In 1964, The year IEEE Spectrumpublished
its first issue, Texas Instruments received a patent
on the integrated circuit, RCA developed the videotape
cartridge, Sharp introduced the all-transistor electronic
calculator, Digital Equipment Corp. shipped the PDP-8
minicomputer, and IBM coined the phrase "word processing." All
those companies were pretty big, even then—it isn't
easy to find a 1964 start-up that was betting its all
on a technology that has since paid off.
Four decades later, venture capital has worked a sea change
in the way industrial innovations are made. If in the days
of Hewlett and Packard the garage start-up was the exception,
today it is the rule. We have therefore tried to divine
the future from a collection of today's most daring tech
start-ups. We narrowed the field by considering technological
innovations in conjunction with the people who have bet
on them; people, unlike new ideas, have track records that
can be vetted. The board of editors of Spectrumdid the vetting, aided by many IEEE fellows.
Another constraint was to allow only one company per category.
That way, software and telecom would not overwhelm everything
else, and the predictions would not boil down to one or
two ideas which, if proved wrong, future list makers would
find laughable. Of course, the categories were shaped in
part by the available candidates for the list, like the
bull's-eyes of a marksman who shoots first and draws the
targets afterward.
Displays: Microvision Inc.
Bothell, Wash.
Display devices have a few weak points—they're bulky, hot,
conspicuous, and power-hungry. Ugly, too. Microvision proposes
to solve all these problems at a stroke by using solid-state
lasers and LEDs to paint fine-grained pictures directly
onto your retina. As John R. Lewis, a research fellow at
the company, wrote in these pages ("In the Eye of the Beholder," Spectrum, May
2004), "Short of tapping into the optic nerve, there is
no more efficient way to get an image into your brain."
It's a bit like the head-up display, which floats meter readings
and other aeronautical data somewhere in the middle distance
in front of a pilot's face. Even better, though, Microvision's
system can superimpose graphical information on the real
world, much as Walt Disney Co. animators had Mickey Mouse
shake hands with conductor Leopold Stokowski in Fantasia in
1940. A surgeon (or a combat medic trying to act as one)
might use superimposed anatomical information to guide
a scalpel; an auto mechanic might use data positioned in
this way to guide a wrench. The latter application is already
in use, in Microvision's Nomad Expert Technician System.
The company uses microelectromechanical system (MEMS) devices
to scan the beams back and forth and, where appropriate,
to mix different colors to produce white light. Because
the beam sweeps over the retina instead of dotting it,
lines need not be serrated and images need not be grainy.
Bright as the picture will seem to the naked eye, it will
consume barely a microwatt, potentially saving hugely on
battery power. And, by sending light only where it's needed,
the system can keep nosy neighbors in adjacent airline
seats from snooping on your work (or play). With a sufficiently
inconspicuous eyepiece, one might even feign attention
to a speech or lecture while, in fact, watching television.