Prototype

Magic Marker

  • September 1999
  • By Technology Review
   

Meeting hell: Someone-most likely your boss-is scribbling ideas, dates and numbers onto a whiteboard faster than you could ever copy them onto your notepad. Eventually you give up, hoping that somebody else has kept a better record than you have. If the room has an electronic whiteboard, of course, you're in luck-but such devices, which cost thousands of dollars, are far from being standard conference-room equipment.

Now comes a gadget-the mimio, from MIT spinoff Virtual Ink of Cambridge, Mass.-that captures the markings made on any ordinary whiteboard in real time and stores them on a PC for future perusal. The device consists of a portable sensor bar that attaches with suction cups to any flat writing surface-even a windowpane will do. A cable connects the bar to a PC. Ordinary markers are held in special ultrasound-emitting jackets; as the marker moves, the sensor tracks its motion by computing the ultrasound's travel time. The jackets even emit an infrared signal that indicates the marker's color.

 

To read the entire article you must log in:

Most of our content — all daily news, blogs, and videos — is free. Magazine stories are paid. To read this story, you must have a subscription or you must use a reading credit. Registration to Technology Review is free and entitles registrants to three free reading credits.

Username or REGISTER
Password  
   
 
Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Can We Build Tomorrow's Breakthroughs?

Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.

Videos

Meet 2011 TR35 Winner Jesse Robbins

More

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

Layar

Ushahidi

Roche

Life Technologies

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement