2011年6月6日星期一

Meet the Ideas for Good winners

Last year Toyota officially announced the Ideas for Good Challenge. Participants in the challenge were tasked with taking one of five Toyota technologies and creating a new non-automotive application that would benefit society. More than 4,000 valid ideas were received and ultimately five winners were chosen, one in each of the technology areas. Last week, the winners gathered in Pittsburgh for a prototyping weekend at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU).

The five winners, who are mentioned only by first name, joined forces with engineers from Deeplocal, CMU staff, Toyota employees and others to take these ideas and turn them into working prototypes, all in a single weekend. I had the opportunity to travel to Pittsburgh and watch these creative geniuses transform their ideas into something tangible.

Congratulations to all of the winners.

We all know that a bicycle helmet could save your life in the event of a fall, but what if that helmet could tell you whether or not you need to go to the hospital? That is what Stu (pictured second from left, below) wants the bicycle helmets of the future to do. Using T.H.U.M.S. (Total Human Model for Safety) technology, Stu envisions a bicycle helmet that can gather impact data and determine if the biker needs to seek medical attention based on this data. This same data could also be used to make better bicycle helmets.


Pure Air by Tim
A major health problem in developing nations is smoke-based illnesses caused when biomass is cooked indoors. If you’ve ever cooked over a live campfire, you know that if you are in the path of the smoke, you can end up a coughing mess. Millions of families deal with this issue daily because they have no choice but to use wood and other biomass fuels to cook indoors. Tim's idea (that's him pictured below) takes the solar panel used on the new Toyota Prius and converts it into a power-generating device for an exhaust fan. The fan can help pull the air out during the cooking process and improve the air quality inside the dwelling.


Power Plant Gym by Birken

Birken was the youngest winner in the contest and his idea has been brewing in his head since he was a teenager — taking the energy produced by gym equipment and converting it into usable power. Birken’s prototype used Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy Drive to convert energy into enough power to charge an iPod or even a laptop.


Automated Firefighting Extension Ladder Guidance System by Fran

Fran can thank his 6-year-old for his winning submission. His children were playing fire rescue but there were no firemen around. Fran asked where the missing firefighters were and the children said it was too dangerous for them — and an idea was born. Fran’s idea uses Toyota’s Advanced Parking Guidance System to create a sensor pack that can provide firefighters with real-time data. The data provided helps firefighters make more informed decisions without putting them directly in harm’s way.

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