Inventor says 'Ginger' speculation overblown

By Richard Shim
15 January 2001 04:28 PM
Tags: ginger, kamen, device, proposal, patent, inventor, invention, speculation

Dean Kamen says expectations about his high-tech mystery device have 'led to expectations that are beyond the mere whimsical.'

The inventor who has been the subject of a frenzy of speculation over a new gadget said to be more important than the Internet has stepped forward to deny that he has any such 'Earth-shattering' project in the works.

"We have a promising project, but nothing of the earth-shattering nature that people are conjuring up," Dean Kamen, president of New Hampshire-based DEKA Research, said in a statement referring to one of his forthcoming inventions.

Kamen said he felt compelled to comment on speculation arising from an "unfortunate, unapproved leak" in a book proposal about him.

"Ginger," the mysterious, purportedly world-changing device that has caught the attention of the technology industry this week, may be something as simple as a scooter.

A patent application filed with the World Intellectual Property Organization's International Bureau on December 14, 2000, lists DEKA Research and Development as the applicant.

Inventor Dean Kamen has been creating products for DEKA for nearly 20 years. The application also lists Kamen as the inventor of the unnamed product.

But the patent does not refer to the device by either of the names that have been used in recent reports about Kamen's unspecified invention - IT" and "Ginger."

Hype regarding Kamen's device began to build after Inside.com first reported on it because of a book proposal from Steve Kemper with Harvard Business Press.

City ties
The device listed on the application, as listed on the patent information Web site Delphion.com, fits some of what is known about the device.

In the book proposal, Kamen says the device will have an effect on some billion-dollar old-line companies, which could be automotive companies.

The application includes drawings of various devices, including a unit similar to the electric scooters now popular with urban workers, a type of one-wheeled skateboard, and several other single-wheeled, foot-mounted oddities.

Kamen did not immediately return phone calls for this story.

Kemper mentions the invention may require work by "city planners, regulators, legislators, large commercial companies, and university presidents about how cities, companies and campuses can be retrofitted for Ginger."

New roads, paths, and traffic regulations may be necessary if Ginger were to take off with anywhere near the force some tech luminaries are predicting.

The abstract of the patent, titled "Personal Mobility Vehicles and Methods," describes "a class of transportation vehicles for carrying an individual over a surface that may be irregular."

The patent goes on to describe various "embodiments" with motorized drives that function only when the machine is in an operating position, which is when a rider stands on the machine in an upright position.

Cash, big praise - and fear of theft Ginger has been the talk of the industry because of some of the people who have stepped forward to sing its praises.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs supposedly predicted that cities will be built around the machines.

Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos and venture capitalist John Doerr apparently are mesmerized with the device and have invested millions.

But the device has been shrouded in mystery, as Kamen and the company he invents for, DEKA, have been tight-lipped concerning details of the device.

In a release, Kamen teased the public with a few particulars, including a 10-minute assembly time, a price tag of less than US$2,000, and a debut date of 2002.

Paul Saffo, director of the Institute for the Future think tank, reviewed the same patent application and agreed that all the signs seem to indicate that Ginger is a scooter-like machine.

"In Kamen's meetings with Bezos and Jobs he supposedly pulled the machine out of a bag, and he's said that Ginger could be a transportation device," Saffo said.

Saffo added that the components in Ginger are already available in Kamen's most recent invention, iBod, an off-road wheelchair.

"I can't help but feel that we are victims here," Saffo added. "I have a feeling that someone is out there having a big laugh over this. I just don't know who it is."

Kamen and DEKA have said they have kept mum about Ginger out of concern that corporations in industries that may be threatened by Ginger could "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," Kamen said in the book proposal.

Kamen, who had remained quiet initially, issued a statement late on Friday saying that several of the comments cited in the book proposal had been taken out of context. Harvard Business School Press has declined to comment on any plans for such a book.

``The leaked proposal quoted several prominent technology leaders out of context, without their doubts, risks and maybes included," Kamen said in a statement.

"This, together with spirited speculation about the unknown, has led to expectations that are beyond the mere whimsical."

Reuters contributed to this story.

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