Alumni Search

Search Registered Alumni:
View all Registered Alumni

Listen to Hits from '75


PopUp MP3 Player (New Window)

Recent Activity

about a month ago
profile update
offlineAnn Wieland updated their profile photo.

4 months ago
new user registration
offlineJennifer Haslund Jambor joined our class! Welcome!

6 months ago
profile update
offlineAnne Lecuyer-Koich updated their profile.

7 months ago
profile update
offlineMitch Hobbins updated their profile.

8 months ago
new user registration
offlineMary Stravers joined our class! Welcome!

new user registration
offlineLiz Emert joined our class! Welcome!

9 months ago
profile update
offlineBeth Jemelka updated their profile.

10 months ago
profile update
offlineBruce Kotz updated their profile.

new user registration
offlineDenise Brown joined our class! Welcome!

11 months ago
profile update
offlineNancy Christenson-Westcott updated their profile.

Visitors

We have 20 guests online

Do you like this site?
The Galleries of Eric Peterson It's Designed by:
Eric Peterson

Powercast Technology - John Shearer PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 30 March 2007 00:00
AddThis

Powercast Technology - John Shearer

A Pennsylvania entrepreneur has developed technology that gives you all the battery juice you need directly from the air.

By Melanie Haiken, Business 2.0 Magazine
March 30 2007: 7:08 AM EDT

(Business 2.0 Magazine) -- How much money could you make from a technology that replaces electrical wires? A startup called Powercast, along with the more than 100 companies that have inked agreements with it, is about to start finding out. Powercast and its first major partner, electronics giant Philips, are set to launch their first device powered by electricity broadcast through the air.

It may sound futuristic, but Powercast's platform uses nothing more complex than a radio--and is cheap enough for just about any company to incorporate into a product. A transmitter plugs into the wall, and a dime-size receiver (the real innovation, costing about $5 to make) can be embedded into any low-voltage device. The receiver turns radio waves into DC electricity, recharging the device's battery at a distance of up to 3 feet.

Picture your cell phone charging up the second you sit down at your desk, and you start to get a sense of the opportunity. How big can it get? "The sky's the limit," says John Shearer, Powercast's founder and CEO. He estimates shipping "many millions of units" by the end of 2008.

For years, electricity experts said this kind of thing couldn't be done. "If you had asked me seven months ago if this was possible, I would have said, 'Are you dreaming? Have you been smoking something?'" says Govi Rao, vice president and general manager of solid-state lighting at Philips (Charts). "But to see it work is just amazing. It could revolutionize what we know about power."

Read More

 

Only registered members of the Stillwater Class of 1975 are authorized to post comments.